La Voz: Climate Justice
Environmental Justice in the Bronx and Beyond! Building shared solutions to surviving climate change and reclaiming Mother Earth from the catastrophic clutches of corporate capitalism…
Monday, May 27, 2013
Chispas que encienden nuestra larga oscuridad
Se ha dicho que en la memoria nos encontramos con las semillas de la resistencia. Por lo que, este caminar es un adentrarse y recorrer, de una forma crítica, cómo se estan alimentando las chispas que iluminan esta larga noche en la que hemos estado viviendo y, cómo en medio del imperio más poderoso que ha existido en la historia de la humanidad, se esta forjando una narrativa diferente.
Esta chispa se desprendió de los grandes fuegos de las luchas históricas, de la imaginación y de la resistencia. El colectivo Ocupa Wall Street irrumpió y ocupó la plaza que se renombró, la Libertad. Varios de nosotros que hemos luchado y resistido olimos el potencial de nuestros jóvenes y nos preguntamos, qué hacer ante dicha sorpresa.
Algunos de nosotros, por nosotros me refiero a un colectivo que desde nuestras comunidades de fe, mirábamos de manera crítica y escéptica, la atención desmesurada a el susodicho grupo burgués que había ocupado y atrapado, de manera insólita e inesperada la atención mediática y se había colado en la conciencia de las masas. Inyectando una nueva energía, un nuevo pensar en los que por tantos años nos habíamos entrincherado en estrategias inefectivas y redundantes. Poco a poco fuimos acompañando, escuchando y alimentando esa chispa, que aunque nueva en su presente forma, ya conocida.
Gente se sumaba al experimento y lo que el gobierno de los Estados Unidos juzgó como prematuro e insignificante empezó a preocupar al estado policiaco y las fuerzas de seguridad. Alcaldes, instituciones del estado, bancos, la bolsa de valores y en sí el sistema capitalista se vio cuestionado y la cultura "del que todos se sienten culpables y nadie responsable" se conmocionó desde sus pilares.
Pronto el experimento en la Plaza de la Libertad, que está en el centro del sistema financiero, en una ola de violencia del estado lo desmanteló. Una y otra vez el estado, expuesto a la luz de la verdad, utilizó la fuerza como ultimo recurso pero no lo suficientemente rápido como para que un nuevo aire de humanidad llenara e impulsara y reavivara el fuego de la conciencia en miles y miles de jóvenes que por la persecución se vieron obligados a infiltrarse en nuestros barrios y comunidades, aprendiendo el largo camino de la praxis de la solidaridad y la ayuda mutua.
Una de las lecciones aprendidas en la plaza de la libertad, que es una alternativa concreta al sistema de corrupción e individualista, es lo que se respiró en esa ocupación de más de un mes: una vida comunitaria, donde las decisions horizontales permitían a cada individuo revalorarse así mismo y al otro, dónde se vivía con respeto y se recuperaba la humanidad y la experiencia original de vivencia comunitaria de los indígenas americanos.
Esta humanidad despierta fue probada por el devastador huracán Sandy y la infraestructura humana que se formó bajo los rascacielos de la bolsa de valores entró en acción ante la obsoleta e indiferente burocracia de una ciudad, cuyo alcalde invertía más en guardar una imagen impecable ante los medios de comunicación que en dar respuesta a las comunidades devastadas.
En el segundo día después del huracán parte del movimiento ocupó la Iglesia Luterana de San Jacobo, de la cuál yo soy el encargado. A la vez, varias personas del movimiento ya se encontraban en las zonas afectadas, identificando lugares que servirían, hasta el presente, como centros de acopio y distribución, y aún más, como lugares donde la comunidad construye su capacidad, experimenta con nuevas formas de organizarse, de generar una vida sustentable y crear soluciones. El trabajo que hicieron estos jóvenes avergonzó a las autoridades, la Cruz Roja, y otras agencias gubernamentales cuyas estructuras burocráticas y corporativas evidenciaron la falta de una respuesta efectiva, rápida y humana.
Además de responder a la crisis en las zonas afectadas se establecieron vínculos con la comunidad local, identificando personas y recursos para la ardúa tarea de la reconstrucción.
Friday, June 22, 2012
Time will tell that good has come from Rio+20
Those who would tell you that nothing good could come of
Rio+20 are the same people who are hoping you won’t notice while they lock up
the remaining natural resources for themselves and their friends. They don’t believe people can work together
to create quality of life for all, but would rather let the market and military
dictate what token animals and resources to save. They don’t stop to learn from the stories of
their grandmothers, nor do they break bread with their neighbors in times of
famine. They are the ones who dump
cyanide in your river because they believe the gold they will find is more
valuable than your life. And they don’t
mind genetically modified food because they can afford name brand pharmaceuticals
that will mask the effects of their malnutrition. Too bad all the money in the world can’t buy
them a new heart.
It could, however, buy them a plane ticket to Rio de
Janeiro, and if they are lucky and end up on the south side of the coast in Flamenco
Park, they could meet tens of thousands of other souls who have gathered here
to problem solve together. They might
eavesdrop awhile on a working group that is striving for consensus around
strategies to achieve food sovereignty, transition to non-fossil fuel powered
transportation, restore ecosystems or set a new standard for society—el Vivir
Bien—Quality of Life. Is it too much to
ask?
If they brought their kids, they could take them to the
Centro Infantil, where they could make art from plants and leaves, celebrating
the creativity of life. Or stop by the
Cooperative Movement booth, where books are hanging from the branches
advertising cooperative values and a vision for a collaborative new economy. Or get a snack at the Solidarity Market,
where locals and visitors have set up organic treats for sale, celebrating the
ripple effect of buying products directly from the source, cultivated without
poisoning the earth.
Maybe they will get tired of the multi-lingual,
multi-generational, multi-objective dialogue and decide to take a break, kick
off their shoes, and let the sand massage between their toes as they wander out
to the shoreline. It is Rio de Janeiro,
after all! The gentle pulse of the waves
of energy as they push up from the depths of the ocean onto the shore might
reveal to them why we are all here in the first place, if they are paying
attention.
But if they are unlucky, they might end up instead on a two
hour shuttle bus that takes them beyond steep walls guarded by machine-gun
wielding teenagers and helicopters swirling overhead, where they can read the
bureaucratic language detailing how corporations and the military are aligned
to co-opt the UN along with the rest of humankind’s institutions; a global
imperial checkmate. Unfortunately for
the rest of us, it is there that our political leaders have gathered to pay
homage, sacrificing our resources and future at the false solution altar of “sustainable
development.”
The ultimate judgment of if anything good comes of Rio+20
will come from the next generation.
Yesterday the youth delegates dressed up as corporate CEOs to ironically
thank the UN for giving them the “future we want,” one dictated by the fossil
fuel and giant agro-industries, even while Oxfam, the World Wildlife Foundation
, Greenpeace and other NGOs tore up
their participation accreditations in rejection of the formal accord.
Meanwhile throughout Rio, in and outside the People’s Summit,
tens of thousands of us continue to share stories and ideas for a different
kind of future we want. I met
architects and permaculture experts who envision green roofs and rain water
capture in Sao Paulo, just as we do in the Bronx. Africans explained “Ubuntu,” the concept that
I am because you are; that sharing doesn’t come from surplus, but rather intertwined
destiny. We shared ideas for a legal structure based on defending our right to
water, and daily practices that heal each other through harmony with our food
and bodies. We challenged ourselves to
learn from marginalized communities how to “live well” outside of the dominant
paradigm, so we can open new space for creative solutions to climate
challenges.
But even as we create this space, we must defend it. After the Indigenous people from across Brazil
shared their ancient wisdom and culture with the visitors from across the planet
that made this pilgrimage, they gathered on the beach to reject the 60 giant
dams the government plans to destroy the rivers of the Amazon, the lungs of the
world.
Make no mistake: this is a battle, in our
minds, our lifestyles and our territories.
If we remain isolated, struggling to survive against the plague of
bulldozers and poisons that quench the capitalist obsession with growth, we
will fail.
But when we come together, in
our own communities just as in Rio, we are stronger than them. Time will tell that good
has come from Rio+20.
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Rio+20 in NYC
Update from the UN Negotiationsfrom the Global Justice Ecology Project
Note: Rio+20 is the major UN summit coming up in June in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Rio+20 is the 20 year follow up to the first Rio Earth summit in 1992, which gave birth to the UN Climate Convention, the UN Biodiversity Convention, the Convention to Combat Desertification and of course the Convention on Sustainable Development. All of these conventions have utterly failed to accomplish their missions.
April 2010 World People's Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth |
Orin Langelle, GJEP’s board chair is on the advisory board of GEAR
.
First to speak was the representative of the Business and Industry Major Group, who reported that global business “welcomed the Zero Draft” and the fact that they’d been given greater access in the negotiations, but noted that they were still “feeling sidelined” by the process and would like to participate more actively in the process. The private sector, she noted, sees the green economy as a linking of “economic growth with environmental sustainability,” and is pushing for an agreed-upon definition of “green economy” in the text.
Directly afterwards was the report from the Farmers Major Group representative, who affirmed that according to fisherfolk and small farmers, food sovereignty and the rights of rural women must play central roles in sustainable development strategy, with food sovereignty defined as a “comprehensive and cross-cutting framework” connecting rights, sustainability, and poverty eradication. The delegate also pointed to the shortcomings of the Green Economy as it “diverts attention away from sustainable development.”
These reports illustrated the seemingly irreconcilable divide existing here at the negotiations, which the Brazilian negotiator (at the Major Groups meeting by invitation) characterized as “parallel worlds”- a simultaneous push by most nations and civil society to strengthen rights-based language and build off of the outcomes of the 1992 Rio summit, such as the Precautionary Principle, and the push by the most powerful nations to use the UN process to kickstart and support a major new investment frontier for global business.
The Workers and Trade Unions Major Group representative seemed to capture the mood of the room: “Our rights are being bracketed.” Civil Society is losing, she pointed out, and needs to demand global outcomes based in democratic process at the international level. This concern was echoed by one of the focal points for the major groups when he called on civil society to “organize” and present a unified front against the agendas of the most powerful nations and corporate interests.
We followed this divide into the first negotiating session, taking place in a cavernous room packed with delegates, all seated in beige leather chairs behind their respective member-state placard. Hung on the walls and featured at the front of the room were large television screens displaying what could be described as the world’s most intense googledoc session- brackets within brackets, comments, additions, and clarifications. In other words, a “cluster-doc”.
When we walked in, the process was essentially a back-and-forth between the US and the G77 (a negotiating bloc of mostly southern countries) with the US bracketing and deleting language upholding rights to food and development, and the G-77 trying to ensure social inclusion and address the shortcomings of market-based approaches to eradicate poverty. The Zero Draft had become littered with paragraphs such as this one:
Protest Against UN Climate Strategy in Copenhagen 2009 |
[25 b alt: Encourage government-driven and market-oriented policies and actions to promote an integrated, action-oriented approach to sustainable development that is based on data, information, and evidence. -US, Canada, EU, New Zealand; G77 delete]
Or, more likely, its inverse, such as a G77 proposal calling for the regulation of financial market speculation, and a wealthy nation response to refine the statement using a [positive tone].
So what will it be? Will the “Road to Rio” further devolve into a North-South power struggle, preventing the coveted UN mandate for a green free-market investment bubble? Or will the G77 eventually cave and sign on to this new Washington Consensus, agreeing to swap human rights language for intellectual property rights guarantees? One way or another, the green economy ball is rolling, and its in all of our interests to follow it closely.
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Raising Tilapia (and Hope) in the Bronx
Raising Tilapia in the Bronx
CONTINUE READING HERE
By C.J. Sinner
On an overcast September afternoon, Joseph
Ferdinand took a walk with friends Juan Antigua and Miguel Hamond, to a
community garden in the Mount Hope neighborhood of the Bronx. The trio
walked slowly around the exterior of the half-acre vacant lot, peering
between gaps in the fence and commenting on the garden’s state of
disrepair: fading toys littered the space, a few raised planting beds
with the remnants of tomato and pepper plants needed care, rusting
garden tools sat propped against tree stumps.
Still, the group saw potential – plenty of space
and sunlight for a greenhouse. Back at Ferdinand’s studio apartment,
flipping through pages of research, they could see the progress of his
project. There, in two 55-gallon tanks along the wall
opposite his bed, were 25 young tilapia that Ferdinand had begun raising
in the summer. In September, each fish measured a few inches long.
Antigua and Hamond watched Ferdinand sprinkle
food into the tanks. Then, questions started circulating. How much
funding do we need? Whom do we need to meet with to take over the
community garden? What about equipment?
Ferdinand and his volunteer friends want to take
over management of the city-owned 176th Street Community Garden they’d
visited and transform it into an aquaponics hub. Aquaponics, a growing
sector of sustainable farming, combines the principles of aquaculture
and hydroponics – raising fish while growing plants. Though operations vary in complexity, they
generally use fish wastewater to irrigate and fertilize plants. The
plant roots, along with naturally-occurring bacteria, filter the water,
which is cycled back to the fish, so that the two become interdependent.
Ferdinand envisions a center where workers, maybe
student interns, raise fresh fish and crisp garden produce, like
tomatoes, cucumbers and lettuce, as neighbors learn about gardening. The
produce and fish would be sold directly to community members or to
local restaurants.
“I see myself trying to bring something that
would benefit the community in the form of growing fish and herbs that I
know would be healthy,” Ferdinand said. “All we get here is, like, the
leftovers – that’s all we get. It’s fat and salt and whatever garbage it
is.”
CONTINUE READING HERE
Friday, March 23, 2012
Concrete Green: In Our Back Yard
original members Elisabeth Ortega, Nethaly Soriano, Andre Rivera, Dahiana Laucer, Taleigh Smith & Jose Rodriguez |
When Taleigh Smith, a worker-owner at Concrete Green, tells people about her business, she is often met with incredulity. “They think we’re peddling some sort of environmental concrete,” Smith told ioby last week.
In reality, Concrete Green is a five-member worker co-op that is attempting to revolutionize green industry in the Bronx.
Smith came to New York City in 2001 with a passion for finding global justice solutions. Through her work with the Northwest Bronx Community and Clergy Coalition, she has come to understand that global problems can only be solved through local action. Global solutions, she found, begins with a group of people trying something new in their neighborhood. So when an opportunity arose to start a green worker co-op in her neighborhood, Smith jumped at the opportunity.
The idea for the organization was born from an environmental literacy class that Smith teaches through the Center for Sustainable Energy at Bronx Community College. In that class, Smith guides students through environmental problem solving and green job trainings. Only a few short months ago, in September of 2011, five of her most ambitious and entrepreneurial students approached her with the idea that would ultimately become Concrete Green.
Now a joint project of the Youth Ministries for Peace and Justice and the Northwest Bronx Community and Clergy Coalition, Concrete Green is still in the early stages of development. The organization’s short-term goal is to provide a steady income to its member-owners, the five Bronx youths between the ages of 19 and 22 who are trained to install green infrastructure, solar panels and rainwater harvesting systems on rooftops. While the group has not yet been contracted out for a job, Smith told ioby that they consider themselves pioneers in the neighborhood.
Socioeconomic contexts in the Bronx present significant obstacles for a green start-up. The member-owners, all Bronx residents, deal regularly with the effects of unemployment, asthma and deteriorating health, school closures and a fundamental lack of economic opportunity in their home neighborhoods.
“We can’t just spin our wheels without making money,” said Smith. All five member-owners work part-time in the area, but each hopes to turn Concrete Green into a career. To do so will take some hard work, coupled with the formation of strong partnerships and the generosity of donors.
The member-owners recognize that, at least in their early stages of business development, they will not be able to win contracts for rooftop installation projects without a track record. They are currently engaging with green design consultants in the hope that they might be able to spark a collaboration. With the right training and an opportunity to accompany specialty firms on contracted jobs, the member-owners at Concrete Green are confident that they will begin to build expertise and a reputation for excellence in the field. Ultimately, Smith hopes that property owners looking to install a green roof on their buildings will approach Concrete Green with their projects.
While the organization will be working with paying clients, Smith is careful to point out that the member-owners’ hearts are with the community. As a non-profit organization largely aimed at generating income for the workers who run it, the organization will continue to fundraise as it grows.
According to Smith, although their plan is to run a money-making enterprise, it is important to her team that they address the highest needs in the community, “whether or not they can pay for our services.”
In ten years, Concrete Green hopes to see a green roof on every building in the Bronx. “When we say green, we expect that to have different characteristics,” said Smith. Some buildings are ideal for typical green roofs and others, said Smith, are ideal for recreational or therapeutic uses. “We’ll measure our success,” Smith added, by looking at “business sustainability, projects we can point to and their environmental impacts, and seeing our work replicated.”
The organization will consider its mission at least partially fulfilled when organizations like it take root across the Bronx. The goal is not to monopolize, but to foster, the market for Bronx-grown green worker cooperatives.
Smith is keenly attuned to the global implications of the work that she is doing with Concrete Green. “The Bronx is in a unique position, being a part of New York City,” she told ioby. The city is an economic hub for the world, “yet the Bronx as a community has been marginalized and over-polluted and has a relationship to New York City that is similar to the developing world.” Smith affirms that environmental solutions in the Bronx have global implications for communities that have been marginalized and exploited around the globe.
With that said, the proximity of the Bronx to New York’s many international political and economic institutions affords the borough unique access to the world stage. In this way, Smith argued, “the Bronx has an advantage.” It is precisely for this allure that many organizations and companies come to the South Bronx to seed environmental projects. Sadly, these are often short-lived and provide few net benefits for the community. Smith firmly believes that environmental and economic sustainability in the Bronx begins with homegrown projects that both employ and benefit Bronx residents.
The future is looking bright for Concrete Green. With the right combination of donors and business partners, the organization might just be an exemplar model for community owned and operated green enterprises in the Bronx.
Concrete Green will be featured on-stage at the New York City Green Festival at the Javits Center on April 21. The event is open to the public but requires a small entry fee. For information on how to receive free tickets, courtesy Concrete Green, please contact Taleigh Smith at taleigh@northwestbronx.org.
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