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Environmental Education

Barbados
in the
eastern Caribbean is a Small Island Developing State (SIDS), only 14
miles by 21 miles with a population of around 265,000. The loss of land
to housing and industrial development and to erosion is increasing
daily. Dependence on petroleum is ever increasing in order to bring in
tourists, import food, run the power plants, pump water and much more.
With this in mind, food security, water conservation and preservation
and conservation of green space are vital interests. Treading Lightly -
an environmental education and conservation project - is developing a
puppet show for the Barbados Green Expo in March. It seeks, through
scripts that highlight the teachings of various Faith communities, to
educate the public as to why it has a spiritual responsibility for the
environment. Treading Lightly hopes to inspire Barbadians to take
responsibility for their environment - appealing to their minds through
science and their emotions through texts of their religions.
The
plan is to
create an interactive, dramatic and artistic time line that gives the
scientific creation story of the universe. The science of the creation
story is inspired by "A Walk Through Time" which can be viewed at
http://www.globalcommunity.org/wtt/index.shtml. We will interlace the
visuals with texts of the creation story from various religions -
primarily Christian because that is the majority Barbadian religion. An
emphasis on the five previous extinctions on the planet will lead to a
supposition that we may be involved in a sixth unless we drastically
change human behavior. The puppet plays which accompany the exhibit
will illuminate the issues in a humorous way.
Participants
will be asked to make a commitment to address at least one
environmental issue in their own lives - for example, to take the bus
and leave the car at home when practical. This is no easy
sell.
Barbadians have recently become more affluent. For instance, there are
125,000 cars on this small island. The polluted air hangs in the school
classrooms near the highways to the extent that one school was recently
shut down for a few days by a teacher protest. Traffic jams are
frazzling the public nerve which nevertheless does not want to give up
the car for the bus. The number of asthma cases is soaring,
especially among children. We hope to find statistics which
will
tie the health issues to the transportation issues.
If
this exhibit
is successful, it will be enlarged into a "roadshow" which will travel
to schools, festivals and such. It is already successful in
unifying the diversity of religious opinions toward a common goal.
Additionally,
the All-Terrain Gardens program will be holding workshops on growing
food organically in stacks of tires. This project aims toward several
outcomes: a recognition of Baha'u'llah's teaching that the world must
have a "special regard" for agriculture; a recognition of the
interactions of the life of the soil and the life of plants; the
creation of gardens for special needs - even on concrete: production of
a safe source of food; wise water use; utilization of problem waste
products; raising questions about land-loss; providing outlets for
youth and those with disabilities.
From 9th
IEF Electronic Conference 2005 http://www.bcca.org/ief/conf9elec.htm

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Last updated 12 April 2006