Is it possible that a tiny child could be snatched from her mother’s side in a suburban park in broad daylight? That a barefoot drunk grabbed her and ran, ended her life and left her body in a shallow creek?
Is it possible that a family, unconnected to that child, might stumble across the little girl’s body in the middle of a pitch-black night?
The story of the fate of Sanaya Sahib, the 15-month old girl whose body was discovered in Melbourne parkland in the early hours of Sunday morning, is so terrifyingly, heart-stoppingly random that nobody wants to believe it.
But opinions are everywhere. According to Melbourne talk-back host Tony Jones, there isn’t enough community outrage about Sanaya’s fate.
“As it stands now, we’ve got a kidnapping murdering madman on the run and it’s something we should be screaming from the rooftops about,” he said on-air today.
“There should be some form of hysteria in the town, but I’m not sensing any of that.”
That’s because people are busy doing what frightened people do, putting barriers between themselves and an horrific event, so they can go on thinking that it’s a thing that could ever happen to them.
In the case as horrendous as a child murder, nobody wants to imagine that there is nothing a loving parent could do to protect their child against someone who wishes them harm.
None of us want to think we live with the reality where in one moment, they could lose everything. We demand more rhyme and reason to the world than that.
We demand a back story and a reason. We need steps of separation between ourselves and the horror, and we will find them.
Top Comments
The public outrage should be domestic violence is far to frequent in Australian society, and the murder of a child by its mother is another form of domestic violence. To me, the story sounded very unfounded from the beginning. Sanaya did deserve so much better - and you would think that would start with her mother.
No there was no public outrage or fear because everyone knew it was going to be a family member not a stranger