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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, February 23, 2015
Young People Have the Power to Rally Others to Create Positive Change
At the 2014 People's Climate March in New York City. (Photo: Light Brigading/flickr/cc)
More than half the world’s population is under 30, a demographic now at
the forefront of international decision-making and some of Canada’s most
powerful environmental changes. Across the nation, youth are thinking
critically about how we can become better stewards of our vast
landscapes and spectacular wildlife and protect the air, water, soil and
diversity of nature that keep us healthy and alive. They’re standing up
for strong environmental protection and a saner approach to resource
management in their own communities.
Take Halifax resident Stephen Thomas,
an engineer in his 20s. He’s been recognized as a driving force for our
nation’s clean energy future. If You Build It, a project he co-founded,
mobilizes volunteers to construct renewable energy projects,
including wind turbines and solar-powered generators. He’s also
catalyzed large-scale, community-owned wind projects in Nova Scotia and
spearheaded Dalhousie University’s student campaign for fossil fuel
divestment.
Vanessa Gray,
a 22-year-old member of the Aamjiwnaang First Nation, mobilized other
young people to campaign against Enbridge’s Line 9 pipeline proposal to
transport oilsands bitumen through Sarnia, Ontario, to Montreal for
export. She continues to speak out about refinery pollution and host
“toxic tours” of Canada’s Chemical Valley, where 63 petrochemical plants
surround her community.
Some young leaders are taking up the David Suzuki Foundation’s call to
support the right to a healthy environment in their towns. In December,
after attending a Foundation Blue Dot Tour event, 10-year-old Victoria resident Rupert Yakelashek led
a successful charge to have his city adopt a declaration giving
citizens the right to clean air, water and food, and to participate in
decisions that affect their environment.
Ta’Kaiya Blaney,
a 13-year-old from B.C.’s Tla’Amin First Nation, followed a path
similar to my daughter’s, speaking at the UN Rio +20 conference in 2012
when she was just 11. She’s also gaining recognition as the visionary
behind the Salish Sea Youth Foundation and for speaking, writing and
singing in defense of a healthy future for animals, humans, plants and
ecosystems. She incorporates environmental messages into her songs, as
she did on the Blue Dot Tour. “In my culture it’s a fact, and an
understanding of life, that everything is connected, and we were put on
this earth to be stewards and caretakers of the environment,” she
writes.
Young leaders are also at the forefront of Idle No More,
one of the largest Indigenous mass movements in Canadian history. What
began in 2012 as teach-ins in Saskatchewan to protest parliamentary
bills that would erode Indigenous sovereignty and environmental
protections has changed the social and political landscape of Canada.
These young environmental champions share a commitment to their
communities and to the world. They know that young people have the power
to rally others to create positive change. And when people gather
around a common cause, magic happens.
Although many young leaders aren’t yet old enough to vote, they’ll be
left to clean up messes from decisions made today. We owe it to them to
think more carefully about the world we want to leave to their
generation.
National non-profit The Starfish Canada,
co-founded by David Suzuki Foundation public engagement specialist Kyle
Empringham, celebrates young people with its Top 25 Environmentalists
Under 25 program. Every year, 25 youth are recognized for their efforts
to create environmental change. The group recognized is diverse, from
community gardeners and outdoor recreationists to scientists and
advocates. Thanks to them, the program continues to showcase positive
change across the country.
If you know a young leader who deserves national recognition, nominate him or her for The Starfish Canada’s Top 25 Environmentalists Under 25. It could help inspire others to change the world.