Boston Strong’s boundaries

The 118th Boston Marathon next week will be the first running of the iconic American foot race after two bombers killed three people, injured 263 and shook the nation a year ago.

A race that had long since settled into familiar ritual was suddenly fraught with peril. Security will be doubled this year. Nine thousand additional participants are expected, along with 1 million spectators, twice the usual number. Media coverage, never shabby for the event, will multiply. It won’t be just Runner’s World poised to record the winners at the finish line. It will be all the world, and who wins won’t be the half of it.

The build-up began weeks ago. Boston radio is playing “Why we run” stories-“This year it’s for, you know, greater reasons,” Juli Windsor told NPR. 60 Minutes unfolded a “now it can be told” report on the manhunt for the Tsarnaev brothers. And Sports Illustrated invited all of Boston to a commemorative-cover shoot on Saturday.

If you miss all that, you can catch the montage of security cam, phone cam and professional cam highlights that will be played and replayed in the coming days: The popping sounds, the shouts, the black hat and the white hat, the Good Samaritans, the murdered MIT police officer, the Watertown shootout, the bleeding boy in the backyard boat.

When America gets outraged, we communicate it. When we are attacked, the furies descend. We make noise, we want answers, we demand action. Last year we were riveted for days by real-time reporting and vigilante rumors, impatient for results. Lives were saved and heroes anointed. We were-we are-flamboyantly, defiantly Boston Strong.

But here is something we may have missed along the way: On April 14th, 2013, the day before the marathon, at least 20 people were killed as al-Shabab jihadists caromed through Mogadishu, Somalia. And hours before the marathon on April 15, Iraq was wracked by multiple car bombs-at least 30 dead, as many as 350 injured by some reports, all on just one violent day in a record year of mayhem there.

These distant tragedies were not ignored by U.S. media. But did you remember them? Will CNN or Fox or your newspaper offer updates this week? How far have the wheels of justice turned in these nations?

Surely those touched by the violence in these cities will commemorate the carnage. But it is safe to say there isn’t a big market for Iraq Strong rubber bracelets in Baghdad or for Mogadishu Strong T-shirts in Somalia.

The generals prepare us for asymmetrical warfare. But the deeper asymmetry is a world divided into nations and cities that have-or don’t-the wherewithal to mend the holes that get blown in the social fabric.

It is right and good this week to remember the tragedy-Boston Strong indeed. But don’t forget about Mogadishu and Baghdad, and everywhere else bombs burst in the air.

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Susan Brenneman is the deputy op-ed editor of the Los Angeles Times.

Editorial, Pages 12 on 04/17/2014

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