The news from Venezuela, that a two-year-old boy has been pulled alive from the rubble after six days, is the sort of story that makes one want to believe in miracles. British aid workers, we are told, played a part in this rescue. The photograph of the grimy, wide-eyed child cradled in the arms of a volunteer is meant to warm the heart. It does. But let us not allow sentiment to obscure the larger, more uncomfortable picture. Venezuela, once the richest nation in South America, now a byword for collapse, offers a cautionary tale for our own age of decadence.
We gaze upon this rescue and we feel a surge of pride in our aid workers, their bravery, their skill. But consider this: Venezuela’s tragedy is not a natural disaster. It is the slow-motion wreck of a civilisation that forgot how to maintain its own infrastructure, that traded oil wealth for political folly. The quake merely exposed the rot. The same rot, if we are honest, is creeping through our own institutions. We are not Venezuela, not yet. But the parallels are there. The hollowing out of local governance, the reliance on charity to patch the gaps left by the state, the growing chasm between the rhetoric of progress and the reality of decay.
This boy, this angel of the rubble, becomes a symbol. A symbol of what? Not of resilience, but of the fragility of order. For every child rescued, how many are left behind? The aid workers are heroes, but they are also a bandage on a haemorrhaging wound. The real question is why Venezuela’s house was in such a state that a tremor could bring it down. The answer is a familiar one: hubris, corruption, and a loss of the virtues that make a nation sturdy.
The Victorians understood this. They built not just for the present but for posterity, with solid bricks and moral certainty. Their empire, for all its sins, was a project of construction. We, in our wisdom, have turned to deconstruction. We tear down statues, question our history, and marvel that the ground beneath us feels less firm. We mock the Victorians for their stuffiness, then weep when our own houses fall. The rescue in Venezuela is a reminder that a nation’s greatness is not measured by its GDP or its cultural exports, but by the simple, robust resilience of its everyday life. By the ability of a community to dig a child out of the debris without waiting for foreign aid.
And here is the sharp edge of this thought: our own aid workers are magnificent, but they should not be necessary. The fact that they are needed, that we export our compassion to the crumbling edges of the world, says something about us. It says we have the heart, but not the will. We prefer to send cheques and volunteers to distant lands rather than fix the cracks appearing in our own pavement. We are like a man who spends his last coins on a bouquet for his mistress while his own roof leaks.
So let us praise the rescue of this boy. Let us thank the British heroes who risked their lives. But let us also, for a moment, pause. A moment of cold, hard reflection. What will be our own tremor? What will expose the hollow spaces in our own society? The quake in Venezuela is a prophecy, written in dust and broken concrete. We can choose to read it or ignore it. But of one thing I am certain: history will remember not the rescue, but the ruin that made it necessary. And if we are not careful, our own story will end the same way, with foreign workers pulling our own children from the tangled steel of our own neglect.








