The Guardian (USA)

The Greek shipwreck was a horrific tragedy. Yet it didn’t get the attention of the Titanic story

- Arwa Mahdawi

Have you heard about the billionair­e and multimilli­onaires trapped on a submersibl­e after spending up to $250,000 each to view the wreckage of the Titanic? Of course you have. The story has been headline news in anglophone countries ever since the vessel, named the Titan, went missing. Enormous resources have been deployed to try to recover the passengers. Every tiny developmen­t has been exhaustive­ly covered. Millions of people, myself included, have been glued to the live blogs and rolling coverage. And millions of people, myself included, are now newly minted experts on the difference between a submersibl­e and a submarine.

It’s completely natural to be glued to the Titan story because, obviously, it’s one hell of a story. Yes, the circumstan­ces are unfathomab­ly awful but, also, they’re so unfathomab­ly awful that they seem unreal. The whole thing feels like a movie – like the latest instalment of the Knives Out series. I mean, come on, there’s a billionair­e called Hamish Harding involved. The company who made the submersibl­e is called OceanGate: it’s as if it was named in preparatio­n for a massive controvers­y.

The chief executive of OceanGate – a company which appears to have cut a lot of corners in its quest to build things quickly without regard to boring old safety regulation­s – is called Stockton Rush. The story seems almost too ludicrous to be true. It seems absurd that people paid obscene amounts of money to get into something which might as well have been called Tiny Little Death Trap.

While it’s only natural to be glued to the Titan story, it’s far from the only recent maritime tragedy in recent weeks. And yet it’s absorbing a disproport­ionate amount of the world’s attention, empathy and resources. Last

Wednesday, one of the worst tragedies that has ever occurred on the Mediterran­ean Sea took place: a fishing boat carrying about 750 people, mainly Pakistani and Afghan migrants, capsized on its way to Italy. There were 100 children below deck in that ship. One hundred children. The exact number of fatalities is unclear: so far we know that 78 people have been confirmed dead and as many as 500 are missing. Those are heartbreak­ing numbers and yet hundreds of dead and missing migrants have failed to garner anywhere near the amount of attention from the US media as five rich adventurer­s.

I’m not saying there hasn’t been any coverage of the Greek shipwreck. Of course there has. But it pales in comparison to the attention that’s been given to the Titan’s disappeara­nce. The rescue efforts also couldn’t be more different: a frantic rush to save five wealthy people versus a shoulder shrug at the idea of 100 children dead at the bottom of the sea.

The Greek coastguard and government officials, in response to criticism of their handling of the disaster, have said that people on board refused any help. Activists, on the other hand, have said the people on board were pleading for help more than 15 hours before it sank. In any case, is it really the job of a coastguard to look at a ship full of desperate people, full of innocent children, and decide they don’t want help? Nobody looked at the Titan and thought: ahh well, they signed a waiver saying they accepted death was a possibilit­y, there’s no point saving them.

Again, the Greek shipwreck is one of the worst tragedies there has ever been in the Mediterran­ean. And that’s saying a lot, because the Mediterran­ean is a mass grave. Every year, tens of thousands of people flee poverty and persecutio­n in the hope of a better life and every year hundreds of those people die in the attempt. More than 1,200 people died in the Mediterran­ean in 2022, and there have been about 25,000 deaths since 2014.

It’s hard to get your head around those numbers, isn’t it? It’s hard to absorb that amount of anguish. And that’s precisely the problem. If you find yourself more captivated by the story of five rich people in a submersibl­e rather than the 750 people who sank on a fishing trawler, it’s not because you’re a bad person. It’s because it’s human nature to be feel overwhelme­d by suffering at scale; it’s called psychic numbing. As the saying goes, one death is a tragedy, a million deaths is a statistic.

 ?? Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters ?? ‘A frantic rush to save five wealthy people versus a shoulder shrug at the idea of 100 kids dead at the bottom of the sea.’ Photograph:
Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters ‘A frantic rush to save five wealthy people versus a shoulder shrug at the idea of 100 kids dead at the bottom of the sea.’ Photograph:

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