I tried to write this post four times.
Maybe five. Each time I walked away;
disgusted at my attempts. Frustrated at
the futility of my words. Pissed off
because let’s face it, what’s my pathetic blog post going to change?
Nothing.
A small three year old boy and his
five year old brother perished this week alongside their mother.
In a week where children everywhere
went back to school after a long summer break, another boy and his brother will
never have that privilege, that right.
On a day where I followed my two
youngest around the garden on yet another dinosaur hunt, another boy and his
brother will never play, anywhere, again.
On a night where I rested my hand a
little longer than usual on four heads as they slept, another boy and his
brother will never receive a goodnight kiss again.
Because they are dead.
I call my youngest Small Boy and this
week another small boy was pictured washed up on a beach in Bodrum having
drowned as he and his family tried to flee their war torn country.
Aylan Kurdi and his brother Galip are
not the first children to die as a result of the wars tearing their countries
apart. And they most likely will not be
the last.
Others have lost their lives in
horrific circumstances but it was the sight of the three year old’s lifeless
body that stopped everyone in their tracks.
It’s horrific. It’s harrowing. It seems so pointless and too mammoth a
problem to solve. Where on earth do you
start?
Over the last few days I have read and
listened to dozens of radio reports about Syria and little Aylan. Dozens.
Most people are open minded and have some compassion and empathy. Then there are those who demand to know why
we should open our gates to migrants. Haven’t
we enough to worry about here with our own homelessness problems?
Yes, yes we do but that problem isn’t
going to go away any time soon either. If
it ever does.
I think we tend to forget. Initially we react strongly to the horror
that is presented to us and after a fashion we forget. Our own lives continue and that of our kids.
But in this case two little lives lost
and washed up on a beach in Bodrum will never continue.
I think it’s horrific what happened to
that child. Beaches are for playing
on. But in another, perhaps perverse
way, I am also glad for him.
Glad because his pain and suffering
has come to an end.
In the way it has always been and
always will be, those who pass on are at peace; it is those left behind who
have to deal with the grief and upheaval.
It is a week in which we should
remember. It is a week in which we
should try to help those less fortunate than ourselves. It is a week in which we should never forget.
His name is Aylan.
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