This piece began on December 15th when an armed
man held 17 people hostage in a café in Sydney. This is my city and I love my
city, but this is not how I want the world to see my city. Unfortunately, this
is now part of the fabric of my city, part of the tragic underbelly of the city
I love. In the end, 2 innocent lives were lost. Two beautiful, innocent people
are now mourned by an entire city.
Photo courtesy of abc.net.au |
A floral tribute has sprawled across Martin Place near to
where the siege took place. It is the visual expression of a city stuck by
grief. For many it is the only way they can display their sense of loss and
dismay. The flowers will eventually give way to a more permanent memorial but
the spontaneous, beautiful, peaceful tribute that spreads across the ground is
somehow the perfect way for my city to define its overwhelming sense of loss
and mourning this Christmas.
Just when we, as a city, were beginning to get our
collective heads around what had happened in the heart of our financial
district, news began to filter through of a far worse loss. In Nigeria, a
militant group known as Boko Haram stormed a village, taking over 200 residents
hostage and killing over 30.
This was the same group that kidnapped 200 schoolgirls
earlier in the year who are yet to be found and presumed dead. The utter
confusion surround events such as this is highlighted by the fluctuating numbers
surrounding not only how many are being held, but how many have lost their
lives as well. How do you mourn an indeterminate number of people?
Photo courtesy of bbc.com |
As the number increases over the days, then subsides, then
rises again, what do we do with our grief? Does it turn to frustration? Should
we be ashamed of our shifting view of the unfolding tragedy? How do we temper
our grief with the need to carry on with our own lives? Is our grief limited by
distance or sheer size of the group?
Sometime I feel we mourn the one more so that we mourn the
many. It can be hard to know how to grieve for a large group and when we were
faced with another massacre, this time in Pakistan, it felt like the underling
feeling, while still a terrible sense of loss, was “not again”. It was a
tragedy that would grip the hearts and minds of every parent, every educator,
every citizen with an ounce of compassion, but maybe due to the distance or the
overwhelming magnitude of the loss, the mourning took on a surreal tinge.
A normal school day for military families ended in bloodshed
when Taliban fighters entered the school and held over 500 people, the majority
being children, hostage. Students and teachers lost their lives in the brutal
attack that can only be described as a massacre. Reports came through of children
witnessing their classmates being executed, of playing dead to avoid the fate
they had seen befall so many others and of families devastated.
Photo courtesy of bbc.com |
And now, as I sit here writing, the Australian community is
trying to understand yet another senseless tragedy. The loss of 8 children in
Cairns, possibly at the hand of the mother of some them, is unfathomable. We
not only feel the loss as a country, but we grieve on behalf of the brother
that found them. We grieve on behalf on the relatives that must someone come to
terms with that fact that not only have they lost 8 young members of the
family, but that a member of the family may be responsible.
Photo courtesy of abc.net.au |
Of course, we have every right. It is an expression of our compassion
or sympathy or empathy, or all of the above. It is a stand against the crimes
that have been committed, a public outpouring of the grief and anger which demonstrates,
in the most raw of manners, that we will not let the tragedy be for nought.
Their deaths mean something, not just to those who knew them, but to a city, a
country, maybe even the entire planet. They will not only serve the living as a
reminder of what terrible atrocities have happened, but of what courage
humanity is capable of, what generosity of spirit, what selflessness and what
this season means regardless of colour, creed, culture or religion.
If you are grieving,
mourning the loss of a loved one, then allow it to happen. There is no end
point to grief. It is something that we carry with us always and use always as
we traverse this path we call life. The pain may lesson, the day-to-day mundane
activities may once again take the foremost place in our mind, but our grief
allows us to remember, to show compassion towards those that are suffering, to
sympathise with anothers loss and to empathise with those whose loss may be so
much greater than our own.
Tonight, I will hug my son a little tighter, give him an
extra kiss goodnight, and be thankful that I am not faced with the loss of
someone close to me in such tragic circumstances as those we have seen this
week. My heart goes out to those affected by recent events and, though my grief
pales into insignificance beside theirs, I feel their pain and hope they can
find peace in their heart in time.
good piece, Nona. The second paragraph has a lot of 'city' in it, did you intend for so much repetition?
ReplyDeleteYes, the repetition was intentional. It wasn't the word "city" but the phrase "my city" that I was repeating. I wanted to convey that sense of ownership and belonging - a territorial reaction to a threat. I'm glad you enjoyed it otherwise.
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