Join The Wide World of WED on June 5th

gorilla-WED2010For This Year’s World Environment Day, the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) Asks the World’s Citizens to Mobilize for Climate Action. [image via flickr]

In the first few months of each year, we report on several special days and hours:  there’s World Water Day on March 22nd, Earth Hour on the last Saturday of March, and Earth Day on April 22nd.  The next earth-themed day – World Environment Day (WED) – will be celebrated on June 5th.  We  think of these as living memorials to our planet.  Just as we set aside time to honor saints and leaders, environment days similarly create punctuations in our routines.  However, rather than meditate on the sacrifice and wisdom of our leaders, we reflect instead on our collective responsibility to protect everybody’s earth.

planet-earth-WED2010

[image via flickr]

WED in Rwanda

Designed to pique international concern for environmental issues, the first WED day was initiated by the United Nations General Assembly in 1972 and gave rise to the United Nations Environmental Program (UNEP). Each year, WED has a unique theme, and is hosted by a different country.  Sweden was the first, while 2010’s “International Year of Biodiversity” commemoration will be hosted in Rwanda.  An important eco-region known as the “Land of a Thousand Hills,” this African country is home to the Gorilla, whose existence is imperiled by habitat loss and poaching.

rwanda-WED2010

[image via flickr]

Gorillas:  A Symbol of Dwindling Ecosystems

According to UNEP, “the fate of the great apes is closely tied to ours as they inhabit some of the last remaining tropical rainforests – ecosystems that not only assist in supplying us with water, food and medicine but also play a global role in carbon sequestration and thus combating climate change.”  Therefore, any effort to protect the Gorilla corresponds to an effort to protect our own habitat as well.

Which brings us to our role in WED.  This day is not only relegated to large government or non-government organizations.  UNEP encourages every conscientious individual and every organized action to contribute to the global momentum, to use our sweeping networking tools to voice our restorative will. And if you think that individual voices go unheard, allow the details of the world’s largest mass participation event in history to persuade you otherwise.

The Power of People United

Funded by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), Earth Hour took root in Sydney in 2007. According to earthhour.org, 2.2 million people and 2,000 businesses switched off their lights for one hour that first year.  The following year, 50 million people in 400 cities did the same.  In 2009, Earth Hour spread to 4,000 cities and towns, while this year a record “… 128 countries and territories joined the global display of climate action… People across the world from all walks of life turned off their lights and came together in celebration and contemplation of the one thing we all have in common – our planet.”

While this event amounts to substantial energy savings (imagine what we could do if we switched off every night?), the most important thing to realize is the power of united individuals to steer the course of climate change.

For this World Environment Day,  use your powerful voice to support biodiversity:  arrange a clean up in your area.  Encourage your friends and family to stop using plastic bags.  Plant a tree.   Plant a community garden. Conduct a workshop on how to curtail water use, an especially precious resource in the Middle East.  And then register your WED activity here, and UNEP will donate $10 to Gorilla conservation and protection.  Every action counts.

More on Conservation Efforts:

Steps and Science for Saving the Jordan River Between Jordan, Palestinians and Israelis

Israel Bars Fishing In Sea of Galilee

Greenpeace Mediterranean Demands that Nestle-Osem Give the Orangutans and Rainforests a Break

Tafline Laylin
Tafline Laylinhttp://www.greenprophet.com
As a tour leader who led “eco-friendly” camping trips throughout North America, Tafline soon realized that she was instead leaving behind a trail of gas fumes, plastic bottles and Pringles. In fact, wherever she traveled – whether it was Viet Nam or South Africa or England – it became clear how inefficiently the mandate to re-think our consumer culture is reaching the general public. Born in Iran, raised in South Africa and the United States, she currently splits her time between Africa and the Middle East. Tafline can be reached at tafline (at) greenprophet (dot) com.
5 COMMENTS
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    Opposing war and it’s by-products can make the biggest difference. But that is almost always the last thing we seem to talk about, and do something about.

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