Using disaster as lens to identify systemic inequalities that shaped vulnerability, and deliberately rebuilding to prevent similar harms.
Zera Yacob developed his philosophy while confronting injustice in Ethiopian society. He insisted on rational examination of systems, not just individual failings. This approach applies powerfully to disaster recovery. Disasters rarely affect populations equally; vulnerability reflects prior structural inequalities. Why did certain neighborhoods flood while others remained dry? Why did some workers lack savings while others did? Why were some industries already fragile? Recovery rooted in Zera Yacob's framework requires examining these structures honestly. Did discrimination in lending exclude certain groups from homeownership in safe areas? Did wage suppression prevent savings? Did zoning decisions concentrate poverty in hazardous zones? Identifying these injustices creates opportunity to rebuild differently. Recovery might include: reparative lending for historically excluded groups, fair wage requirements, land reforms, or regulatory changes preventing future exploitation. This is not merely charitable; it is rational reconstruction. Communities that fail to examine and address the structural vulnerabilities that shaped their disaster response are likely to reproduce the same harms. Reason demands we learn from disaster and build justly.
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