Monday, December 21, 2015

On the Road from Paris 12/8-10/2015

An, Peace Rider and Paul De Man Aalst, Belgium at business and home
Werner, Marion and Don - Mechelen, Belgium at their home




 

Brugge Medieval village near Brussels with Werner
Don with Werner at Brussels Atomium built for 1958 EXPO


See Werner Van Steen Photography for a lot more.  Banner goes next to Mongolia with Marion and Werner but alas not me.  Many thanks to David, Claire and Sophie for letting me stay with them in Paris.  Without their generous hospitality and friendship my trip to Paris for COP 21 would not have been possible.

In summary a lot of people worked very hard to get an agreement which is a beginning but the feeling of many is that it is not bold enough or soon enough to stave off the worst effects of our warming Earth.  

A few more thoughts to add but computer fatigue has set in so all for now.

Peace Rider  
 





Tuesday, December 8, 2015

On The Road At Omaha Beach, Normandy, France 12/7/2015


 American Cemetery memorial Omaha Beach, Normandy, France
American Cemetery  Omaha Beach
Sculpture Omaha beach St. Laurent























































These loving words were recently shared by Terry Tempest Williams with a dear friend.  Their expression embodies, the hope and yearning of many of us for creating a world in which we care for one another and care for the Earth - it remains eternally true that Love is the Way. 

And that Way, through the personal sacrifice of many on the beaches of Normandy is a reminder that we have a responsibility to those who have gone before as well as to those yet unborn to create anew, a world of hope, justice and peace for all of God's children.


 Dearest Joe:

"So this morning I awoke with the word "emigres" in my mind. I actually had a dream that I had written a book of poetry and emigres was the last word of the last poem. Very strange as I don't recall every using it in a sentence, certainly not on the page.  Why this word now?

I looked it up:

Emigres: Whereas emigrants have likely chosen to leave one place and become immigrants in a different clime, not usually expecting to return, émigrés see exile as a temporary expedient forced on them by political circumstances. Émigré circles often arouse suspicion as breeding-grounds for plots and counter-revolution.

Anyway, I became curious how this word might inform the question you asked me
about the relationship between climate change and peace.

We tend to approach climate change as a political issue, a scientific issue.  I believe it is a spiritual one.

Finding beauty in a broken world is creating beauty in the world we find.  I am not in Paris.  I am home in the American southwest in the desert in the midst of drought. The questions I am asking myself are how do we live lives of greater intention? How do we use less water, less carbon, travel less and root more closely to home? Living in Utah, we are not at peace. Oil shale and natural gas development are ravaging this red rock landscape and it is leading those of us who live here to action. We are working to keep the fossil fuels in the ground on our beloved public lands be it through acts of education, art, protest, and when necessary organized acts of civil disobedience. America's first tar sand mine is here, already here, and we are organizing around how we might shut it down before it gets further along in its construction.  Water is an issue.  Health is an issue.  And greenhouse gas emissions is an issue.  Power is an issue and so is democracy.

I do not want to be an Emigres and find myself exiled from my own home ground.  I do not want to leave this beautiful broken country of erosional beauty where rocks tell time differently and the wingbeats of ravens come to us as prayers.  But if the drought continues, if the toxicity of the air increases, and if our public lands continue to be mined for profit rather than protected as reservoirs of peace -- this is who we will become -- Emigres -- exiled from our own country.

Here is the truth of our times: There is no place to go.  We must face climate change as we face an illness at home with consciousness and a vow to change our lives with a bow to a more sane way of living. We cannot do it alone.  We must do it together. It may not be about finding a cure.  It may be about moving toward a collective planetary healing -- dare I say that this might  include rituals and ceremonies and a change of story?  The old story of growth for growth's sake and economic imperialism within nation states is killing us. If the dark side of climate change is violence, then the light within the climate justice movement which I see as love -- a love for life on this planet, and putting our love into action with the gifts and strengths that are ours from science to art to the humanities and religion -- this is what will lead us toward a pathway of peace because we have made a commitment to be in the service of something larger than ourselves.

Some may call me naive.  But I have tremendous faith in the collective will and imagination of people who are ignited toward a common cause.  Climate change is our common cause. We are seeing this outpouring of active concern all around the world in the poorest of countries  who are the most vulnerable and in the richest of countries whose arrogance is failing us. Our survival as a species depends on this kind of enlightened leadership from the ground up across the divides of race, class, gender, and belief.

The climate justice movement is a movement of peace because it is our commitment to minimize suffering, both human and wild, on this beautiful blue planet we call home.

It is a fierce and mighty movement of the heart beating from the margins of the body politic to the center.  It will revive our humanity as we remember what We, the People and our governments seem to have forgotten: The health of the Earth is our own.

I hope this helps.

With love and respect for your voice, Joe --
Terry
















Friday, December 4, 2015

Peace Rider on the Road from Paris 12/4/2015















Dear Friends,

One of the more inspiring presentation I attended was on Wednesday by Naomi Klien's group This Changes Everything?  It was about the Leap Manifesto that was launched just before the recent Canadian election but intended for a wider audience.  A beginning document not necessarily cast in concrete whose creation involved many people and translated into many languages.  It has been gaining traction and fundamentally a call for transformation.

 There is a web site where one can get more information (theleapmanifesto.org).  Instead of inserting Canada in the subtitle it could also read A Call for an America Based on Caring for the Earth and One Another.   Its time may also be right for our country with some modification.  And as the brochure I have says, Canada (America ) is not this place today - but it could be. 

Yesterday afternoon on my way home, I passed by the Ba ta clan Cafe on Rue Voltaire where 80 some persons were killed by terrorists.  A multitude of flowers and candles and messages of all kinds now adorn the sidewalks by the cafe and across the street.  A spontaneous heartfelt street memorial to loved ones lost to senseless violence.  More surround the nearby monument of Marianne in the Place de la Republique.

I started to unfurl my Love is the Way banner on the barricade around the cafe and was told I couldn't do it by a policeman.  I said it was only temporary.  He wanted to see so I unfurled it.  Is it about the climate he asked no, an expression of Love I indicated.  So he said I had one minute but it took longer and I did get several photos of it I will post on my blog. 

I don't think many yet understand Love as being the energy of unity, that which seeks the highest good of another, and connects all things.  Fully understood and embraced at a higher level of consciousness it knows that what we give to one another individually and collectively is giving to oneself or ourselves.
 
 Without a shift of consciousness it is as Einstein said, we cannot solve the problems that confront us

Some interesting things to check out - a book by Tim Gore from Oxfam titled Extreme Carbon Inequality.  I saw a brief interview with him about it last night on Democracy Now.  Also a moving reading of a poem by a young person from the Marshall Islands pleading with the rest of us to help her save her island home being affected by rising sea levels

This afternoon I will try to the International Rights of Nature Tribunal; on the weekend is the Peoples Climate Summit, also screenings of This Changes Everything, and an Indigenous Peoples press conference on Sunday afternoon I will try to make.  They will call for world leaders to keep fossil fuels in the ground and a need for a treaty to protect Mother Earth.  There will be a flotilla with the "Canoe of Life" brought 6000 miles from Ecuador. 

Lots of interesting things going on apart from the COP 21 sessions.  One must pick and choose.

I'm feeling perkier and back on my bicycle making tracks around town.

Love to all,

Peace Rider

























































Don - Peace Rider