Pacific Islanders mobilise: “We are warriors”

Click to submit a photo of yourself

“Malo ni!

My name is Mikaele Maiava. I’m writing from the Pacific Island archipelago of Tokelau to ask you to join with us in action as we take on the fossil fuel industry.

Last October, Tokelau turned off the last of its diesel generators. In their place, we switched on our solar plants, making Tokelau the first country in the world to become 100% renewably-powered.

I woke up before sunrise that day, excited about the history Tokelau was making. My whole village made its way to the site of over 100 solar panels — we could see the many hours of hard labor that had gone into this project. As we counted down to the switch, I could feel future generations smiling at us and thanking us. Our children’s future suddenly looked brighter because we had the vision (and perseverance) necessary to get off fossil fuels and switch to 100% renewable energy.

You might wonder why we bothered. Aren’t we doomed to lose our islands from sea-level rise? I don’t blame you for thinking that if you did. So often the global media victimises the Pacific Islands and portrays us as helplessly succumbing to climate change and rising seas. But the global media know nothing of who we really are, or how it feels to live on these paradise islands we call home. They don’t know that as Pacific Islanders, we are warriors, and that the land we live on is part of us.

We know that the longer the fossil fuel industry gets its way, the worse climate change will be, and the more sea-level rise will threaten our islands. But giving up on our home is not an option. We are not drowning.
We are fighting.

That’s why on March 2nd, Pacific Islanders across 15 diverse nations will be mobilising at prominent locations to perform our unique war challenges, songs, and dances. We’ll be laying down a challenge to the fossil fuel industry. It is their coal and oil and gas vs. our future. They cannot both coexist. And it is our future that has to win.

In this moment, and in the years to come, we need you to walk beside us. Because we live far away from the mines and power plants that threaten our future, we need the world’s solidarity. Click here to stand with us during this weekend of Pacific Warrior climate action!

We want to show the world that people from countries and cultures everywhere are standing with us — the Pacific Warriors — in the fight against climate change.”

Fakafetai lahi,
Thank you,
Mikaele Maiava

 


You can show your solidarity by submitting a photo of your own:
350dotorg.tumblr.com/submit

Sign a pledge:
act.350.org/signup/warrior_day_of_action


Here is our contribution from Geelong…

stop-climate-change-family



Who is your climate change warrior?

Who is your climate change warrior?, asks The Guardian: Who is fighting for a more sustainable world? They’d like to hear your suggestion before 6 March 2013.

The climate change abolitionists of our time
“The campaign to abolish slavery has many parallels with the work of today’s climate change activists: it takes bravery and determination to try and make the world a better place,” writes Andrew Winston, a globally recognised advisor, speaker, and writer on sustainable business, co-author of the international bestseller ‘Green to Gold’. in the Guardian.

He mentions brave climate change abolitionists such as Bill McKibben, who gathered 50,000 people last week to march on Washington, scientists such as Jim Hansen and Michael Mann. Read more…

Personally, I am thinking of Al Gore and R K Pachauri, and at the same time wondering, where are the women on this list?

Until Wednesday 6 March, you can put forward YOUR favourite climate change abolitionist in the comments section on this page
– or email them to hannah.gould.casual AT guardian DOT co DOT uk
– or tweet them to @GuardianSustBiz