Airplanes lined up on runway
Photograph ©2008 by Brian Cohen.

Is it Safe to Travel Anymore?

s it safe to travel anymore? Events during the past 18 months have understandably caused trepidation in some people when it comes to travel — as well as ask that very question. Those recent events include but are not limited to:

Should You Fear Traveling by Airplane — or Travel in General?

Noting that the crash of the Boeing 777-2H6ER aircraft which operated as Malaysia Airlines flight 17 occurred exactly 18 years to the day after an airplane which operated as Trans World Airlines flight 800 crashed shortly after departing from John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York does not exactly help to alleviate the fears people might have pertaining to commercial air travel in recent months.

I am not one of those people. As I stated here, I would have no problem watching an airline disaster movie during flight…

…and in fact, the following paragraph is part of what I stated on the fourteenth anniversary of the terror attacks of the United States which occurred on September 11, 2001:

“All I wanted to do that day was find the tallest building and get to the top of it; or fly as a passenger on an airplane. I wanted to shout to the adversaries that if they wanted a war, bring it on, for they will be sorry. I wanted to show those low-life terrorists that they don’t scare me; that our country will only be stronger; and that the United States will be better than ever despite their attempts to destroy it.”

Sure, we can say how dangerous travel has become and cower, not wanting to travel. We can mitigate our risks in our attempts to stay alive as long as possible. Let us be as safe as we can so that we can enjoy life.

Sorry. I don’t buy that. Not for a second.

“I think you are crazy to advocate visits to Egypt at this time”, Richard — a reader of The Gateposted in the Comments section of this article as he related to a first-hand experience in Egypt in 2009. I disagreed with that statement with this response:

I would argue that Egypt is safer today than it was six years ago.

When I was in Panama, I saw armed military patrolling the streets. Was I crazy to visit there?

I was in Lebanon in 2006 and saw shells of buildings after they had been bombed juxtapose with brand new buildings being constructed; and not once did I not feel safe. Was I crazy to visit there?

Would someone be considered crazy for visiting the United States in September of 2001 after the terror attacks occurred?

No travel is without risk; but my recent experience in Egypt suggests to me that visiting there is relatively safe…

…and one can argue that with a police and military presence, tourists are actually safer — although I prefer not to be in a police state.

Is the Media Partially Responsible for Spreading the Fear?

It is easy to get all caught up in the sensationalist media hoopla surrounding incidents which cause the deaths of hundreds of people all at once — but the incidents must be viewed realistically. They were not caused by blatant carelessness or purposeful negligence — although it can be argued that a missile attack on a supposedly unintended target can certainly qualify. Unusual and atypical circumstances were the causes which resulted in the tragic accidents listed above. Even terrorist attacks are not considered ordinary in most places on our planet; and where they may be considered part of the norm, you may want to exercise greater caution if you do not intend to outright avoid those places altogether.

I visited Beirut several years ago and would have no problem visiting Israel; and I would return to Beirut despite the recent attack which killed at least 43 people in Beirut this past Thursday — a day before the attacks in Paris occurred. My thoughts and prayers are with the victims as well as their families and friends and the people of Lebanon in general — especially as their tragedy was unfortunately overshadowed by what occurred in Paris the next day.

While it is important to not be foolish — I personally would not jump out of an airplane at 35,000 feet without a parachute or peek into the mouth of a hungry wild lion — travel is all about taking risks. Every time you walk out of the door of your home, you place yourself at risk — without even mentioning all of the potential risks that exist inside your home. I will bet that there were more fatal accidents on the roads and highways near your home since January 1, 2014 than which occurred in the air involving commercial aircraft in the same time period; and I will bet that more people died in motor vehicles in your country in a year than in airplane crashes — yet you still step into your vehicle to travel from one place to another.

I could cite statistics all day long — but that is not the point.

What Travel Is — and What It Is Not

Travel is about experiencing different cultures; meeting new people; tasting foods which are new to you; and experiencing activities which you have never done before — all of which can be risky in one sense or another. Travel is not about repeating the same habits; eating the same foods; and “sterilizing” the experience to the point of being mundane, predictable — and “safe.”

Think about it. Which trip report sounds more exciting to you: one which the person experienced caviar and champagne in the lap of luxury — or one where the person tells you how he or she narrowly escaped a situation considered potentially dangerous?

Without going into details, I remember one time I was photographing an outdoor market in Abidjan — the capital city of Côte d’Ivoire — while doing everything I can to ensure that I respect the privacy of people by not taking their pictures. A local man suddenly grabbed my arm and started incessantly yelling at me angrily in a native language I could not understand; and he would not let go of my arm, which he gripped firmly and tightly. It was initially frightening when a crowd of local people started gathering around us — but then I noticed that the looks on their faces were more of curiosity and initial confusion than that of anger. I kept trying to explain in French that I was not taking pictures of people; but rather of the market — but to no avail. Finally, several men wrested the hand of the man from my arm, took him over to the side and eventually calmed him down before the crowd dispersed — and I safely left the scene a little shaken but calm and unharmed.

That was a scary moment in my life — but what a story to tell!

Summary

I am not advocating that you should drop a sedentary lifestyle to instantly become a thrill-seeker. What I am saying is that there really is nothing to fear — and that with risk comes excitement, adventure and intrigue. What terrorists hope to do more than kill people — seemingly randomly — is to instill fear in people; and the reaction of chaos, confusion and fear is exactly what terrorists want — even if they are not responsible for the source of that fear.

If I were offered to head over to Paris after the recent terror attacks there, I would not hesitate to return to that city, to which I have been multiple times. We need to show terrorists that we are not afraid of them while simultaneously offering solidarity to the victims of the terror attacks — my thoughts and prayers are with the victims as well as their families and friends and the people of France in general — and we need to stop paying so much attention to them while still taking appropriate action against them.

Just take the proper precautions when you travel and remain alert and aware of your surroundings, knowing that there are always risks involved — and know that despite the recent incidents through which no one survived, commercial air travel is still one of the safest methods of travel in the world

…so sit back, relax — and enjoy your flight. May your travels be packed with plenty of excitement where you will experience reactions of envy every time you tell your travel stories to others — but may you travel safely in the process; and never be afraid to take flight.

Photograph ©2008 by Brian Cohen.

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