On the night of April 14th,
2014, almost 300 Nigerian schoolgirls from the village of Chibok were
kidnapped by Boko Haram, an Islamist terrorist organization. I did
not write an article about this event.
Why am I writing about it now, two
months “late”? Well, even though the entire media was in an
uproar about it in April, I haven't heard a word about these girls
for many weeks- not from news organizations, not from open-source
websites, and not from human lips. Are the young scholars still
missing? Yes. Are they still being kept as sex-slaves and many being
indoctrinated into Islamism against their will? Yes. Does the public
still care? Not really.
After two months of imprisonment,
surely these girls have given up hope. If I were among them, I would
have. Despite a twitter campaign, empty promises from the government, and many people claiming that "I won't be able to rest until the victims are returned home", the world has forgotten about them already. I suppose that shows exactly how much Western society cares about people who are only an ocean away- and yet, an ocean is enough to separate the lamented from the forgotten, the rescued from the abandoned, and the saved from the damned.
Image credit to ABC News |
Sources: www.cnn.com, videos released by the Boko Haram terrorist group
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