Everything I Need to Know - Vandana Shiva
Introduction
Vandana Shiva is an internationally renowned activist for biodiversity and against corporate globalization. In the essay “Everything I Need To Know” she tells the readers about her early lessons of environmentalism. She also tells us how she learnt all the major ideals of a good life from the forests such as diversity, freedom and co-existence.
Summary
Vandana Shiva’s ecological journey started in the forests of the Himalaya. Her involvement in the contemporary ecology movement began with “Chipko”.
Chipko Movement
It was a nonviolent response to the large-scale deforestation in the Himalaya region. In the 1970s peasant women in the Garhwal, Himalaya had come out in defence of the forests. Vandana Shiva noticed a steady loss of forests in this region. She decided to become a volunteer for the movement.
Biodiversity - Navdanya Farm / Navdanya Movement
The Chipko Movement taught Vandana Shiva about biodiversity. She realized the importance of biodiversity based living economies. She started Navdanya, the movement for biodiversity conservation and organic farm in 1987. Vandana Shiva has worked with farmers to set up more than 100 community seed banks across India. They have saved more than 3000 varieties of rice. This is a transition from monocultures to bio-diverse ecological systems. To demonstrate her experimentation she started Navadanya Farm in 1994 in the Doon Valley in the lower elevation of Himalayan region of Uttarakhand Province. They are now able to conserve and grow 630 varieties of rice, 150 varieties of wheat and hundreds of other species. Thus they practise and promote a biodiversity intensive form of farming that produces more food and nutrition per acre.
Rights of Nature / Separatism - eco-apartheid
Vandana Shiva interestingly talks about how the UN General Assembly organised a conference on harmony with nature as part of Earth Day celebrations inspired by the constitution of Ecuador and the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth initiated by Bolivia. This emphasises the significance attached to the mother earth much against human domination over nature. She upholds the view that human beings are an inseparable part of nature. So, she feels that today, we do not need an apartheid situation which once divided people based on colour. Our challenge now is to overcome eco-apartheid based on the separateness of humans from nature.
The Dead Earth / Industrial Revolution - Capitalism - Exploitation
This separateness paved the way for the industrial revolution replacing vibrant earth and turning it into a dead matter. This has further led to Capitalism and Consumerism which exploit natural resources indiscriminately. Thus Terra Madre (Mother Earth) was replaced by Terra Nullius (the empty land / the dead earth).
The Earth University / Earth Democracy
The Earth University located at Navadanya biodiversity farm is an inspiration from Rabindranath Tagore which teaches Earth Democracy; to recognize, protect and respect the rights of other species. It is a shift from anthropocentrism (human centric) to ecocentrism (nature centric).
Forest and Freedom / Enoughness - principles of equity
The last section of this essay is adapted from “Forest and Freedom” written by Vandana Shiva published in the May / June 2011 edition of “Resurgence”. This highlights Tagore’s view of forest as the source of beauty and joy of art and aesthetics of harmony and perfection. The forest teaches us union, compassion and enoughness. It teaches us enjoyment through renunciation and not through greed of possession. Thus Vandana Shiva concludes that it is this forest that can show us the way beyond this conflict.
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