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Fridays from the Frontline: An INSEAD Student in Asia Mourns for Paris, Holds Hope for the World

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On the other hand, how do we reconcile with mounting criticism over the fact that barely any media covered Lebanon and Iraq, events that happened barely 24 hours before Paris? Some critics even state it sends the signal that “not all lives are equal” in the eyes of the West, and that we do not seem to care. Indeed, even for a well-articulated mind, it becomes difficult to argue otherwise. So where do we go from here?

A humanization must happen across cultures, religions and geographies. Across ethnicities, we must recognize and embrace our fellow humans that live normal lives, and go through just as much suffering, pain, love and joy as us. And this should start well before any conflict or tragedy erupts.

Unmistakably, when pictures of attacks and grieving people from foreign countries make the headlines, I can’t bare the pain and flip to the next article. These images don’t register in my brain, because my brain doesn’t want them to. 15,000 km across the world, in a country I do not know, in a culture unknown to me where people speak a foreign language, hundreds of lives were lost. It just doesn’t register. Let’s just avoid the pain of internalizing these images.

On the other hand, we had Paris on a Friday night, in restaurants, cafés and at a football match. All the 129 names of the deceased will be made public, and many of them will have articles narrating their lives and last days. I could have been there. Friends of mine were not too far away, enjoying a nice Friday night on the town. This event did register with eerie clarity when I woke up reading about it Saturday morning. It registered and got cemented in my mind.

Indeed, if we, as “developed countries,” can’t even show we care about events happening in Iraq, Lebanon, Turkey…why should they do otherwise about us?

A humanization needs to happen across cultures, religions, geographies. We need to witness and learn how different people live all over the world. This would increase the “gray zone” of tolerance and reduce the absolute white and black. This must and this will happen as our lives in this global world are more connected than ever.

But for “them” to start caring about “our” sufferings, we should start caring about theirs as well. Pretending to do so is not going to cut it anymore. And we better start being aware of their reality not only in turbulent times, but also in times of peace. The planet must become a village where information flows both ways.

If, in the “Western World,” there were to be a greater attention, greater education to the way of life of foreign countries, perhaps Western countries would be more sensitized to lives lost there. Perhaps there would be a greater effort to save lives of civilians and avoid casualties. Perhaps then lives lost in the eyes of the West would be “just as equal.”

With the available mobile technology, internet, virtual reality, communities across geographies and within countries can be bridged, brought closer together. It has become increasingly easy to connect across the world. I have this vision where technology will be used for this purpose. It won’t be a question of us or them anymore. A vision where there won’t be many parts of the world, just one big planet, one united world where polarizing factions can’t find their place anymore. It won’t be black or white, but just a gray zone of tolerance, amongst yellow, brown, black and white.