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Somalia 1992
By John O'Shea
Somalia in the summer of 1992 was as close as I've seen to hell
on earth. Struggling to save lives in a country gripped by famine
is a desperately difficult task, but when you are surrounded by
the threat of violence every minute of the day, the situation becomes
almost intolerable.
In Somalia, death was everywhere, but it seemed as if the world
didn't care. If you're not a medic, working in a famine zone can
be doubly difficult. Faced with a staving child, you feel utterly
helpless. All you can do is watch while groups of Irish doctors
and nurses work their magic, day and night, week after week.
In truth, I was glad to be leaving the northern city of Baidoa
that summer's evening, having talked my way onto a cargo flight
returning to Kenya. From there, I could return to Dublin, and begin
to raise awareness about Somalia's plight.
The only other passenger on the plane that evening was a doctor
from the Arab League, a man who himself was clearly distressed by
the scale of Somalia's suffering, and the world's failure to respond
to it.
We had been talking for an hour or more when he asked: "where are
you from?" "Ireland," I said. "Ah," he responded, smiling, "the
caring nation." Twenty five thousand feet above Somalia, away from
the misery, the suffering and the death, I felt deeply moved.
For so many people around the world, the Irish are legendary drinkers,
great storytellers, natural comics. But in Somalia, where it mattered
most, we were the ones who cared.
None of the Irish doctors and nurses who worked in Somalia had
to leave the security of their homes - none of them were forced
to risk their lives in the Horn of Africa so that others might survive.
But they came and worked without pay because they cared about
the plight of their fellow human beings.
Almost two decades on, as the roar of the Celtic Tiger drowns
out all other voices, I look back with pride at that time when we
gained the respect of the world not because we were successful,
but because we cared.
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