07 June 2019

maybe too many links

But what will the world do, ( . . . ) if we can't solve the problem of the millions and millions of people  with no home to go to or whose homes aren't good enough, except by saying go away and building fences and walls? It isn't a good enough answer, that one group of people can be in charge of the destinies of another group of people and choose whether to exclude them or include them. Human beings have to be more ingenious than this, and more generous.

Ali Smith


This picture.  I actually took a photo of a page from the weekly colour supplement of our newspaper. (The photographer is Mattia Balsamini, he has the story here on his website.)


What do we see here?  
Again from the photographer's website: "On April 18, 2015, a ship sinks on its way from Libya to Europe. 528 bodies are recovered from the wreck a year later. A team headed by forensic scientist Cristina Cattaneo collected and catalogued all items on the wreck."
You can read about Cattaneo's work here and here.  I hope you will.

So this particular picture shows us the contents recovered from a young man who drowned that day: three crosses (two Coptic) and three small plastic bags of soil. Soil from home. Home soil. Holy soil, maybe. 

It's the small packages of soil that stun me. A feeling of loss almost. And for a moment I cannot speak and need to look around me, listen to familiar sounds to find my bearings again. It seems that all the dear people, the hopes, the dreams, the things that I have lost (throw my health into that bag, too), nothing comes close to the loss this young man may have felt holding these bags of soil close to his body on some godforsaken ship about to capsize. But maybe he didn't know it would capsize, maybe he was just waiting for the awful seasickness to abide, for a shore to be within reach, dreaming of friendly European faces to welcome him. He would have been in for a shock. 
The Coptic crosses identify him as most likely Eritrean or possibly Ethiopian. You can read about the human rights situation in 2015 in Eritrea here and Ethiopia here.

And now I ask you to have a look at this link.  This is the crew of a rescue ship, Iuventa. A ship that was chartered and organised by a youth organisation from Germany, because:
When people were drowning in the Mediterranean we knew we had to act. So we went out to sea and saved 14,000 lives.
Since then, the EU has stopped all rescue mission, whether organised by European navy ships or NGOs. Instead, all the EU allows now is for helicopters and observer planes to spot migrant ships in distress and to watch the people drown. Watch. People. Drown.
The crew of the Iuventa has been accused of aiding and abetting illegal immigration into Italy, their ship has been seized by the authorities in Sicily.

I was 15 when I learned in school about the ancient Greek concept of xenia, (generosity and kindness to anybody far from home) and the god Xenios (aka Philoxenon or Hospites but basically Zeus in yet another disguise), the revered patron of hospitality and protector of guests, the avenger of wrongs committed against strangers.
Some years later, in sociology 101 at university, were given an essay by Hannah Arendt to discuss. The consensus then was, of course, how great and magnanimous the free world has helped the persecuted of WWII. We agreed, of course.
It's worth reading that essay again. "We refugees", she called it. But it's long, so just a quote:
Our optimism, indeed, is admirable, even if we say so ourselves. The story of our struggle has finally become known. We lost our home, which means the familiarity of daily life. We lost our occupation, which means the confidence that we are of some use in this world. We lost our language, which means the naturalness of reactions, the simplicity of gestures, the unaffected expression of feelings.

Then there is this story by Wade Davis that I wrote about several years ago (here) when he and his team were travelling by Jeep from an outpost in the Sahara desert and met a caravan of six men and 12 camels transporting salt. The men had been forced to stop in the desert to dry out the salt before continuing their journey. They were down to their last quart of water, 150 km from the nearest well with a cargo and animals that represented the entire wealth of their families. They had sent one of their young mates with one camel to find water. Davis continues:
While we waited for their friend to return, the leader of the party kindled a twig fire and with their last reserve of water offered us tea. It is said in the Sahara that if a stranger turns up at your tent, you will slaughter the last goat that provides the only milk for your children to feast your guests. One never knows when you will be that stranger turning up in the night, cold and hungry, thirsty and in need of shelter. As I watched him pour me a cup of tea, I thought to myself, these are the moments that allow us all to hope.

I leave you with this:
But masked gods walk among us as a test
for hospitality’s a sacred duty
binding all who claim morality
 Ian Duhig 


10 comments:

My life so far said...

This makes me weep, especially the last stanza.

My life so far said...

I read the whole poem and read the story behind it, about David Oluwale. Human beings leave a lot to be desired. We have the potential to be good, kind, compassionate beings and the potential to be hate filled, arrogant, heartless beings. Most of us sit in the middle, trying to be good, failing at times. But what happens when the dark side takes over, when the majority becomes heartless? We are pack animals after all. None of us wants to be outside the pack, we fear it's anger, it's retribution. We all want, crave to belong; all of us.

ellen abbott said...

the world is in turmoil and getting worse. no one leaves their home, family, country, customs, culture unless they are desperate. and people are getting desperate either through war or famine or danger or interference from other countries or... with our affluence we lose our compassion, our culture no longer teaches us to welcome the stranger and with our willfull ignorance about our part in climate change and our greed when push comes to shove, our worst nature ascends and we send out helicopters to watch. them. drown. if we think we have a problem with migrants now, people leaving their homes in droves for a chance not at a better life but just for life, then what will we do when more of the world's population is on the move when all the ice is melted, when sea levels rise, when changing weather patterns make once livable areas non-livable? will we move from just watching them die to actively gunning them down?

Anonymous said...

I read this and realize that I have truly lost all hope. I have not a drop of optimism left in me. I wish I could be inspired by something.

37paddington said...

This makes me weep. I was ruminating on much the same thing today. I feel so lucky and privileged. There but for the grace of the fates.

Colette said...

I'm holding you close to my heart, Robin.

Colette said...

This post is powerful in so many ways. They way it forces one to experience and empathize with the experience of the refugee is really important. I thank you.

am said...

"One never knows when you will be that stranger turning up in the night, cold and hungry, thirsty and in need of shelter."

The fact that these links exist means to me that there is hope. A little hope goes a long way. The first half of my life was spent without hope for myself or others. I have no explanation for what happened to change that, but it did happen.

I am reminded of the book by Tim O'Brien -- The Things They Carried.

Bohemian said...

The Gift of Hospitality is huge in many Countries that have so little, and yet is Shared, often with Strangers who aren't expected and yet are Welcomed and given this incredible Gift. How ironic that it is typically those that have so much that are the least Hospitable. This Post caused me to weep, it touched my Heart so deeply.

Elizabeth said...

I was driving yesterday here in Los Angeles and looked out the window and into the eyes of a man so dark and dirty and ragged that it took my breath away. I was behind glass, that was all that separated us but it was so much more -- and less --. When I was a child, I used to terrify myself in that way that young Catholics did by imagining that every homeless person I saw or "bum" as we called them then, was actually Jesus, and we were being condemned. I don't know what the answer is, although I imagine there is none and that each of us must give and give and give, make eye contact, witness, write, protest.