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Spiritual Environmentalism: Healing Ourselves by Replenishing the Earth
YES! Magazine Editor's Note: Wangari Maathai, the Kenyan activist and 2004 winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, passed away on September 25. In this essay from her book Replenishing the Earth: Spiritual Values for Healing Ourselves and the World, she describes what motivated her groundbreaking work.
Wangari Maathai (1940-2011)
During my more than three decades as an environmentalist and campaigner for democratic rights, people have often asked me whether spirituality, different religious traditions, and the Bible in particular had inspired me, and influenced my activism and the work of the Green Belt Movement (GBM). Did I conceive conservation of the environment and empowerment of ordinary people as a kind of religious vocation? Were there spiritual lessons to be learned and applied to their own environmental efforts, or in their lives as a whole?
When I began this work in 1977, I wasn't motivated by my faith or by religion in general. Instead, I was thinking literally and practically about solving problems on the ground. I wanted to help rural populations, especially women, with the basic needs they described to me during seminars and workshops. They said that they needed clean drinking water, adequate and nutritious food, income, and energy for cooking and heating. So, when I was asked these questions during the early days, I'd answer that I didn't think digging holes and mobilizing communities to protect or restore the trees, forests, watersheds, soil, or habitats for wildlife that surrounded them was spiritual work.
However, I never differentiated between activities that might be called "spiritual" and those that might be termed "secular." After a few years I came to recognize that our efforts weren't only about planting trees, but were also about sowing seeds of a different sort—the ones necessary to give communities the self-confidence and self-knowledge to rediscover their authentic voice and speak out on behalf of their rights (human, environmental, civic, and political). Our task also became to expand what we call "democratic space," in which ordinary citizens could make decisions on their own behalf to benefit themselves, their community, their country, and the environment that sustains them.
In this context, I began to appreciate that there was something that inspired and sustained the GBM and those participating in its activities over the years. Many people from different communities and regions reached out to us because they wanted us to share the approach with others. I came to realize that the work of the GBM was driven by certain intangible values. These values were: love for the environment; a gratitude and respect for Earth's resources; a capacity to empower and better oneself; and a spirit of service and volunteerism. Together, these values encapsulate the intangible, subtle, nonmaterialistic aspects of the GBM as an organization. They enabled us to continue working, even through the difficult times.
Of course, I'm aware that such values are not unique to the Green Belt Movement. They are universal; they can't be touched or seen. We cannot place a monetary value on them: in effect, they are priceless. These values are not contained within certain religious traditions. Neither does one have to profess a faith in a divine being to live by them. However, they do seem to be part of the our human nature and I'm convinced that we are better people because we hold them, and that humankind is better off with them than without them. Where these values are ignored, they are replaced by vices such as selfishness, corruption, greed, and exploitation.
Through my experiences and observations, I have come to believe that the physical destruction of the earth extends to us, too. If we live in an environment that's wounded—where the water is polluted, the air is filled with soot and fumes, the food is contaminated with heavy metals and plastic residues, or the soil is practically dust—it hurts us, chipping away at our health and creating injuries at a physical, psychological, and spiritual level. In degrading the environment, therefore, we degrade ourselves.
The reverse is also true. In the process of helping the earth to heal, we help ourselves. If we see the earth bleeding from the loss of topsoil, biodiversity, or drought and desertification, and if we help reclaim or save what is lost—for instance, through regeneration of degraded forests—the planet will help us in our self-healing and indeed survival. When we can eat healthier, nonadulterated food; when we breathe clean air and drink clean water; when the soil can produce an abundance of vegetables or grains, our own sicknesses and unhealthy lifestyles become healed. The same values we employ in the service of the earth's replenishment work on us, too. We can love ourselves as we love the earth; feel grateful for who we are, even as we are grateful for the earth's bounty; better ourselves, even as we use that self-empowerment to improve the earth; offer service to ourselves, even as we practice volunteerism for the earth.
Human beings have a consciousness by which we can appreciate love, beauty, creativity, and innovation or mourn the lack thereof. To the extent that we can go beyond ourselves and ordinary biological instincts, we can experience what it means to be human and therefore different from other animals. We can appreciate the delicacy of dew or a flower in bloom, water as it runs over the pebbles or the majesty of an elephant, the fragility of the butterfly or a field of wheat or leaves blowing in the wind. Such aesthetic responses are valid in their own right, and as reactions to the natural world they can inspire in us a sense of wonder and beauty that in turn encourages a sense of the divine.
That consciousness acknowledges that while a certain tree, forest, or mountain itself may not be holy, the life-sustaining services it provides—the oxygen we breathe, the water we drink—are what make existence possible, and so deserve our respect and veneration. From this point of view, the environment becomes sacred, because to destroy what is essential to life is to destroy life itself.


18 Comments so far
Show AllThank you, Ms. Maathai, for your wise words and actions dedicated to healing Pacha-Mama. I am pleased to say the ideas you've espoused live on. Many of us resonate with them... and will keep your legacy vibrant.
Beautiful and powerful words. I am going to pass on this essay to as many people as I can. I have seen students get inspired by Wangari Maathai's work and words, and I have no doubt they will continue to inspire more people in the days and years to come. If the world is still inhabitable despite all the negative energy put out by human beings, I think it is because of the enormous positive energy from people such as Wangari Maathai.
Another person that comes to my mind (and I doubt anyone would have heard of him) who sees no distinction between protecting the environment and spiritual work (although I have never heard him use such words) is a man called Sunderlal Bahuguna. Years ago I had a chance to shake hands with him and I will never forget the energy I felt.
Wangari Maathai was an inspiration to so many and to me personally. She was a fine and stalwart model of what one person can spark. I am sorry she is gone so soon. There are not enough wise elders reminding us about earth care. The millions of trees in Kenya are living testimony to her work.
A marvelous woman by all counts. Her ideal and efforts live on in World 5.0, where we readily acknowledge the vital work of trees in restoring our Earth's ecology.
http://world5.org
peace and love,
BRAVO!! I was thinking the same think today as I added new top soil and manure / humus to my veggie gardens.
"Spiritual Environmentalism: Healing Ourselves by Replenishing the Earth"
[EDITED]
*It is heartening to see all of the recent responses* to the passing of such an inspiring person, one who pointed clearly toward the direction we all must begin to face, regardless of our 'spiritual', 'moral' or 'rational/ethical' beliefs.
re: "I came to recognize that our efforts weren't only about planting trees, but were also about sowing seeds of a different sort—the ones necessary to give communities the self-confidence and self-knowledge to rediscover their authentic voice and speak out on behalf of their rights (human, environmental, civic, and political)."
And to the atheists out there, this is what REAL reverence/spirituality is about: inter-connectivity, self-knowledge, mutual empowerment. Synergy based upon deeper threads than mere reason can relate or even compete with. The fabric of our inner beings is not made of rational abstractions projected by our cognitive intellects, but of living, neurologically sensitive and dynamic biology... Our need to create meaning is organic, intrinsic and primordial, not synthetic, auxiliary or a reflection of the modern human condition.
The problem of atheism is that is fails to address what is ultimately 'authentic' about being alive, being a Terran species, and being a human being. The authentic truth is that our relationship to life and the biosphere is sacred... its roots connect to our deepest needs and meanings, to all of us, regardless of one's beliefs or background. To not see our relationship in terms of awe, of profound respect, love, fear, need, hope, transcendental connectedness... is to truncate our experience, to lessen our value by lessening our relationship to life, and the the surrounding universe.
I dedicate these words to Wangari Maathai, and all she did during her life to forward the cause of respect and love for the Living Earth, and for her re-awakening the spirit and essence of the healing goddess for all of us to be witness to.
Praise the Goddess for her life, and may many more follow in her great footsteps. Thank you Wangari Maathai for your service to all of us and our shared and sacred Earth.
Words of wisdom. So sad to have lost you.
"In degrading the environment, therefore, we degrade ourselves.
The reverse is also true. In the process of helping the earth to heal, we help ourselves...
while a certain tree, forest, or mountain itself may not be holy, the life-sustaining services it provides—the oxygen we breathe, the water we drink—are what make existence possible, and so deserve our respect and veneration. From this point of view, the environment becomes sacred, because to destroy what is essential to life is to destroy life itself."
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Condolences to the family and friends -
Manysummits
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They made a movie about this, "AVITAR."
the most poignant line from that movie for me occurred when the princess answered the question, "why do they come here?"
"they killed their Mother."
Wangari Maathai you are an inspiration. May your work live on.
>>That consciousness acknowledges that while a certain tree, forest, or mountain itself may not be holy, the life-sustaining services it provides—the oxygen we breathe, the water we drink—are what make existence possible, and so deserve our respect and veneration. From this point of view, the environment becomes sacred, because to destroy what is essential to life is to destroy life itself.
Yes indeed. Beautiful words form a beautiful soul.
Rest in peace dear Wangari Maathai. Your beautiful soul, your wisdom and courage, your leadership, your inspiration to all women everywhere, your loving concern for the environment -- all this will live on like the trees and the seeds of love that you planted. Thank you for all the gifts you have given us!
What a great woman you are Wangari!
A great visionary, and a tough, relentless fighter. An inspiration to everyone you touch. I do not believe in super heros, but i have to make an exception in your case, because there is no other word for all you are, and will continue to be because your spirit s so powerful it must live forever
Ah! A beautiful soul is released from God's increasingly spoiled earth. While a void is left here, she now moves with the bright energy that is the good, the just, and the perfect. This force within the very cosmos is our hope, our salvation and so Wangari Maathai will continue to bless us with her power.
A beautiful lady with beautiful words contributing to our still beautiful earth. May we be able to return it to it's former balance.
There are all too few heroes for us these days. We were privileged to share the Earth with her in our time.