When I read audiobooks, sometimes a passage goes by and I find myself driving along, thinking “did I really hear what I think I heard?” That was the case in a passage of Dreams of Joy by Lisa See when the protagonists are traveling from Shanghai into the countryside, to rescue a family member from starvation during the Great Chinese Famine. As Pearl drives along, she and her companion discover a field where people are in holes. The people are alive, but they can’t get out of the holes (they have been left to die). At first Pearl sees just one person, and she is starting to think of how she can rescue the person. Then she sees that the field is filled with others in the same situation. She is resigned to the fact that she can help no one as her companion Z.G. reminds her that they are on their way to rescue their own flesh and blood.
Like Pearl, when I learned from OxFam America of the desperate situation in the Sahel, and the need to put this situation back in the minds of people, I wondered what I could say or do that would make a difference to even one person in the Sahel. The difference between Pearl’s situation and mine is that she existed in a work of fiction (although the famine was very real); the people of the Sahel are at the epicenter of a crisis and their situation is very, very “non fiction” and we do not have to leave them behind to die.
1 million children are at risk of acute malnutrition. Parents are forced to sell essential tools and livestock in order to feed their families.What can you and I do to help any of these 18 million people? There are several things.
I must admit, I have a lot to learn about what can be done to increase community resiliency. It is mentioned in this informative and compelling article by Nathalie Bonvin as a key strategy to impacting this problem. Gotta say, Martin, learning more is on my to-do list!
Wife of one, Mom of two, Friend of many. My pronouns are she/her/hers.
ft lauderdale hotels says
I am in total agreement with Djimon
Arnebya says
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Arnebya says
I had to show my girls the YouTube video. After reading just your first paragraph, I had to stop and come back. I literally stared at the screen in disbelief. Shock, maybe? Disgust, sure. And it makes me want to rail against the world, scream at everyone who will listen that as we ride around in billion dollar cars and pay thousands for shoes there are PEOPLE IN HOLES.
My girls were quiet after watching. I let them be. We discussed it later as I hoped they'd ask how they could help, what they could do. They did, but I haven't yet figured out our next step. I will.