WEAVING THE CONNECTIONS

The Newsletter of the Center for Women, the Earth, the Divine

 

Volume 16                Winter 2010-2011             Number 3

Climate Change—When Will We Be Moved To Act?

Eleanor Rae

On November 7, 2010, my husband Giles and I visited the Hartford, CT home of Harriet Beecher Stowe, the person whom President Lincoln addressed, according to reports, as the woman who started the Civil War. While the wording of his address to her may be open to historical questioning, what is certain is that her book, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, may be looked upon as the reason for Lincoln’s remark. It was this book that gripped the nation, indeed large parts of the world, selling second only to the Bible. It was considered  responsible for keeping the border to Canada open so escaped slaves would have a safe haven. Our guide at the Stowe house told us that whenever Stowe traveled—and travel she did—she was received like a rock star of today. (She took her celebrity totally in stride, probably because she always maintained that, since the book was based on a vision she had in church, God was actually its author). But why, we might wonder, did this book, and not those by activists such as Sojourner Truth and Frederick Douglas, cause people to react so forcefully? It would appear that while much was written setting forth the facts of slavery, it was Stowe’s book that reached the heart as well as the head, thus involving people’s emotions and moving them to action.

As I listened to Stowe’s story, I could not help but think of what I consider to be our primary moral issue today—the destruction of the Earth. With few exceptions, there is universal agreement about the facts of global warming. Yet, on the whole, we fail to act. (This past December, the nations of the world met yet again, this time in Cancun, and once again achieved what has been referred to as “baby steps” toward the solution of this massive problem.) Might it be that the peoples of the world, try as we may, cannot be moved by the issue of climate change—it just does not grab us? Maybe we need to shift our focus to an issue that could involve us emotionally as well as intellectually—perhaps that of the massive extinction of so many life forms that we are causing. We already have the facts about these extinctions, more massive than any that have taken place since the disappearance of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. What is missing are the images that could grasp not only the head but also the heart. Should this not be doable with an issue like the extinction of those living creatures who share the planet with us? While an Uncle Tom’s Cabin for today’s extinction crisis is yet to be imagined, we can all become open to an experience of moving beyond ourselves by making significant contact and learning from another life form. Such an experience is ours for the asking. All it takes is a willingness to be open to the Universe and a receptiveness to its guidance. It may be that only such contact will enable us to be moved to the point where we will actually do what is needed to save our dying planet. 

   

 

 

Time to End War against the Earth

Vandana Shiva

Sydney Morning Herald, November 4, 2010

 

When we think of wars in our times, our minds turn to Iraq and Afghanistan. But the bigger war is the war against the planet. This war has its roots in an economy that fails to respect ecological and ethical limits—limits to inequality, limits to injustice, limits to greed and economic concentration.

A handful of corporations and of powerful countries seeks to control the earth’s resources and transform the planet into a supermarket in which everything is for sale. They want to sell our water, genes, cells, organs, knowledge, cultures and future.

The continuing wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and onwards are only about “blood for oil”.  As they unfold, we will see that they are about blood for food, blood for genes and biodiversity and blood for water.

The war mentality underlying military-industrial agriculture is evident from the names of Monsanto’s herbicides—“Round-Up”, “Machete”, “Lasso”. American Home Products, which has merged with Monsanto, gives its herbicides similarly aggressive names, including “Pentagon” and “Squadron”.   This is the language of war. Sustainability is based on peace with the earth.

The war against the earth begins in the mind. Violent thoughts shape violent actions. Violent categories construct violent tools. And nowhere is this more vivid than in the metaphors and methods on which industrial, agricultural and food production is based. Factories that produced poisons and explosives to kill people during wars were transformed into factories producing agri-chemicals after the wars.

The year 1984 woke me up to the fact that something was terribly wrong with the way food was produced. With the violence in Punab and the disaster in Bhopal, agriculture looked like war. That is when I wrote The Violence of the Green Revolution and why I started Navdanya as a movement for an agriculture free of poisons and toxics.

Pesticides, which started as war chemicals, have failed to control pests. Genetic engineering was supposed to provide an alternative to toxic chemicals. Instead, it has led to increased use of pesticides and herbicides and unleashed a war against farmers.

The high-cost feeds and high-cost chemicals are trapping farmers in debt—and the debt trap is pushing farmers to suicide. According to official data, more than 200,000 Indian farmers have committed suicide in India since 1997.

Making peace with the earth was always an ethical and ecological imperative. It has now become a survival imperative for our species.

Violence to the soil, to biodiversity, to water, to atmosphere, to farms and farmers produces a warlike food system that is unable to feed people. One billion people are hungry. Two billion suffer food-related diseases—obesity, diabetes, hypertension and cancers.

There are three levels of violence involved in non-sustainable development. The first is the violence against the earth, which is expressed as the ecological crisis. The second is the violence against people, which is expressed as poverty, destitution and displacement. The third is the violence of war and conflict, as the powerful reach for the resources that lie in other communities and countries for their limitless appetites.

When every aspect of life is commercialised, living becomes more costly, and people are poor, even if they earn more than a dollar a day. On the other hand, people can be affluent in material terms, even without the money economy, if they have access to land, their soils are fertile, their rivers flow clean, their cultures are rich and carry traditions of producing beautiful homes and clothing and delicious food, and there is social cohesion, solidarity and spirit of community.

The elevation of the domain of the market, and money as man-made capital, to the position of the highest organizing principle for societies and the only measure of our well-being has led to the undermining of the processes that maintain and sustain life in nature and society.

The richer we get, the poorer we become ecologically and culturally. The growth of affluence, measured in money, is leading to a growth in poverty at the material, cultural, ecological and spiritual levels.

The real currency of life is life itself and this view raises questions: how do we look at ourselves in this world? What are humans for? And are we merely a money-making and resource-guzzling machine? Or do we have a higher purpose, a higher end?

I believe that “earth democracy” enables us to envision and create living democracies based on the intrinsic worth of all species, all peoples, all cultures—a just and equal sharing of this earth’s vital resources, and sharing the decisions about the use of the earth’s resources.

Earth democracy protects the ecological processes that maintain life and the fundamental human rights that are the basis of the right to life, including the right to water, food, health, education, jobs and livelihoods.

We have to make a choice. Will we obey the market laws of corporate greed or Gaia’s laws for maintenance of the earth’s ecosystems and the diversity of its beings?

People’s need for food and water can be met only if nature’s capacity to provide food and water is protected. Dead soils and dead rivers cannot give food and water.

Defending the rights of Mother Earth is therefore the most important human rights and social justice struggle. It is the broadest peace movement of our times.

Vandana Shiva is an Indian feminist and environmental activist. She is the founder/director of Navdanya Research Foundation for Science, Technology and Ecology.

 

                 

 

      

 

 

Associates of C:WED:

Eleanor Rae, Ph.D., founder

Anne Andersson, editor

Giles E. Rae, publisher

Representatives at the United Nations:

       New York:    Alayne O’Reilly, Ph.D.

                           Kathleen Quain

       Vienna: Susanne Schaup, Ph.D.

      

Mission Statement

The Center for Women, the Earth, the Divine is dedicated to exploring the parallels that exist between the imaging and treatment of women and of the Earth, and how our images of the Divine are related to these parallels.

We began by exploring these relationships within the context of our own tradition— the Christian. While we continue our exploration in this tradition, we have also engaged people of other traditions such as the Buddhist, Goddess, Hindu, Indigenous, Jewish and Muslim. Our work is made available through talks, workshops, writings and retreats. The immediate purpose of the Center is educational, while the ultimate goal is the healing of the Creation.

The founder of C:WED is Eleanor Rae, Ph.D., author of Women, the Earth, the Divine, President Emerita of the Network Alliance of Congregations Caring for Earth and founder of the Earth Values Caucus at the United  Nations and Founder/President of the Hutchinson River Restoration Project..        

 

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NACCE Ends 25-Year Mission

 

 The following is a press release issued by the North American Conference on Christianity and Ecology.

 

 

 

On November 22, 2010, the non-profit North American Coalition for Christianity and Ecology (NACCE), the first organization of its kind, voted to cease operations, cancel its incorporation with the state of Michigan, deactivate its website, and donate remaining funds to The Center for Women, the Earth, the Divine ( www.Cwed.org). The group’s decision reflected the recognition that its pioneering work is being continued by other organizations and was no longer needed or possible.

The archives of NACCE, documenting the first 20 years of its history (1986-2006), were donated to Yale Divinity School, and are kept in its Library. Contact :Martha Smalley, Special Collections Librarian, Yale Divinity School Library, 409 Prospect Street,New Haven, CT 06511, Phone: (203) 432-5289,martha.smalley@yale.edu .                

In 1986 a visionary group of theologians and environmentalists from all the major traditions in American Christianity incorporated as the North American Conference on Christianity and Ecology to articulate the ecological dimension already present in Christianity. The first continental conference, in 1987, was attended by over 500 people. Through numerous conferences, networking, and the publication of the bi-monthly Earthkeeping News, NACCE, over 20 years, helped build the Christian ecology movement. Its mission has been to address effectively the greatest moral issue of our time—our continuing destruction of the Earth—with the understanding that humans are not separate from the natural world.

NACCE twice changed its name in response to the rapidly changing consciousness of Christians regarding care for Earth as a religious issue. In 1997, Conference was replaced by Coalition. In 2008 the name became Network Alliance of Congregations Caring for Earth, implying maximum use of internet technology. After operating for more than two decades as a grass-roots movement, never having an institutional base, its resources declining, its constituency very actively involved in local efforts, and seeing its mission being continued by numerous entities around the world, NACCE voted unanimously to end operations.

                                      

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1/19/2011

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Text Box: Lost
David Waggoner
 
 Stand still.
The trees and bushes beside you are not lost.
Wherever you are is called “here” and you must
treat it as a powerful stranger,
must ask permission to know it
and be known.
 
 Listen,
The Forest breathes, it whispers,
I have made this place around you. If you leave it
you may come back again saying “here”.
No two trees are the same to Raven.
No two branches are the same to Wren.
If what a tree or branch does is lost on you
Then you are surely lost. 
 
 Stand still.
The Forest knows where you are.
You must let it find you. 
 
     The above is a Native American teaching story adapted by poet. David Waggoner.