Compassion fatigue is a term I heard many years ago perhaps
when there were a number of natural and man-made disasters and conflicts in the
late 1980s. The term came to my mind in the last few weeks. Another saying:
think globally and act locally. So thinking globally, I was thinking how
humanity could descend to such barbarity around the world. How could African
migrants risk their lives to leave countries wrecked psychologically and
economically by colonial Europeans to seek to arrive in the same continent that
subjugated them? How could Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslims be slaughtered in the
thousands by the majority Buddhists and surviving people end up in boats and
sent back to starve and die at sea rejected by nearby countries including
countries like Indonesia with Muslim majorities? How could relatives of Jewish
holocaust survivors engage in racism and ethnic cleansing for native Palestinians
while relatives of Armenian holocaust survivors lead amazingly rich productive
caring lives? How could a very wealthy country like “Saudi Arabia” (the quotes
are needed because it is an imposed name for a country stolen by the Saud
Family) spend billions to support the US/Israeli agenda of destruction and
mayhem in countries like Yemen and Syria? How could a pilot who claims being
Muslim drop bombs on Muslim civilians? How could a powerful and rich country
like the USA be so occupied by the Zionist lobby that they send their “police”
to train in racism and oppression in Apartheid Israel and then go back to kill
blacks in American cities? How does the world tolerate the continued siege on
Gaza and its starving and dying population (the largest open air prison with
1.7 million inmates whose only crime is being born in Palestine)? How could the
world stand by and let Egypt execute political dissidents or imprison them for
decades simply for demanding freedom from the entrenched military dictatorship
funded by US taxpayers? The US and Canada Zionist lobbies just might succeed in
getting unconstitutional laws passed to ban standing up for human rights
(supporting BDS against the apartheid regime). It might get worse with
the lobby getting the subservient governments to force the political neutered
Palestinian leadership to accept a version of apartheid (and no refugees’ right
of return). But then that is what the PA leadership knew would happen
when they signed the articles of surrender known as the Oslo accords.
So did humans develop compassion fatigue and does this bode
ill for our future as a species? I do not know and cannot predict the future. I
can only act against the negative trends and draw closer to other activists.
When we do find people who still cares, we latch onto them and try to do
something together to keep our sanity. Palestinians were genuinely happy that
the Pope decided to canonize two 19th century Palestinians nuns as saints
and conclude an agreement recognizing “state of Palestine”. Those
positive people trying to do good things are so needed when so many are either
apathetic or directly benefitting Israel while getting rich. Without the few
lights in the darkness, we would all be lost and very depressed. Perhaps this
is why the presence of volunteers around us in the museum and the botanical
garden/integrated ecosystem is so crucial to our health. When we walk or work
in the garden with others, we feel reinvigorated physically and
psychologically. In fact when we do any work together, we feel empowered. On
Nakba memorial day last week we had a number of activities including installing
a large visible plaque that included sections of the famous poem by Tawfiq
Ziyad (“here we stay”). The next day, we hosted a workshop on trauma relief
through herbal medicines and working on gardens. We then hosed 44 Nazareth
colleagues on a tour of Battir then lunch at the museum. Yesterday we
attended a meeting on biodiversity, did field work and got two Bedouin children
to help us near their camp by picking up some round rocks we needed for our
pool at the museum. They were so nice and so friendly and their smiles even
after the sweaty job will always be with me. Their community spirit is strong
even when they are threatened as a community with evictions (was done to them
before). So while thinking globally we are able to act on location and keep
going based on a vision that all these borders and divisions and conflicts they
foist on us will be gone one day. We dream of an interconnected free society
and of traveling free from Bethlehem to Jaffa to Nazareth to Beirut and
Damascus without anyone stopping us at any border. On my desk is a quote
from the Dalai Lama “Never give up. No matter what is going on around you.
Never give up…” Sometimes we do not know the best way forward but we
should never give up. I have a friend in Gaza whose son had spinal cord cancer
and now partly paralyzed and the family constantly calls for support. But that
is one of dozens of stories, needs fulfilled or unfulfilled etc. It is natural
occasionally to have doubts about our future as a species and frequently to
reassess our methods. But we must keep the hope alive. We must keep dreaming,
keep trying, keep working, and keep living. We must never give up. We must
“stay human” as Vittorio used to write to us.
South Africans apologize over forest planted on Palestinian
village
(incidentally our studies and those of others show how
environmentally destructive was the planting of European pine trees to cover-up
the destroyed Palestinian Villages)
In Gaza, the Nakba is ongoing and you can help us end it
http://electronicintifada.net/content/gaza-nakba-ongoing-and-you-can-help-us-end-it/14527
US press blacks out Israeli defense minister’s citation of
‘Nagasaki and Hiroshima’ as model for dealing with Iran - See more at: http://mondoweiss.net/2015/05/ministers-nagasaki-hiroshima
Yes, Qumsiyeh, how to stay human is the challenge especially since giving up is also human! I wonder if true compassion gets fatigued or if fatigue is just another way of being human. Perhaps humans are based on a flawed design?
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