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Planting trees for peace: the message brought by Kenya's Nobel Peace Prize winner sounds surprisingly familiar.


In the beginning, Wangari Maathai Dr. Wangari Muta Maathai born April 1, 1940 in Ihithe village, Tetu division, Nyeri District of Kenya is an environmental and political activist. In 2004 she became the first African woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize for "her contribution to sustainable development, democracy  had very little to work with: Seven seedling trees, a handful of resolute women, and a powerful will to bring change to their community. That was enough. Those first trees the women planted together became hundreds. The hundreds became thousands. And the thousands of trees planted by Maathai and other Kenyan women became the Green Belt Movement The Green Belt Movement is a grassroots non-governmental organization based in Kenya that takes an holistic approach to development by focusing on environmental conservation, community development and capacity building. .

Today their work has been honored by a 2004 Nobel Peace Prize The Nobel Peace Prize (Swedish and Norwegian: Nobels fredspris) is the name of one of five Nobel Prizes bequeathed by the Swedish industrialist and inventor Alfred Nobel.  recognizing that the simple act of planting trees reduces conflict, strengthens communities, and contributes to world peace.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

"The message is this: If we want a peaceful world Peaceful World is a double-LP by rock band The Rascals, which was released in 1971. In August of 1970, Eddie Brigati left the band, and guitarist Gene Cornish left the following month. , we have to manage our environment responsibly and sustainably," Maathai says. She delivers this deceptively simple message with a warm and direct smile, her dark face luminous beneath an elaborate hat of green and black African cotton print.

Her words have a ring so familiar that I am momentarily too startled star·tle  
v. star·tled, star·tling, star·tles

v.tr.
1. To cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start.

2. To alarm, frighten, or surprise suddenly. See Synonyms at frighten.
 to ask my next question. I have heard this message from America's tree planters Planters is an American snack food company under Kraft Foods manufacturing, best known for its nuts and the Mr. Peanut icon that symbolizes them.

Started by Italian immigrants Amedeo Obici and Mario Peruzzi in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, in 1906, it was incorporated in 1908
, harvesters, and community forest activists during a decade of writing about them.

These leaders of a national community-based forestry movement, mostly women, understand the link between their communities and natural resource management, which Maathai, as a world leader, now personifies. Like Maathai, they have looked to the landscapes surrounding them for solutions to problems ranging from poverty to government mismanagement mis·man·age  
tr.v. mis·man·aged, mis·man·ag·ing, mis·man·ag·es
To manage badly or carelessly.



mis·manage·ment n.
. Like her, they have experienced the profound personal changes that come from nurturing the natural world around us.

Although Maathai's reach is global and theirs more local, these American grassroots forest activists share her knowledge that planting and tending trees have profoundly powerful ramifications ramifications nplAuswirkungen pl .

"How we use resources--how we share them--affects how we live," says Maathai.

Her understanding of these fundamental connections comes from a childhood spent close to the land. Nibbling nibbling Nutrition The consumption of multiple–up to 17–'mini-meals' per day, as opposed to the usual 3 meals/day. Cf Bingeing, Gorging.  at an assortment of fresh fruits during our interview in Portland, Oregon, she tells of working beside her mother on a small plot of ground she called her farm. Together they experienced the rains, the germinating seeds, "the touch of the soil."

Maathai revered the village fig tree, whose roots dove deep into the ground near the spring that fed the stream where her mother sent her to fetch water. She played in the water, stringing around her neck the pale luminescent lu·mi·nes·cent  
adj.
Capable of, suitable for, or exhibiting luminescence.



[Latin lmen, l
 larvae Larvae, in Roman religion
Larvae: see lemures.
 "beads" that later disappeared, leaving thousands of tadpoles Tadpoles are a psychedelic rock band formed in 1990 in New York City by Todd Parker (guitars/vocals) and Michael Kite Audino (drums.) In 1992, Nick Kramer (guitars/vocals), David Max (bass) and Andrew Jackson (guitars) of the fledgling Manhattan group, Hit, joined the Tadpoles  quick to evade her eager hands.

Years later, when Maathai served on the National Council of Women of Kenya, she began linking her early appreciation of natural systems with the politics of how they are managed. After traveling abroad and earning degrees in biology and veterinary anatomy veterinary anatomy
n.
The study of the structures of domestic animals.
, she returned to the village of her childhood.

What she found changed her life. The streams that had run full and clean were now trickles laden with silt. The tadpoles had disappeared. The fig tree was long gone, replaced by coffee bushes. The people were poor and struggling.

Even more than growing up in the Kenyan countryside, it was the experience of these women still living close to the land that launched the Green Belt Movement. Their needs--for their families and their neighborhoods--spurred Maathai to action (See American Forests American Forests is a nonprofit conservation organization that promotes healthy forests and urban tree planting.

The organization was established in 1875 as the American Forestry Association, by physician/horticulturist John Aston Warder and a group of like-minded citizens
, September/October 1990). Their close ties to home and their dependence on primary resources made the Kenyan women barometers of the health of the land.

"I placed my faith in the women, who clearly recognize when the water is no longer clean, when the fields have lost their topsoil," she tells me.

When the women complained about pollution and erosion, Maathai said, "Let's plant trees." When they said they didn't know how, Maathai said, "We will learn." And they did.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The Kenyan women ignored conventional forestry techniques, relying instead on their traditional skills. Government and industry groups donated the initial batches of seedlings, but after that the women started their own nurseries by finding seeds in their neighborhood. They substituted broken pots for seedbeds, used granaries to keep seedlings away from animals, and taught themselves how to harvest their own nursery seeds by observing the plants closely.

The lessons went well beyond keeping the tender roots moist and cultivating the tiny sprouts until they matured. By planting and growing trees, the women also understood that they had real choices--about themselves, their communities, and their immediate environments. It was this empowerment that attracted government attention, not the small forests that began emerging around the Kenyan countryside, Maathai says.

"The government said, 'If they only planted trees we wouldn't bother them. But they also plant ideas.' And I say it's true," she says, a mischievous grin spreading across her face.

For fostering these lessons, Maathai was harassed, jailed, and vilified.

Across America, women in cities and small towns are also planting ideas as they organize efforts to create forests in urban neighborhoods and improve the management of vast tracts of public stands. Along with new skills, confidence, and a stewardship ethic, they are instilling in·still also in·stil  
tr.v. in·stilled, in·still·ing, in·stills also in·stils
1. To introduce by gradual, persistent efforts; implant: "Morality . . .
 the notion that people have both the responsibility and the power to take care of themselves and the earth.

For all their differences in projects, approaches, and geography, they share with Maathai and the women of Kenya a focus on common sense solutions that ignore the hierarchies of conventional power. Maathai began with ordinary people and the simplest of materials. In America, community forest activists began with their neighbors--business owners, schoolteachers, and loggers--and their own backyards.

Today they are bringing change to barren U.S. urban streets, now graced with trees; to struggling rural communities, which now offer a few more steady jobs; to federal policy, which is starting to recognize needs at neighborhood levels. They share with the Kenyan women a humility aimed more at exchanging information and improving skills than amassing personal or political power.

Maathai calls them "foresters without diplomas," and they are gaining strength throughout the world. Her Green Belt Movement has placed more than 30 million trees in the ground and spawned sister projects around the world. Since the Nobel Committee's recognition, each planting is honored as a commitment to sustainability, peace, and equitable use of natural resources.

Maathai casts a steady gaze out at her audience, now grown to several thousand assembled by the World Affairs Council World Affairs Council may refer to:
  • World Affairs Councils of America, a non-profit, non-partisan umbrella organization for world affairs councils throughout the United States
 of Oregon. Then she launches into a story about a hummingbird. There was a horrific forest fire, she says, her arms lifting slightly like a dancer's. All the animals ran out of the woods to safety. But the hummingbird filled its tiny beak beak
 or bill

Stiff, projecting oral structure of birds and turtles (both of which lack teeth) and certain other animals (e.g., cephalopods and some insects, fishes, and mammals).
 with water and flew back into the smoke, dropping its mouthful over the flames and returning for another load. The other animals laughed at this minuscule effort, Maathai says, her body swaying as if in flight. "What do you think you are doing?" the animals mocked. Poised for yet another trip over the fire, the hummingbird replied, "I'm doing what I can."

As Maathai stares into the sea of faces she seems to single each one of us out.

"Find something you can do," she urges, opening her arms in appeal. "It doesn't have to be a big thing. It's the little things that matter."

Contributing editor A contributing editor is a magazine job title that varies in responsibilities. Most often, a contributing editor is a freelancer who has proven ability and readership draw.  Jane Braxton Little covers natural resource issues.
COPYRIGHT 2006 American Forests
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Wangari Maathai
Author:Little, Jane Braxton
Publication:American Forests
Geographic Code:6KENY
Date:Jun 22, 2006
Words:1191
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