The Brutality of Indifference
How the privileged world dehumanizes refugees, rendering their suffering invisible.
Quote
They were bodies. Not people. They were bodies, and the bodies were a problem, and the problem needed to be solved.
El Akkad shows the developed world's chilling indifference to the refugee crisis. The novel highlights how the tragedy's scale, combined with distance, lets those in comfort see displaced people not as individuals but as an abstract 'problem.' This dehumanization is a violent act, leading to policies that prioritize borders over human lives. The book forces readers to confront the moral failure of a society that sees mass drownings as an inconvenience rather than a catastrophe demanding empathy.
Supporting evidence
The recurring motif of bodies washing ashore, observed by indifferent tourists or pragmatic officials, underscores this point. The islanders' casual discussions about the 'migrant problem' while enjoying their lives starkly contrast with Amir's desperate fight for survival.
Apply this
Actively challenge narratives that dehumanize refugees. Seek out and share personal stories of displaced individuals to counteract generalized, abstract portrayals. Advocate for policies that prioritize humanitarian aid and safe passage over exclusionary border enforcement.









