Three weeks ago, a shooter killed eight people in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia, Canada … including six children. Maya Gebala was shot in the head while trying to protect her classmates. She’s in the B.C. Children’s Hospital in Vancouver. A few days ago, she opened one eye.

Millions of people are praying for Maya, in Canada and around the world. Including me.
***
Five days ago, about 160 Iranian girls, aged 7 to 12, were killed when a bomb from US or Israeli forces exploded in their school. On Tuesday there was a mass funeral for the victims.

I look myself in the eye … and feel my reactions.
I’m deeply engaged with Maya surviving. I’m momentarily sad about the deaths of all those schoolgirls. But it’s 160 lives compared to 1 life. Shouldn’t the depth of my feeling be the other way around? What does it say about me that so little of my energy reaches out to the kids who have died?
I feel numb when I see all the needless death in the world. CNN tells me stories every day of tragedy and despair.
Maya speaks of hope, that the courage of this young one needs to be rewarded, that her love deserves returning love from millions of us.
Maya is a symbol
… of goodness
… of something so much larger than evil
… of us shining brighter than me

















