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King of the beasts in Florence, 2023 |
At that time we always differentiated between "the big kids" (teenagers) and "us". The guy lying on his back made eye contact with me and began calling out for help. I was between 50 and 100 feet away, trying to process what I was seeing. The youth on the ground had evidently been stripped because his underwear, pants and shirt had been throw up into the branches of the tree above him. Of the three teens who were standing, two were holding the fourth down, and the leader of the pack appeared to be whipping the captive one on the groin area with a fistful of branches. This last one turned and made eye contact with me, making a direct threat if I said anything.
Over the course of a lifetime I have met several people who witnessed violence and did nothing other than regret later that they either didn't intervene or didn't say anything. It's a hard experience to process.
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The above story came to mind when I think about what is happening in Gaza. Can we really watch this horror and say nothing, do nothing?
Here is an excerpt from Chris Hedges' substack that was published yesterday:
Gaza is a wasteland of 50 million tons of rubble and debris. Rats and dogs scavenge amid the ruins and fetid pools of raw sewage. The putrid stench and contamination of decaying corpses rises from beneath the mountains of shattered concrete. There is no clean water. Little food. A severe shortage of medical services and hardly any habitable shelters. Palestinians risk death from unexploded ordnance, left behind after over 15 months of air strikes, artillery barrages, missile strikes and blasts from tank shells, and a variety of toxic substances, including pools of raw sewage and asbestos.
Hepatitis A, caused by drinking contaminated water, is rampanr as are respiratory ailments, scabies, malnutrition, starvation and the widespread nausea and vomiting caused by eating rancid food. The vulnerable, including infants and the elderly, along with the sick, face a death sentence. Some 1.9 million people have been displaced, amounting to 90 percent of the population. They live in makeshift tents, encamped amid slabs of concrete or the open air. Many have been forced to move over a dozen times. Nine in 10 homes have been destroyed or damaged.
I find the devastation in Gaza is heartbreaking. Yet, here in the U.S., life goes on, tra-la-la. From the beginning it seems there was nothing any ordinary citizen could do to persuade our government leaders to stop sending bombs.
Apartment blocks where families lived, schools, hospitals, universities and even places of worship have been obliterated. This destruction extends to cemeteries, local shops, and offices, leaving the community without vital structures that support daily life.
One article I read mentioned the economic toll on Gaza. I couldn't imagine any kind of organized economy in the midst of this rubble. According to Hedges, unemployment is nearing 80% with the gross domestic product plummeting by nearly 85%. Here is an October 2024 report from the International Labor Organization that puts this in perspective.
Then there's the ban on the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East. Israel has cut off a critical lifeline. This agency, which predicted that clearing the rubble will take 15 years, had been one of the few sources of basic humanitarian supplies, food, and services for the people of Gaza.
Again, what disturbs many of us is this feeling of helplessness about it all.
As for the future, what next? It's not going to be a cakewalk.
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Source and stimulus: The Chris Hedges Report
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