Monday
morning. At the camping. A relaxing tune comes from the background
and I am aimlessly gazing at the sea for a moment.
A
boat is floating, not much far from the shore.
My
senses are all alarmed.
I
walk to the camping fence with a sped up pace.
From
there I can easily see two bodies diving in the sea, perhaps even
posing before the actual dive. The remaining third person on the boat
starts paddling. A warm breeze whispers in my
ears; a boat close to the camping, bodies instantly hovering above
the easy wave... they
are on vacation, what else did
you expect?
For
a second I expected to see
bodies struggling to reach the shore, any shore. I expected there
would be no paddles, just a hull left to
sink. I expected to face the Mediterranean collapsing right under my
feet.
But
that was another time.
I
am on Samothraki now.
Yet
Turkey is not that far. It’s only a 3-hour sail, to be exact. If
there were a Customs Office on Samothraki, I could be there by noon.
Syria
is not far either. Neither is Afghanistan, nor is Iraq. Somewhere out
there, somewhere relatively close, the world is collapsing. Or it
already has.
Bodies
wearing sunscreen float in the Mediterranean
sea, but all I can see is disasters; with
each gentle push of the wave getting closer. Bodies
wearing sunscreen and bodies wearing life jackets, one next to the
other, diving and drowning.
Another
Kassandra, I think of myself.
And who ever liked her!
Photograph: what the waves bring, camping seaside on Samothraki, 14 July 2018.
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