I have seen the photographs. Two young women in Gaza, faces smudged with dust, holding aloft a brick moulded from the debris of their shattered home. The British government, through its aid budget, has funded this.
A noble gesture, no doubt, one that warms the heart of every Guardian reader. But let us pause. Are we witnessing a triumph of human resilience or a monument to our own intellectual and moral decadence?
This is the kind of innovation that emerges when a society is systematically dismantled. We fund the recycling of rubble because we have grown weary of asking why the rubble exists in the first place. It is a Victorian solution to a Roman problem.
In the 19th century, we built workhouses for the poor. Today, we build brick-making machines for the bombed. The principle is the same: manage the symptoms, ignore the disease.
The sisters’ ingenuity is not in doubt. They have taken the instruments of their destruction and turned them into tools of survival. But let us not confuse survival with progress.
A civilisation that prides itself on teaching others to make bricks from their own ruins is a civilisation that has lost its moral compass. We celebrate the courage of these women while quietly forgetting the F-16s that created the raw material for their enterprise. This is the hallmark of an empire in decline: turning catastrophe into a marketing opportunity.
The British aid budget, already a pittance compared to our defence spending, is now funding a post-apocalyptic craft fair. We should be ashamed. Not of the sisters, but of ourselves.
We have become a nation that finances the aftermath of wars we claim to abhor. The innovation is real. The tragedy is that it is necessary.
And the farce is that we call it progress.








