The Battle Against Climate Change by Paul Kingsnorth May 31, 2019 / activist360 / Leave a comment Humanity has lost the battle against climate change. That is what Paul Kingsnorth thinks. The former environmental activist believes that we can’t stop climate change anymore. How should we live on knowing that climate change is a fact that can’t be denied anymore? A documentary that gives thinker and writer Paul Kingsnorth the time to explain how humanity still can be hopeful although the battle against climate change in his eyes has been lost. Former environmental activist and writer Paul Kingsnorth has withdrawn to Ireland on a unspoilt part of the earth. You could say that he lives now at the end of the world. A portrait of an end-time thinker who nevertheless does not give up hope and continues to believe in the power of nature. Thinker and writer Paul Kingsnorth stood early on the barricades as a conservationist. He resisted the insatiable hunger of the globalized world for more land, resources and things in England and on the other side of the world in Papa New Guinea. Kingsnorth was one of the leaders of the environmental movement and reached a large international audience with its passionate speeches. But at some point, he came to terms that he had to revisit his belief that humanity could save the world. In his bundled essays “Confessions of a recovering environmentalist” (2017) he describes how some weak-kneed accountants of this world hollowed out the green movement from the inside and exchanged the barricades for ties and conference tables. Limiting CO2 emissions became the new gospel because it was measurable and countable. But according to Kingsnorth, that is an illusion. He thinks that in his victory rush, the green movement of today exchanges the remaining wild nature for a wind or solar panel farm. The battle is lost. Kingsnorth withdrew with his family to the Irish countryside to live self-sufficient. He founded the “Dark Mountain Project” in which writers, poets and artists are looking for a different view of the end of the world, based on the connection between man and nature. He exchanged his clenched fist and protesting voice for an inner, literary search for the question of what makes us human and what our place is on this magical planet. Original titel: De aarde draait door Originally broadcasted by VPRO in 2018. © VPRO Backlight December 2018.
Living a Cultural Legacy May 31, 2019 / activist360 / Leave a comment Cultural practitioner, Greg Solatorio lives off the land on the island of Molokai just like his ancestors did, 1,000 years ago. The island of Molokai is truly unique because it is frozen in time. No other place in Molokai exemplifies this more than Halawa Valley. It has no fancy resorts, restaurants, or golf courses. Greg and his family are the last original family left in the valley. His father was the last elder, born and raised here. Their lineage connects them back to the first Hawaiian settlers on Molokai. Today, through the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act, the entire valley, from the peaks to the ocean, still belongs to the Solatorios. Although the nearest store to get supplies is 29 miles away, the valley is rich with bountiful fruit, fish and vegetation. It supported a village for more than a thousand years and it supports the Solatorios today. Greg operates the Halawa Valley Falls Cultural Hike. When asked why it’s important to share his way of life, he says his family traditions in the valley are his expertise. He was taught from his elders, that culture is not a secret it is sacred. For him, culture needs to be shared. In Halawa Valley, he practices sustainability the way he was taught, by working with mother nature. For him, instead of taking from nature, you must ask and borrow – to stay pure, you must use the gifts she gives.