Reactions to the photos The photograph of Kurdi's body caused a dramatic upturn in international concern over the refugee crisis.
French President François Hollande phoned Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and some European leaders after the images of Kurdi emerged in the media. He said that the picture must be a reminder of the world's responsibility regarding refugees. British Prime Minister
David Cameron said he felt deeply moved by images of Kurdi. Irish Taoiseach
Enda Kenny commented on the photographs of Kurdi and described the refugee crisis as a "human catastrophe" and found the pictures "absolutely shocking". The picture has been credited with causing a surge in donations to charities helping migrants and refugees, with one charity, the
Migrant Offshore Aid Station, recording a 15-fold increase in donations within 24 hours of its publication. An article in
The Guardian, on 22 December 2015, outlined a collection of what it described as "outrageous claims" against Abdullah Kurdi. It was said that he was an opportunist who used his status as a Syrian refugee for personal gain. Another source said that Abdullah was profiting from the tragedy, including selling his dead son's clothes to a museum in Paris. Australian politician
Cory Bernardi claimed that "The father sent them on that boat so he could get dental treatment". Some anti-immigration politicians claimed that the image of Alan on the beach had been faked. In contrast,
Nick Logan of
Global News argued on 4 September 2015: "Photojournalists sometimes capture images so powerful the public and policymakers can't ignore what the pictures show." He compared the images of Kurdi's body to the pictures taken during the
Selma to Montgomery marches in which
civil rights demonstrators were
beaten by
Alabama Highway Patrol troopers, and he said that widespread viewership of those images helped peaceful demonstrators in the passage of measures such as the
Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Impact on the 2015 Canadian federal election The death of Kurdi and reports that his family had been trying to ultimately reach Canada had an immediate impact on domestic Canadian politics. Prime Minister and leader of the
Conservative Party Stephen Harper cancelled a photo opportunity and addressed the issue in a campaign event, saying, "Yesterday,
Laureen and I saw on the Internet, the picture of this young boy, Alan, dead on the beach. Look, I think, our reaction to that, you know the first thing that crossed our mind was remembering our son Ben at that age, running around like that". Minister of National Defence and Multiculturalism
Jason Kenney cancelled an important announcement on Conservative efforts to protect the integrity of Canada's immigration system and the security of Canada. Canadian Citizenship and Immigration Minister
Chris Alexander announced he would be temporarily suspending his campaigning in
the 2015 Canadian federal election to return to
Ottawa to resume his ministerial duties and investigate the case of Alan Kurdi, whose uncle's application for refugee status had been rejected by his ministry. Leader of the Opposition and
NDP leader
Thomas Mulcair said that "Chris Alexander has a lot to answer for, but that's not where we are right now. We're worried about how we got here, how the collective international response has been so defective, how Canada has failed so completely." NDP MP
Fin Donnelly was accused of using the tragic event as a means to garner votes, because he initially told reporters that he had personally handed a letter to Immigration Minister Chris Alexander urging the minister to look at the refugee application of Alan Kurdi's family, but that Canadian immigration authorities denied the family's application. However, later the aunt of Alan Kurdi revealed that the application was made only for Kurdi's uncle and was rejected because it was not complete. Meanwhile, the
Citizenship and Immigration Canada office clarified that they had not received the proper documentation to certify refugee status for the uncle's family. Mulcair later defended Donnelly, saying that no apology was warranted because the letter had mentioned both families, and stated that he "couldn't be prouder to have someone of the strength, integrity and hard work as Fin Donnelly" in caucus.
Liberal leader
Justin Trudeau said that "you don't get to suddenly discover compassion in the middle of an election campaign" and that "All different stripes of governments in Canada have stepped up in times of crisis to accept people fleeing for their lives", he said. "Canadians get it. This is about doing the right thing, about living up to the values that we cherish as a country."
Green Party leader
Elizabeth May criticized Stephen Harper's response to the crisis, noting the difficulty of sponsoring a refugee in Canada. On the Green Party website, May accused the government of lacking credibility on the issue, "having failed to honor previous [refugee] announcements".
Reactions in the arts A week following his death, around 30 Moroccans recreated the discovery of Kurdi's body in tribute in the
Moroccan capital. In January 2016, the Chinese artist
Ai Weiwei posed like Kurdi by imitating his dead body as shown in the media pictures. His gesture and the surrounding controversy were part of "using the image as an interface" to communicate about social justice. The picture was published first in the Indian magazine
India Today together with an interview of Ai Weiwei, and was also shown at the
India Art Fair. In February 2016,
Missy Higgins released a song titled "
Oh Canada", dedicated to Alan Kurdi. In September 2018, hip hop artist
Lupe Fiasco released a song titled "Alan Forever" on his album
Drogas Wave. The song presents an alternate reality where Alan survived. Director
Terry George created a scene in the 2016 film
The Promise inspired by the Kurdi incident, to show parallels between Armenians fleeing the
Ottoman Empire and modern refugees like Alan Kurdi.
Maggie Smith's poem, "Small Shoes," was inspired by the photograph. It was later made into a short film. The song "
Love It If We Made It" by
the 1975, which deals with a multitude of political and pop-culture moments, includes a line about "a beach of drowing three year olds," a direct reference to Kurdi. Composer, bandleader and woodwind artist [Sundar Viswanathan] composed a dedication piece titled "Little Kurdi (for Alan Kurdi)" for his world-jazz group
Avataar after hearing about Alan Kurdi's death. The composition appears on
Avataar's 2020 JUNO award-winning album
Worldview The album as a whole is a gut-response to the treatment of children in our society and our leaders' inability to keep them safe.
Other uses In April 2017, the
Mint of Finland revealed a commemorative coin celebrating the centenary of
Finnish independence, using a picture of Alan Kurdi's body on the obverse side of the coin. This picture is accompanied with the text "Global Justice" (Globaali oikeudenmukaisuus). The death of Alan Kurdi is contrasted with a Finnish public library on the reverse side of the coin. In February 2019, the rescue ship
Professor Albrecht Penck of the German sea rescue organization
Sea-Eye was renamed to
Alan Kurdi. Following a similar conflict in early July 2019 with the German
Sea-Watch organization rescue ship
Sea-Watch 3 under the command of
Carola Rackete, Italian authorities also denied the
Alan Kurdi access to the harbour of
Lampedusa on 6 July 2019. After international intervention, the refugees eventually entered Malta on 7 July 2019. ==Legacy==