The big picture many of us are reluctant to speak of
KAMLOOPS — The recent shocking events in Charlottesville have unleashed many a deep emotion, as well as vociferation of opinions. The world was shocked and for good reasons. Marches ensued, thousands affirming that no human being matters less than others, period. Many are trying to make that a reality where we are and beyond.
We want to have compassion and kindness fueling our intentions, thoughtfulness to carry us towards a place where we all get along and make life work rather seamlessly. We want all people to be treated with respect, we want no violence and we shudder when we think that throughout time, humans enslaved, killed, and otherwise treated fellow humans in reprehensible ways. Wars still plague our world, but slavery was abolished a long time ago, and its ill effects on people need to be remembered (rather than celebrated with statues) so that history does not take us there again. Right?
Well, not so fast. Admit it or not, taking down all statues representing controversial historic figures will be, at best, the tip of the iceberg. Though it became the starter for the Charlottesville riot, the statue of a Confederate general and many others like it should help bring awareness to the mostly hidden issue of slavery that still plagues our world.
Drawing attention to it is but a moral duty that I cannot ignore. A rather conservative estimate by an organization called Free the Slaves, places the number of slaves at 21 million worldwide, with 78 percent of them in industries that rely on manual labour, and 22 percent in sex trade (other estimates place the figure at over 35 million slaves.) A quarter of these are children.