PARLIAMENT OF WORLD RELIGIONS TORONTO The 2018 Parliament of the Worlds Religions took place in Toronto, Canada. The program featured more than 500 programmes and events. An important new track was added for the first time this year”Climate Action Track: Care for Our Earth, Responsibility for Our Future” Canon Rachel Mash of Green Anglicans was invited to join the plenary session on Climate Justice as part of the panel of “frontline witnesses, voices from communities impacted by climate change Uncle Angaangaq Angakkorsuaq, Eskimo-Kalaallit Elder – The Arctic The Rev. Dr. Rachel Mash, Cape Town, South Africa Davi Kopenawa Yanomami – The Amazon Brazil’s Amazon – the frontline witness was Davi Kopenawa a spokesperson for the Yanomami people who is leading a campaign to secure Yanomami land rights. . His courage, combative spirit and tenacity are reflected in his Yanomami nickname, ‘Kopenawa’, or ‘hornet’. Since 1985, Davi began to fight for the recognition of the vast area inhabited by the Yanomami in the Brazilian states of Roraima and Amazonas. Goldminers were invading the area, and Yanomami were dying of diseases to which they had no resistance. In 1989 Davi won a UN Global 500 award in recognition of his battle to preserve the rainforest. In the course of his travels, Davi has met four Brazilian presidents including President Lula, Al Gore – former vice President of the USA – and Prince Charles. The Yanomami area was officially recognised by the Brazilian government just before it hosted the UN’s first Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. Covering over 9.6 million hectares, it is one of the planet’s most important reservoirs of genetic diversity, as well as being home to some 16,000 species “The world needs to listen to the cry of the earth, which is asking for help. If you carry on killing people and you continue to destroy nature and you take out all the oil, the minerals and the wood, our planet will become ill and we’ll all die.” Angaangaq Angakkorsuaq, is an internationally respected Elder from Greenland, the only country in the world where man lives and there has never been war. His commitment to the environment and indigenous issues has brought him to 5 continents and 70 countries in the world. Angaangaq bridges the boundaries of cultures and faiths in people young and old as he advocates for a spiritual climate change. He has been invited to speak at the United Nations, at universities, schools, social work programs, prisons, at spiritual and religious conferences, and for medical, scientific and government organizations Always there is a transformation and a new understanding. “It is easy to melt the ice on the ground. The hardest thing to be melted is the ice in the heart of Man. Only by melting the ice in the heart of Man, does Man have a chance to change and begin using his knowledge wisely.” Here is the text of Rev Rachel’s speech “At the start of this year we were told that on the 22nd of April, all the taps of Cape Town, a city of 3 million people would be turned off. What did that mean? 400 temporary taps would be set up with enormous queues of people waiting in line under the hot sun for 20 litres of water a day per person. The army would be deployed because of potential violence that would break out. Schools would close as there would be no toilets working and businesses would shut down. There were fears of outbreaks of disease as the sanitation systems broke down. It felt like the apocalypse.. After three years of the driest winters for 100 years, the dams were nearly empty – our biggest dam was sitting at 17 percent, and the dams were emptying at 1.5% a week. Cape Town has always had long wet winters and the climate has changed radically. So what happened? The city rallied together – people shared water saving ideas, there were competitions, social media went wild. We washed for 1.5 minutes every second day. We reused water from washing machines first to clean the floor then on the garden. We stood in queues to get water from the springs. Taps in public restrooms were turned off and replaced with hand sanitizers. We reduced our water consumption by a massive 50% And slowly, day by day we pushed back day zero – until the winter rains came. Thank God they were good this year. But last week as I left Capetown we were having the hottest day in October for 50 years. We were a rainy city but drought is going to be the new normal for us. We survived – battered but we survived. 30000 farm workers lost their jobs – mostly casual workers and most vulnerable. The tourism industry was impacted with again the least well paid the most affected. We learned a lot. We learned that water is heavy – they say unless you have carried water you do not know the value of it – we realised a little of the struggle of our sisters who have to carry water everyday. We learned that water comes from God. We thought it came from a tap but we realised that it is a free gift from God, the government delivers it and cleans it. We learned that it is craziness to put clean drinking quality water into your toilet. We learned that we must protect those precious sources of water, springs, and aquifers for the future. How did the faith communities respond? First of all we were on our knees praying for a miracle. And then we released that we must pray for something deeper – we needed to pray for two things – to give thanks and realise again that water is sacred, and a gift from God. As christians we became members of the family of God through the sacred waters of baptism, water is our primal element. Our Muslim brothers and sisters wash their