Sunday 22 February 2009

Oh please

Some are familiar with the fact that I'm becoming a bit uneasy with movies like SlumDog Millionaire - as to whether they are exploiting the extreme poverty of people for our first world entertainment. I was watching another of these movies last night (Blood Diamond) and the reporter in it sums up my thoughts exactly: We write and take all these pictures of suffering people, we draw a tear or two, maybe even get a cheque written. But in the end - no one really cares. No ones really going to stand up and do something about it.

As a disclaimer, I believe movies like slumdog millionnaire and blood diamond can be useful if they are used in the context of a holistic education on events or realities in the world, reminding watchers that for 99.999% of the people involved, there isn't a happy ending. Together with these movies, audiences need to be made aware of the need to do something about these issues - be it through pressuring the government, to raising awareness, to actually getting out there and doing something. Unfortunately, the "unhappy" message doesn't get transmitted to most of the people watching these movies (after all, people are going to the movies to be entertained, not challenged).

So what we end up with is the "pornography of poverty", where the events of another world are turned into our entertainment. Where what is a serious matter is turned into an object to be devoured by audiences for their pleasure.

The title of this age article couldn't have said it better..."Do the SlumDog!" So now the concept of slum dwellers living and dying poverty is a colloqual term for a hip and fashionable dance. Please.

(PS i have written to the Age about it)

Friday 6 February 2009

Confessions

I confess - I'm not itching and raving to drop everything and go work in a developing world.

I know how much of a need there is - I've spent 3 months living with the people (mud huts and all) in the poorest regions of India (it isn't much, but it's something). I've read article after article quoting international statistic after statistic, with plenty of case commentaries to demonstrate the difficulty of the situation. Mentors and friends have shared stories about the challenges and trials of working in these areas. I have been moved to tears by sights of poverty and hopelessness.

Unyet, I don't feel like dropping everything I have and heading over there ASAP.

Don't get me wrong, I have immense respect for people who sacrifice much to work overseas, and believe there is a genuine need for all Christians (including myself) to be involved in global missions, in whatever capacity. However, at the same time I can't help but feel that we have "glamorised" the overseas experience, and fixated our eyes on it, while Rome burns.

You don't need to be a genius to realise that our society is cracking at the seams - our health systems are breaking, families are being destroyed, street violence is on the rise, and so on. In many ways, the developed world is a ticking time bomb; we have archaic systems and mentalities in place that are woefully inadequate to meet the changing needs and demands of society, yet this is a society that is integral to the global village (the recent economic crash is a typical example of the central role developed nations play in the world).

An example has grown out of my experience in community pediatrics over the last one month. It has been decades since the concept of the "new morbidity" has been put forth, when pediatricians began to notice the replacement of "developing world" diseases such as meningitis, with developmental problems - learning disabilities, behavioral problems and so on.

"Bah" you may say, "having difficulty learning is nothing when compared to starving to death". In some ways that is true, but consider this - in todays highly educated, competitive and academically oriented culture, a learning disability is going to have massive social repercussions, much more than in a more traditional culture. The label of "dumb" rapidly progresses to bullying, school dropouts, and eventually substance and drug abuse, unemployment and involvement in street violence. Child Safety Commissioner Bernie Geary is quite certain where many of these kids end up: prison. It doesn't take long to see what a social disaster this could become, with up to 20% of Australian kids now having a functionally significant learning impairment. Can we seriously make a value distinction between the impact of starvation and the impact of violence/substance abuse/imprisonment?

In many ways, I can't help but feel that this is going the way of Christian evangelism: for years it was "the West to the Rest", but now, for a variety of reasons, it's very much "the Rest to the West". Unless we keep vigilant on what's happening at home, we could easily end up on a downhill slope in society. Already Keating and Hertzman (1999) have noticed this "paradox of modernity" - that Marmot's social ladder of health is beginning to falter in our modern world.

And so the next time you are tempted to think that the third world is only place needing prayer and transformation effected through the work of the body of Christ, remember events such as this merely scratch the surface of a deeper disease beginning to eat away at the roots of our society.