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My Perspective: Conference energizes FSPA ecological advocate to educate
by Lucy Slinger, FSPA In the fall of 2007 I attended the Climate Change Conference sponsored by the
Department of Public Information: Non-Governmental Organizations at the United
Nations. It was a most unique opportunity to see the United Nations in an up-close
personal way and to experience being with about 2,500 people from 390 countries.
I still sit in contemplation over it all and I dont have the words to
describe the feelings this experience evoked in my life. Simply being able to
walk on the small space on this Earth that is not a sovereign territory of any
nation but a collectively designated shared global space puts me in a mindset
that there is deep hope for a sustainable future despite the despairing facts
presented. Attending the session on the Caucus on Values in the Bahai
International Center was a deep confirmation of the line of reasoning and thinking
I have done around cosmology, environmental education and sustainability as
a part of my FSPA formation and ministry in ecospirituality. I cant tell
you how affirming it is to have discerned the same two paradigms for life that
this group of 15 people from around the world, across faiths, across denominations
has developed. I treasure the provided single page handout I was given, and
will be using it in the retreats, courses, workshops and presentations that
I do for my ministry work.
It was also intriguing to hear about vertical farmingsomething
new for me. I can imagine high-rise farms within cities pretty easily when the
given statistics are that there will be 9 billion people by 2020, and that the
additional 3 billion people will require food production land that is equivalent
to the size of the country of Brazil. Its a stunning proposition out of
technology to offset a shocking reality of the challenge to Earth the Homo sapiens
species is presenting. I take with me a renewed sense of urgency to educate
and act on behalf of a sustainable future and to know more deeply that what
we do today is truly the base for future generations. A clear message was that
while the adults of this age will not see the real impact of their lifestyle,
the youth of 2020 and beyond will know the massive impact our ways left as a
legacy.
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