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The Asia Quake: Has catastrophe really made us a more caring world?

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  • The Asia Quake: Has catastrophe really made us a more caring world?

    THE ASIA QUAKE : Has this catastrophe really made us a more caring world?

    Irish Independent
    Jan 08, 2005


    By Mary Kenny

    Has the world been changed by the terrible tsunami in Asia? Has human
    nature been altered by this appalling catastrophe, brought home to us
    by the television cameras with more vividness than any other
    catastrophe in history?

    It certainly seemed like that in the two weeks following the
    disaster. An unprecedented flow of global generosity poured out from
    all countries, a flow led not by politicians or other leaders but
    spontaneously erupting from ordinary people. Within two weeks,
    worldwide pledges of donations had reached $3bn (â=82¬ 2.27bn) - a sum
    of money never before collected in such a short time for a caring
    cause.

    And if 'globalisation' is a dirty word in the mouths of some - the
    'anti-globalisation' campaigners certainly have used it thus - after
    the tsunami the admirable and uplifting aspect of a global
    consciousness became evident. People were not thinking in terms of
    national, racial or religious relief. They were thinking globally.

    Back in the 20th century, kindly and compassionate gestures were
    certainly made for peoples who had suffered catastrophe, but these
    were usually on some basis of kinship. The Irish-Americans helped
    Ireland; the British helped those they were linked to by 'Empire'; the
    Church of England helped the Armenian peoples because they were being
    persecuted by the Islamic Turks; the Catholic Church in Ireland raised
    quite a lot of help for victims of the Russian famines in the 1920s,
    partly because the victims were often Christians starved out by an
    atheistic regime and partly because the very word 'famine' is always
    evocative in Ireland.

    But with the tsunami, it hasn't been like that at all. This global
    response was for suffering humanity, with no particular links of
    kinship or other points of common cultural identity. It was pure,
    globalised altruism. Indeed, some Darwinist thinkers were quite
    puzzled by it, since Darwinism teaches that we are programmed to give
    preference to peoples who might be related to us over those with whom
    we share no gene pool.

    So, yes, in one way we could conclude that the tsunami has been a
    turning point for the 'global village'. Its terrifying scale and
    unpredictability has raised awareness that there must be a sustained
    globalised response to catastrophes and, further, that the richer
    world must be ready to help the poorer world on a continuing basis.

    This is not entirely a new idea. The notion of alms-giving is explicit
    in almost every religion - Judaism and Islam are particularly emphatic
    about it. You are obliged to give to the poor and the needy. In
    Ireland, that generosity has always been quite remarkable, and however
    much bad publicity the Catholic Church has had over the past decade,
    hostility never affected the caritas role of the Church. Year in, year
    out, the St Vincent de Paul still attracted support and revenue.

    Calvinism did not approve of charity to the same extent as older
    faiths: the Calvinist strain distinguished between the 'deserving' and
    the 'undeserving' poor. The deserving poor were merely unlucky; the
    undeserving were the feckless and improvident who had brought it all
    on themselves and would never alter their behaviour. That dilemma is
    still with us each time we pass a beggar in the street. Is it kind to
    give him money, knowing full well that he is likely to spend it on
    drugs that will keep him where he is? Or should we simply act
    charitably and not enquire where the money goes?

    On a larger scale, some of the post-tsunami donors will be asking the
    same question: is it right to give money where a society is corrupt?
    Or should we just be charitable without a strings-attached clause?

    All in all, the tsunami has pushed the world more towards the spirit
    of generosity. Even where governments are corrupt, we realise that
    people are needy. And we should have a worldwide consciousness of
    these needs. It's as if the tsunami has almost ushered in an idea
    pledged in the Communist Manifesto of1848: "From each according to his
    ability, to each according to his need".

    But if the world order has been changed by this catastrophe, it is
    less likely that human nature itself has. Disasters shake us and
    resolve us to show humanity, but soon enough the Old Adam
    appears. There are people who immediately show great kindness and
    heroism, but there are also people who quickly take advantage. Within
    a week of the disaster, in Britain, there were reports that special
    collections for tsunami victims had been stolen by thieves. Within 10
    days, there were reliable reports coming from Unicef that gangs were
    recruiting tsunami orphans to sell into the sex trade. There were
    grumbles, too, from other charities that money collected for the
    tsunami victims would now meanless revenue for them.

    There were proclamations from Islamic clerics that the tsunami was a
    punishment from God for all the sex-tourism and prostitution that has
    been associated with some parts of the Far East. And the internet was
    awash with other conspiracy theories: the Americans were quickly
    blamed, as they so often are now. Strange, was it not, that the
    island of Diego Garcia, host to an American airbase, was untouched by
    the tidal wave? Actually, there is a geological explanation, but that
    would spoil the conspiracy theory!

    There is something frightening and extraordinary about the thought
    that the tectonic plates can move beneath the surface of the ocean and
    the globe itself can shift on its axis. The world has been changed by
    this knowledge. And for all that we complain about the rubbishy aspect
    of television, this is one great service that TV and international
    communications have performed: bringing it all so close to us.

    But to sustain that consciousness, and to maintain that sense of
    global solidarity will require a change in human nature itself. And
    that has always been somewhat more difficult to achieve.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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