When I was 17 my least favorite morning of the week was
Saturday. With an ever-changing extracurricular
activity schedule, Saturday morning was my one set shift at the local dry
cleaners, which dragged me out of bed before 8am, and at that age indicated
torture. The shift lasted four hours and always included a bagel brought by a
sympathetic friend and a pile of gossip magazines supplied by my boss to
entertain me while in-between helping customers at the counter. I should also
mention that I received $40 for those “hard” worked Saturdays, totaling $120.00
a month pre-taxes.
On Wednesday, any avid news watcher would be able to tell
you that a factory building collapsed in Dhaka, Bangladesh which housed 3,122
employees who produced garments that are
out sourced for the western world. And by this morning, any avid news watcher
could tell you that the death toll count of these factory workers is up to 364,
with 2,200 rescued (many at the cost of their limbs), and an estimated 550
people missing under the debris. With today marking Sunday, the 5th
day since the catastrophe, it is well past the estimated 72 hours a human being
can survive without food and water. I mentioned those who would know these
facts would have to be an avid news watcher because it has been my observation
that these stories, even in Dhaka, run second and third to what is happening in
the first or Western World. On Thursday I could tell you more about how much
the Boston Marathon bombers mother shoplifted from a Natick, MA mall then how
many factory workers were still missing from watching the news.
I was reminded of my job at the local dry cleaners and my
$120.00 a month I then received, as I watched a 17 year old girl interviewed
today after her hand was cut off from the slab of cement it was mangled under to
rescue her from debris. The station called her lucky and I went numb thinking
how at age 17 I would have defined lucky. It would have incorporated more than
a minimum wage of $38.00 a month, it would have indicated that if a building
was deemed unsafe on a Tuesday, I would not have been forced to return on a
Wednesday, and without question it would have included 2 hands.
Being American I know that I am just as much part of the
problem as the solution. As I walked the hospital corridors down to the ward
filled with women rescued from the collapse today, I realized any of the items
I was clothed in may have come from a similar unsafe factory in Asia, as
Bangladesh reports they release 23% of their garment productions to America
annually. I realized while I was being brought down to comfort them, I just as
much owed them an apology for being part of a world that allows this kind of treatment
and I caught my breathe when my guide was asked to bring us to the unit at another
time as the Prime Minister of Bangladesh
was currently inside visiting.
As we turned to leave someone asked me, “If you want I can
take you outside to see the piles of bodies that weren’t pronounced dead until
they got to the hospital”, and while I politely declined, I turned in time to
see a lifeless woman my age being wheeled by to join the others. I said a
prayer, not knowing if it was to the god she believed in or the one I had been
raised to believe in, but pictured both fundamentally saying “We hate this too, were working on it,
and so can you”.
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