In the course of history, there comes a
time when humanity is called to a new level of consciousness, to reach a higher
moral ground. A time when we have to shed our fear, to give hope to one
another. That time is now.
Activities that devastate the
environment and societies continue unabated … The Norwegian Nobel Committee has
placed the central issue of the environment and its linkage to democracy before
the world.
The challenge is to restore this home …
and give back to the children a world of beauty and wonder.
The world needs lifestyle rethinkers. Consider the example
of this courageous and brilliant Kenyan woman.
With humble beginnings in a small village, she became the
first East African woman to earn a PhD, then taught in a Kenyan University .
From her position of relative privilege, she was moved especially by the
poverty of rural women and the scarcity of water and fuel to found the Green
Belt movement, a grass roots organization, which to date has planted more than
35 million trees in Kenya
and nearby countries.
Empowering rural women to believe they could be foresters
led them to challenge the forest destruction fuelled by post colonial greed and
corruption. In the 1980s and 90s, she and others were beaten and imprisoned for
speaking out in defense of democracy and the environment. She lost her academic
position.
But by 2004, when she said the above words in her Nobel
Peace Prize acceptance speech (the first African woman to be so honoured),
trees planted by the first Green Belt women’s groups were being harvested for
lumber, arid and dry lands were reforested, streams were again flowing, and
soldiers were planting trees alongside villagers.
The inspiring story is told in a documentary video, Taking
Root: the Vision of Wangari Maathai. Who?? Most of us have never
heard of her. She was a lifestyle rethinker, and her thinking led to practical
action … the simple act of collecting tree seeds, propagating them,
establishing local nurseries, and then planting and tending the seedlings,
eventually by the millions All accomplished by dozens of women’s groups throughout
the country. The Kenyan countryside is being transformed and revived by these
simple, practical activities and the Green Belt movement has spread throughout East Africa .
Initially, the women did not believe they were capable. Many
were illiterate. Their cultural tradition did not include tree planting among
women’s tasks. “You need a diploma to plant a tree” professional foresters told
them.
But Maathai doggedly questioned all the assumptions – the
women’s, the foresters’, the corporations’, the governments’ – and pushed for
change. Why were forest lands being clear-cut, why were parks and preserves
being logged, why were people being jailed and mistreated for challenging
government corruption?
There was push back by those in power - beatings, death
threats, imprisonment – but changes came. And finally recognition and
acceptance for Wangari Matthai. She died of cancer September 25 at age 71.
Some lessons for me emerge from her story ….
I need to watch more good documentary and fewer
“entertainment” videos. Like Wangari Maathai’s story, they inspire! This video
and others are available from SETI.
I can sit back and let the “powers” run the show, but
eventually my family and I will feel the environmental impact of greed,
mismanagement and bad policy.
Look around. What is obviously incongruent in our lifestyle?
What is clearly destructive and unsustainable? I need to respond with personal
lifestyle changes, but I need to also question and challenge government and
corporate practice and policy.
Take this link to the movie web site.
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