South Asia’s worst monsoon flooding in recent memory has affected 30
million people in India, Bangladesh and Nepal, destroying croplands,
livestock and property and raising fears of a health crisis Flooding
in the
densely-populated region
. – MSNBC – August 7, 2007

[Click on this link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xYQXH0Ut4OM&NR=1]
   If you didn’t know about the above ongoing disaster, it’s not surprising. American news media have offered very little coverage of this horrendous tragedy. At least two million people in India and Bangladesh have lost their homes. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, have drowned.
   Imagine how we would react if the entire population of California was affected instead of Indians and Bangladeshis? Imagine if two million New Yorkers had lost their homes? Imagine if the entire U.S. Congress had drowned in a flood?…

   The scant coverage leaves the impression that there might be a
sarcastic but truthful postscript to this story that might read:
"Hundreds have drowned. Since none were Americans, why should we care?"
    You know the headlines in America’s papers: The serious, but dramatically smaller tragedies in Utah and Minnesota. And there are the daily reports of the activities of Paris Hilton and Britney Spears. More teenagers are likely aware of the activities of Paris and Britney than they are of the location of India and Bangladesh.
Flood_also
   There is always an easy explanation for all of this. We care about what is, or what seems to be, near to us and ignore what seems remote. After all, many will say, the poor will always be with us and what can we do about drownings in India or starvation in Darfur?
   The answer is that we can choose to care. Each of us has a much greater capacity for compassion than we realize.
   Compassion is not a finite liquid measured out in cubic centimeters. Compassion is the highest expression of our humanity. And it is fueled by Love.
   Our humanity is enhanced by caring about those remote from us as well as those in front of us.
   Click on the link, above, and you will get a one and a half minute glimpse into a heartbreaking hell. By taking a moment, today, to be present to suffering and tragedy elsewhere in the world, we demonstrate our human capacity for caring. To ignore world tragedy because it affects "strangers"  is to diminish the presence of the holy in this world.
   Amid the disasters in South Asia and North Africa, we may imagine a myriad of volunteer caregivers who are reaching out to help their neighbors. We may envision thousands of Good Samaritans reaching beyond their own pain to ease the pain of another. And we may pray that God’s grace may flow into the anxious hearts of millions who, on this day and into the night, sit on rooftops surrounded by floodwaters, wondering if anyone will be kind enough and strong enough to help them survive – or if anyone cares.

-Erie Chapman

8 responses to “Which Headlines Matter?”

  1. Mary Jean Powell, MSW Avatar
    Mary Jean Powell, MSW

    Today’s Journal essay is one of the most important I have read here because you opened my consciousness. You awakened and expanded my heart today as I think of those who suffer in the floods in Asia. I will pray for them.

    Like

  2. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    As I read today’s meditation I find myself knocked off balance and awakened as perspective yields a powerful blow. Suddenly, my childish anxieties of yesterday are so embarrassingly insignificant today. I seek forgiveness, as I turn away from self-concern towards those who suffer, in awareness now my prayers join to be with them.

    Like

  3. Jan Jones Avatar
    Jan Jones

    How could it be that such tragedy was not reported in our news! What suffering was evident in that video! Thank you, Erie, for sharing and caring – my prayers will be added to yours and those of others.

    Like

  4. Diana Gallaher Avatar
    Diana Gallaher

    This meditation calls to mind a quote by Zelda Fitzgerald:
    “Nobody has ever measured, not even poets, how much the heart can hold.” The capacity to love and care is always more, isn’t it?

    Like

  5. Kristen Avatar
    Kristen

    Thanks for sharing this today, Erie. It’s a startling reminder of the importance of staying informed and empathic to the suffering of those who are least “like us.” In our house, we typically watch the BBC World News at 10 PM on our public television station as they pay attention to stories where any major event is occuring whether it is a developed nation or not. They have been giving frequent reports not only on the flooding in Southeast Asia but also on the progress in Dafur among the rebel leaders recent meeting and how the UN is proceeding. I would strongly recommend anyone who is interested in what is happening in our world outside of the US to watch the BBC World News if it is available in your area. For those who are interested in helping in relief efforts, there are a number of international relief agencies (such as Catholic Relief Services, Save the Children and International Red Cross) that have been deployed to the region.

    Like

  6. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    Kristen,
    Thanks for the suggestion for a donation to the relief efforts. That is one tangible way we can be of help, even if only in a small way.

    Like

  7. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    Thank you, Erie.

    Like

  8. Maureen McDermott Avatar
    Maureen McDermott

    Thank you ever so much for awakening me to this horrific human and natural disaster. Like the USA this tragedy was not considered to be of prime importance on our Australian media. Isn’t it wonderful that modern technology can broaden us in ways that traditional media fails us? Now, we can join the prayerful, financial and awareness support.

    Like

Leave a reply to Diana Gallaher Cancel reply