The geography of Jammu and Kashmir is a complex blend of mountains, plains, and treacherous routes, often made worse by poor road connectivity. Due to these challenges, accidents caused by landslides, rockfalls, or road mishaps are tragically common, claiming innocent lives regularly. While such events demand solemn reflection and collective mourning, the rise of social media has introduced a troubling trend—turning tragedy into a spectacle.
Whenever a life is lost in an accident, some individuals rush to social media not just to share the news, but to post photos of the deceased and, more disturbingly, private images of their family. Captions like “the deceased with his wife,” “with his daughter,” or “with his son” are shamelessly added, giving the impression of empathy. But this isn’t empathy—it’s insensitivity, veiled in the cloak of performative compassion.
These images, which the deceased likely never shared during their lifetime, are suddenly circulated by strangers in the name of tribute. This act is not a reflection of shared grief, but of social media vanity—where ‘likes’ and ‘shares’ are valued more than dignity and privacy. It’s heartbreaking that even in the face of death, some seek visibility rather than silence, sensitivity, and respect.
Have we become so numb that we treat someone’s final moments and their family’s heartbreak as “content”? Are we so desperate to appear sympathetic online that we forget the very essence of humanity—empathy with dignity?
If we truly wish to stand with grieving families, we must do so quietly—with prayers, personal messages, or respectful silence. Broadcasting their pain through pictures serves no purpose but to reopen wounds and deepen trauma.
Before posting a photo of the deceased or their family, we must ask ourselves: would I want my loved one’s memory and my family’s grief shared so publicly without consent?
True sympathy is not loud. It doesn’t demand attention. It respects silence, it honors privacy, and above all, it preserves dignity in sorrow. If we fail to understand this, we are drifting towards a culture where even death becomes entertainment and grief becomes public property. It’s time to reflect.DD