WHAT SHOULD WE DO?
I had just delivered my presentation at a local event, then one youthful comrade caught up with me at the exit. We exchanged some pleasantries before he looked straight into my eyelid and asked:
“Sir,
what is the most pressing environmental issue we face?”
The
most urgent environmental hassle confronting us! I thought to myself reframing
the question.
Not
all of us know the major environmental issues confronting us, except for
environmentalists and those who care to know and do follow discussions on
environmental topics. But all of us know we are in the 21st Century.
Correct!
For
those who need to be reminded, I will; those with no idea but are willing to
know, let me share that climate change, toxic pollution, species extinction,
and desertification are the major issues that are confronting us.
Replying
to the above question, I gave an honest answer that the above are serious
ecological issues that are confronting humankind and no one has any idea on one
that can trigger an irreversible and catastrophic collapse in the life support
systems on our planet Earth.
And
the truth is that, there is no single act which will one way or the other keep
us away from the looming environmental crisis.
Human Mind: Modern and Urban
The
overarching crisis inheres in the modern and/or urban human mind. I believe so;
the valence and beliefs driving much of destructiveness.
A
historian will remind us, our species – human beings – must understand and
acknowledge being a part of one nature. Not anything exists in isolation.
Everything is pretty connected to everything else.
One
may spray insecticides to kill pests which inadvertently might end up affecting
birds, fish, as well as human beings. All and each deliberate act carry the
responsibility for one to think beyond the immediate issue while considering
the whole system.
A field walk at Dzalanyama Forest Reserve (Malawi) where deforestation for charcoal burning is prevalent. Photo Courtesy Lloyd Mfune |
Bring A Challenge
Nowadays,
we humans find it difficult to recognize and appreciate the continuing
connection with and dependence on nature.
Let
us try out this thought exercise. Are you ready? I guess you are.
Imagine
the invention and creation of a time machine by scientists or innovators and we
travel back five billion years. Life had not evolved on the plane. In lieu of
limitless resources and opportunities, we come across an unfriendly place,
inhospitable to human life. The atmosphere is polluted - poisonous, rich in
carbon (IV) dioxide and devoid of oxygen.
As a
result of no life, water is unfiltered of toxic substances by plant roots, soil
fungi, or microorganisms. There is not a thing to eat in the pro-life world;
every bit of our food is composed of plants, animals, and microorganisms.
We
buying or bringing up a stash of food, seeds in the time capsule to enable us
to stay a while, will be in futility; no place will support the growth of seed
or food for the soil contains a mixture of molecules from life-forms having the
matrix of clay, sand and silt.
There
is nothing to burn to create heat because all fuels – coal, gas, oil, wood, and
peat – are created from life.
The
absence of oxygen precludes flame at any location on the planet therefore, our
papers and wood brought for fire could be regarded as useless.
The
four sacred elements – Earth, Water, Air, and Fire – that our forefathers and traditional
people apprise/inform us sustain complete life, involves creation and cleansing
or replenishment by the scheme of life that we tend to call nature.
Our picture of the world shapes our actions on and to it. We should perceive a mountain maybe as a deity but not a pile of ore; Espy a river as one of the veins of the land, not potential irrigation water; Descry a forest as a sacred grove, not timber; View other species as our biological kin, not resources; and to the rest of the world, recognize the planet as our mother, not an opportunity – then treating each other with greater and utmost respect will be achieved.
What should we do?
Look at Mother Nature from a different and kind perspective.
Quote of the Day
"And He knows what is in the land and sea. Not even a leaf falls without His knowledge, nor a grain in the darkness of the earth or anything - green or dry - but is 'written' in a perfect Record." - Quran 6:59
Happy World Wildlife Day!
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Written and Edited: Brian ONALI NDUW
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