Early in the morning, a fisherman
leaves the shore of the lake, a wind-filled sail and the gentle lapping of water
around the hull of his simple craft. A man alone, setting sail to support his
family by the work of his hands, his skill and his experience.
Others gather on the North African coast, coming
from different countries where their, lives have become impossible, seeking
landfall in
Europe
to start again. There they crowd on boats, whose
sea-worthiness is questionable, having paid large sums of money for the doubtful
privilege. What desperation makes men women and their young children take such a
risk?
The news over the last couple of weeks of those who
have tried to make the journey has been of great loss of life, the cost of
trying to escape has been a tale of tragedy. And the death toll continues to
rise.
After meeting the Italian president, Pope Francis
said that “It is evident that the proportions of the
phenomenon demand much greater involvement. We must not tire in our attempts to
solicit a more extensive response at the European and international level.”
This
is not
Italy
’s problem alone, it extends beyond their Mediterranean
coast line.
Francis
responded to the current crisis by saying “I want to
express my gratitude for
Italy
’s undertaking in welcoming the
numerous migrants seeking refuge at the risk of their lives,”
The contrast between the
fisherman alone on the lake under an early morning sun and the over-crowded
vessels filled with anxious, frightened humanity, couldn’t be greater.
The final lines of Wilfred Owen’s poem
‘Insensibility’
“Before the last sea and the hapless stars;
Whatever
mourns when many leave these shores;
Whatever
shares
The
eternal reciprocity of tears”.
conclude the story of a young soldier leaving his
homeland during the First World War. But these boat people are not soldiers,
neither were the boat people who fled Vietnam following the conclusion of the
war in south-east Asia with the fall of Saigon fifty years ago this year. They
seek the possibility of a life without constant fear, a chance to believe
without threat.
Our great risk is that each event becomes another news item, the numbers
change as the few survivors are
brought ashore huddled in protective blankets, shock written on their strained
faces. Then we move on to our own local concerns and tragedy becomes a memory.
The
anonymous author of the 16th Century song "The
Western Wynde" wrote
O
Western wind when wilt thou blow
That small rain down can rain:--
Christ, that my love were in my arms
And I in my bed again.
Those
few words express a deep human longing, the pain of separation and the fragility
of life on this Earth. May our prayers and our resources, our compassion and our
understanding be with those in peril on the sea.
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