Humanity by Raúl Ilargi Meijer
Humanity
Herri met de Bles Landscape with Saint Christopher 1535 -- 1545
It is a strange world where in some parts of the globe children are left to drown when the rubber dinghies they are put in to escape warfare and poverty in order to reach a place where they are expected to be able to grow up in peace and safety and have an education and a future, fail to carry them there, while in other parts they are put in cages and camps, torn away from their families, simply for looking for a better life and future, and at the same time other children just like them are rescued by heroes bigger than life from all over the planet, from a cave they are trapped in, in a no holds or costs barred operation.
What is the difference between these children that could ever justify such divergent treatments? They themselves surely would never be able to answer such a question. But that is all the more reason to ask them. And if they don't understand, how can we? And if we don't understand, why is it happening? Why do we allow it to happen? In Thailand, mankind shows it very much possesses humanity. In the Mediterranean and along the US border, it shows that it has none. The two can't both be true at the same time.
What now? It's not difficult. From Arab Weekly, writing about the EU's request to Egypt to set up 'Regional Disembarkation Centres' in the country:
Instead of asking economically struggling countries to act as refugee hosts, European leaders need to solve the problems that cause these refugees to leave their countries in the first place, particularly the unrest that has engulfed many countries, Egyptian specialists said.
"The solution to the problem will be to resettle these refugees in their countries," said Youssef al-Metany, a refugee lawyer at local NGO Egyptian Network for International Law. "This can only happen when the conflicts raging in these countries are settled."
See? We all know the answer. What we need is the same courage and selflessness that the cave divers in Thailand have demonstrated over the past week. Yes, one died, bless his soul, but he knew there are more important things than one's own life. One of them is children. Another is honor. And yet another is humanity. Let's make it happen. Let's save them all.
Hooyah!
July 10, 2018 Posted by Raúl Ilargi Meijer at 12:31 pm Finance Tagged with: America, cave divers, children, courage, dinghies, humanity, Mediterranean, selflessness, Thailand