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- <text id=94TT1006>
- <title>
- Aug. 01, 1994: Essay: Looking at Cataclysms
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 01, 1994 This is the beginning...:Rwanda/Zaire
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 64
- Looking at Cataclysms
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Paul Gray
- </p>
- <p> It was a week of visual superlatives, of images both awesome
- and horrifying. Astronomers said they had never seen anything
- like the fireworks produced when comet chunks, one of them roughly
- as big as an alp, crashed into the planet Jupiter. International
- relief workers said the same thing, only they were referring
- to the tide of refugees streaming out of Rwanda and into overnight
- cities of misery, disease and death. Certainly the millions
- of people who watched these two cataclysms unfold through news
- photographs and televised images had never seen anything like
- them either.
- </p>
- <p> The ability to "see" such events, the one taking place 477 million
- miles away and the other in a small, remote pocket of central
- Africa, is a fairly recent human acquisition. Not so very long
- ago, before communications satellites and attendant technologies
- wired the world, the news about what happened on Jupiter and
- along the eastern border of Zaire last week would have spread,
- if at all, largely by print or word of mouth.
- </p>
- <p> Now such explosions have become spectator events. In theory,
- this rush of instantaneous sightings should be a boon to human
- understanding; the more we notice, the wiser we become. In practice,
- such cascades of images can prove deracinating. The mind is
- cut adrift by what the eyes provide.
- </p>
- <p> For witnesses, either firsthand or at the remove of film or
- TV, must supply their own contexts to make sense of what they
- are seeing. Faced with something new in their visual experiences,
- they are likely to jump to questionable conclusions. After watching
- three comet fragments pound, at around 130,000 m.p.h., into
- Jupiter's dense atmosphere, Steve Maran, an understandably elated
- NASA astronomer, called the sight "the greatest one-two-three
- punch of all time." Meanwhile, Filippo Grandi, director of emergency
- aid for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, surveyed the
- unimaginable conditions around Goma, the sleepy Zairean border
- town that had suddenly filled with over a million terrified
- Rwandans. More than a million other refugees, also without food,
- running water, sanitation and medical facilities, were crowding
- into other locations. The understandably despairing Grandi said,
- "We're talking about four sites that are the biggest refugee
- camps ever."
- </p>
- <p> It is the hubris of vision to mistake the unfamiliar for the
- unprecedented. What happened on Jupiter was obviously massive,
- but comparisons are impossible. What little we know about the
- universe includes the fact that it is an incredibly violent
- place. The nighttime sky is a panoply of explosions. The pocked
- and cratered face of our moon--which was also on TV last week,
- thanks to a triumphant moment everyone had seen 25 years ago--bears mute witness to eons of shuddering collisions. Given
- what we may infer from such signs, the pummeling of Jupiter
- could have been a commonplace affair.
- </p>
- <p> And as for those refugee camps in Zaire being the biggest ever:
- it would almost be a comfort to believe that, to think the earth
- had never before offered up such an appalling concentration
- of human suffering. But how can we know? J. Brian Atwood, the
- administrator of the Agency for International Development, said
- of the Rwandans late last week: "The world has never seen this
- many refugees." This is accurate, provided the word seen is
- given its full value. There may have been more refugees huddling
- together, somewhere, sometime, but the world did not see them.
- </p>
- <p> Images can lead not only to erroneous comparisons but to misapprehensions
- of scale. Because of its great distance from the observers,
- Jupiter fit neatly within the frames of the zillions of photographs
- taken of it last week. Some of them seemed serenely beautiful,
- showing small reddish blossoms dotting the planet's darker surface.
- The information that one of these was a fireball larger than
- the earth could not be conveyed visually. It had to be explained
- in words, and even then the mind resisted the preposterous notion
- that that was what it had seen.
- </p>
- <p> In absolute measurements, the Rwandan refugees filled infinitely
- less space than that taken up by a single explosion on Jupiter.
- But, paradoxically, images could not begin to convey the immensities
- and emormities of these settlements. The frame was too small
- to contain such an expanse of anguish. Photographers had to
- resort to visual synecdoche, hoping that a small part of the
- scene--a wailing child, an emaciated mother, a pile of corpses
- in a freshly dug trench--would suggest the horrors of the
- whole.
- </p>
- <p> In an important sense, of course, the photographs did just that.
- They alerted the world to the plight of the Rwandans, just as
- the snapshots of Jupiter gave earthlings an invaluable cosmic
- slide show. The danger of images lies not in the information
- they carry but rather in our propensity to believe--once we
- have seen them--that we have seen the whole picture. The much
- heralded visual age is nearly upon us, and we can take justifiable
- pride in our new abilities to look at each other over long distances
- and to take close-ups of deep space. We should also remember
- that images do not come with built-in memories or instructions
- in how they should be read. If we are to understand them correctly,
- we must still do that work ourselves.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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