Friday, October 2, 2020

Thoughts on World Population Day, 2020

 

Thoughts on World Population Day, 2020

The corona virus catastrophe has struck the world. It is wreaking havoc in every corner of the globe. Millions are suffering, many are dying and almost all are living in fear. The irony is, the experience of pain and apprehension is shared by all, a population of seven billion. The gross inequalities afflicting our world is absent though temporarily in this shared experience of anxiety and helplessness.

World today has a population of more than seven billion. A hundred million more will be added during the next year. While the population was growing, mankind has made exceptional progress in every arena. Very soon we would be on planet Mars. Yet with every passing day, the gap between the rich and the poor is growing. While a few are rejoicing in opulence, every minute someone is dying from hunger.

We are confident today, there will be a vaccine against corona virus within the next six months. Not so long ago millions would die in a pandemic while waiting for a cure or a vaccine. Medical science has made immense progress. Yet, a mother who sustains the world population by giving birth to a new life, has high risk of dying while giving birth. Maternal mortality not only affects third world countries of Africa, the rate is still alarming in our country. Poverty adds to the misery of ill health.

We are confident today, there will be a vaccine against coronavirus within the next six months. Not so long ago millions would die in a pandemic while waiting for a cure or a vaccine. Medical science has made immense progress. Yet, a mother who sustains the world population by giving birth to a new life has a high risk of dying while giving birth. Maternal mortality not only affects third world countries of Africa, the rate is still alarming in our country. Poverty adds to the misery of ill health.

In the world population of seven billion, everyone is not born equal. There are multiple divides. The starkest among these is the gender divide. We have an almost equal number of male and female. In most part of the world, females do not have an equal right, equal opportunity and even equal space to live as males. News articles on atrocities on women fill our daily newspapers. Female foeticides and infanticides are rampant. We celebrate the success of a few women while subjecting others to suffer from the unjust diminution imposed by the artificial divisions of the world population.

Mother Nature provides us with everything that we need. The food we eat, the air we breathe and rejoice in the bounty of nature. We often forget natural resources are not limitless. Every addition to world population puts new demand on these resources. Unfortunately, technological progress has made people demand more from nature and give a lot less. It is getting clearer that such behaviour is not sustainable. The increasing frequency of natural disasters and even the ongoing pandemic are alarms, that if we do not mend our ways bigger catastrophes are awaiting mankind.

The population is a resource. Countries like India have a demographic dividend. But, the resources must be used the right way. There is an ancient saying ‘Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam’, meaning that the world is one family. In a family, no one should feel neglected or left behind. A family is called a happy family when every member is happy. I remember a line from the movie Spiderman, “With great power comes great responsibility”. Our achievements give us immense power, let us pledge on the world population day that we would use that power for the happiness of all. Let us pledge we would live responsibly so that generations to come are proud of us and not fight the war we start.

by a Middle School student in India