Monday May 19, 2008
Earthquake in China IV - In Memoriam
The state of Israel uses the air raid siren systems three times a year
for commemoration rather than "the real thing". Every year, on the
twenty seventh day of the Hebrew month of Nissan (usually around
April), at 11:00 AM the siren goes off in commemoration of the six
million Jews killed by the Nazis during WWII. Every year, on the
fourth day of the month of Iyar at 8:00 PM, and the following morning
at 11:00 AM, the sirens wail in commemoration of the Israeli soldiers
who lost their lives defending the homeland, and the victims of hostile
attacks on Israelis around the world. The expected behavior, when
hearing the sirens cries, is to stop whatever it is that you're doing,
and pay your respects by standing straight, your head bowing, thinking
of all those who made your life a possibility. It's a very uniting
act, and it always gave me the feeling of being part of something a lot
larger than myself. For a declared atheist, this is a significant
deviation from an individual point of view, to the collective. Yet, I
always thought that it is a proper way to show that you too, are part
of this collective, and that you too appreciate the sacrifice. It's an
exercise in humility.
Today, May nineteenth, 2008, I experienced the same in Beijing, only
many orders of magnitudes larger. It was an amazing experience.
At 2:28 PM, exactly the time when the earthquake struck, China came to
a halt. Beijing came to a standstill. Millions upon millions of
people around the country stopped whatever they were doing, stood
straight, their heads bowed down, paying their respects to the dead, to
the people who lost their lives in the earthquake last week. Lines and
lines of people stood there, motionless, thinking. The drivers were
honking their horns. Millions of horns with the air raid siren
sounding in the background was indeed a surrealistic sound, and the
scene was as surreal.
I can only imagine what they were thinking. I know what I was
thinking. I was thinking how would I do if I went through an ordeal as
such, and survived. I was thinking, how would I save my family, my
friends, total strangers. I was thinking about the sheer power of
nature. I was hoping. I was wishing.
For a few minutes there, I was part of a much larger group. Probably
the largest ever to be standing at the same time, respecting the same
victims, mourning. A lesson in humility, larger than life. Larger
than a million lives.
Posted at 09:27PM May 19, 2008 by Amiram Hayardeny in Personal | Comments[2]
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