Every day is Earth Day
We live on earth, the only planet known to carry life. We breathe its air, drink from its waters, live off its produce, build on its soil, dig up its treasures and exploit it to our advantage. Yet, we need a day each year to remind us of its importance to us and its needs.
And on that one day out of 356, April 22, we sing the Earth’s praise, lament
about its sufferings, pledge to care for it and then get back to living just as carelessly and selfishly as we have always been.
When people stop noticing and caring about things, special days are set aside in the year — for instance Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, Women’s Day, Labour Day, etc. — to raise awareness of issues and problems related to each theme, and motivate people to become proactive about these relationships and issues.
of issues and problems related to each theme, and motivate people to become proactive about these relationships and issues.
But isn’t it a sad state of things that we are commemorating such important aspects of our lives on a single day of the year when we should remember them each and every day? Isn’t it a pity that Earth is the only place we know, our home, and we still have to be reminded of our duties to it?
Our planet is home to more than six billion human beings and countless animals and plants. All its bounties and resources are shared and used by every living creature, but it is abuse by humans that has led to environmental problems and climate change that is affecting all forms of life on it. Not many people realise, and very few accept, is that when we do anything that harms any part of our planet, we are harming ourselves.
When we use up and waste its resources, we are using up and stealing the resources of our future generations. When we pollute its air, water and land, we are polluting things that we depend on for living and thus polluting our own bodies. When we cut the trees to build our cities, we are taking away the oxygen we breathe, the homes from many animals and killing many plants. When we pollute our rivers and seas with waste, we are depriving ourselves of clean water and killing the marine life in them. These are just a few ways in which we are harming our mother planet along with ourselves.
Many of the changes that are happening in our environment are too obvious to remain unnoticed by everyone. The hot summers that we are experiencing each year, the devastating storms and hurricanes that lead to so much destruction and both heavy rainfall or none at all when there should be some rain at least, are things that people everywhere in the world are experiencing now. As for deforestation, shrinking glaciers, ice sheets at the poles and decline in the number of many animals, these are things that scientists are carefully monitoring and informing us about.
The delicate environmental systems on earth, that are all interconnected, has been disturbed by human activity — the water cycle, climate cycle, food cycles, ocean currents, animal migrations, carbon/oxygen exchange and so on. Cutting down of forests to make way for cities and agriculture, is destroying animal and plant habitats, leading to animal extinction and migration. It also leads to top soil erosion and slows the exchange of carbon dioxide into oxygen, causing temperatures to rise.
Certainly the temperature of Earth has changed immensely over the millenniums and time has been witness to the extinction of many species. But while most of what happened over the past millions of years has been due to the working of Nature and natural forces, the changes that have been observed in the last century are our own doing, and at a much faster rate than anything scientists have assumed about the past ages.
If we want to cope effectively with the changes in the environment, each of us needs to take the ownership of our planet, become its guardian angels, not only to protect the earth, but to also protect ourselves. We need to turn to ‘green living’. Green living is basically “a lifestyle that tries in as many ways as it can to bring into balance the conservation and preservation of Earth’s natural resources, habitats and biodiversity with human culture and communities.”