Wangari Maathai’s Call for a Shift in Thinking In decades past, Africa has flourished with culture, livelihood, and personality. This highly populated continent was once a refuge. It was a harbor for travelers. It was a haven of security. Ravaged by slave trades and devastating wars, Africa has departed from its once peaceful state. In her Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech, Wangari Maathai augments these sensitive issues that have pervaded African culture for decades. Her audience consists of
Wangari Maathai grew up being taught to love the environment and respect the fig tree. Which in her elders called the “Tree of God”. She did and like the roots of the fig tree she describes in her memoir unbowed. she was given a fertile environment to grow. Where there was no reason to fear or to have uncertainty. As her roots took hold she began to grown out of the ground and blossomed into a beautiful tree. In the Mid 70’s kenya natural resources began to decline. There were streams in Nyeri
In Unbowed: A Memoir, Wangari Maathai wrote her life story, filled with battles and achievements. In writing this memoir, Maathai wanted to share her many experiences of struggle, self-discovery, dedication, and perseverance in hopes of encouraging future generations to do the same and make a difference in the world. From her ancestral roots to her activism, she always made a connection to nature, its environment, and the effects it had on the community. Wangari Maathai grew up surrounded by nature
For years, majority of our food has been produced through industrial agriculture, but are we feeding ourselves or slowly starving ourselves. Industrial agriculture is the system of chemically intensive food production, featuring enormous single-crop farms and animal production facilities. This is affecting how large communities explore a basic human right, eating. Industrial agriculture has played a major part in why about 23.5 million people live in a food desert. Food deserts can be described as
profession and the number of women at the top even decreases. Even in the non-profit world, women do not lead (Sandberg, 2010.) Adichie (2013) states that most of the positions of prestige and power are occupied by men. She cites Nobel Peace Laureate Wangari Maathai, who said, “The higher you go, the fewer women there are” and agrees with Sandberg (2010). As an example, she brings a story when a man with some skills is paid more than a woman with the same skills, that’s the way men rule today’s world (Adichie
1A) The Energy Department mission is “ to ensure America’s security and prosperity by addressing its energy, environmental and nuclear challenges through transformative science and technology solutions”. They address the America’s energy by constantly looking to have the latest in clean energy technology and constantly looking the improve America's energy system. They also are involved in nuclear defense and security, and nuclear clean up. The Office of Environmental Management deals with the environmental
difference in this world. I have taken time to learn about equality between races, genders, culture and religions. I have learned about Nobel Peace Prize winners such as Martin Luther King Jr, Malala Yousafzai, Barack Obama, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Wangari Maathai, and Mother Teresa. But Martin Luther King Junior was the one out of the six that I wanted to learn even more about. Martin Luther King Jr, asked himself all the time, “What am I doing for others?” Not all people think about others. To most people
Wangari Maathai once said, “A tree has roots in the soil yet reaches to the sky.”. Trees are a common lifeform outside, simply nature: green, growing, thriving, and dying. Most people don’t pay trees much attention, but in Sandra Cisneros’s novella, Esperanza progressed through life facing many challenges and blockades, ultimately persevering. As Esperanza starts to mature and the novella progresses, the motif of nature repeats and thus becomes symbolic of beauty and growth. Through flowers and trees
In MAIN READING of UNIT2, we learned the dichotomy between a high-context culture like Japan, Korea, China, and many Latin American countries and a low-context culture like the U.S. and many European countries. In a high-context culture, the context of the situation and the relationship of the interlocutors play a vital role in the message being communicated, in a low-context culture, everything is direct, straightforward, and individualistic, often times to the point of redundancy. Besides, in the
well as ancient ones. The modern day heroes include the soldiers that die at war, protecting their countries from war as well as others who have brought a change to humanity by trying to save their lives such as the renowned Nobel prize winner Wangari Maathai, etc. While ancient heroes include the story of Aeneas who was going to find another land for his people the modern day Italy (Virgil. 1, 2,
The HIV Conspiracy HIV has been in the US since 1981, it is the virus that causes AIDS. There is a conspiracy belief that HIV was a manmade virus purposely put into African American communities by the government. HIV is a very deadly virus and is currently an epidemic; numerous methods have been implemented to combat the deadly virus. However, in African American communities, these methods seem to be scarce and unproductive. White americans make up the majority of the US, however, HIV rates are
Many influential people have actually fought against environmental crime and have actually received Nobel prizes for it. The late Wangari Maathai who was an activist for the environment was highly against illegal logging of trees. In fact she proposed that for every tree that was cut down, three should beplanted. Prevention strategies have been implemented in order to combat crime. In Ireland