Ncumisa

I am who I am, because I believe in the protection of Godly created things

Opening of Restored Cathedral starts with tree planting

OPENING OF CATHEDRAL RENOVATION STARTS WITH TREE PLANTINGThe historic Cathedral of Messumba in Northern Mozambique (Niassa Diocese) has been beautifully restored. They were honoured with the Presence of the President of the Republic at the service of blessingAt the start of the service the four bishops of Mozambique and the Minister of Public works planted trees as a sign of the renewal not only of the cathedral but also of the earthPhotos – Diocese of Niassa

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Serving God in the sanctuary of the Earth – Altar servers in Action

Serving God in the sanctuary of the Earth – altar servers in action The altar servers from the Diocese of Lesotho held their annual conference at St Cyprians in Butha Buthe. They came out in their numbers and over 200 attended this exciting event! One of the diocesan executive members whom attended the Care for Creation Boot camp in 2018 , invited the Provincial Green Anglicans office to come share more on how to make Alter Servers earth keepers. During the Green Anglicans slot each region had to act out on how humans are  harming God’s   creation and also show the corrective measures how we can reverse our action and become more eco-friendly . During that play one could witness a sense of awareness amongst the group and also the knowledge of corrective measures, the only challenge was that, We keep waiting on some else to lead the struggle with all the good ideas we have. The conference didn’t just end there but the 219 attendees went on a spiritual hike to the cave where King Moshoeshoe  would hide during war time before heading of to Thaba Bosiu. Now because servers understand that cleanliness is next to Godliness the group not only cleaned the church but the entire St. Cyprian’s high school area showing that God’s sanctuary is in His Creation. It is time to “be the change you want to see in the world” Bino Makalanyane Photo by: Ms Bile Sehloho & Ms. Boithatelo Kopano

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Season of Creation – Liturgical Renewal

“Season of Creation – a Time to Pray and Act”Liturgical Revision in the Scottish Episcopal Church – the Scottish Episcopal Institute Journal is dedicating this issue to Liturgical Revision. Canon Rachel Mash from the Anglican Church of Southern Africa prepared a paper on the Season of CreationScottish Episcopal Institute Journal:Volume 3.4; Winter 2019ISSN 2399-8989https://www.scotland.anglican.org/wp-content/uploads/2019-34a-SEI-Journal-Winter.pdf

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Cathedral Choir get muddy for Creation

The Cathedral Choir of All Saints in Nairobi have caught the green bug. Instead of just singing about the beauty of Creation they are helping to restore Creation. Undaunted by the rain they planted 300 trees at Ngongo Road Forest in Nairobi.Trees are God’s miracle – which hold the soil, cool the city, clean air, provide a home for biodiversity and provide joy for all people! Truly the leaves of the trees are for the healing of the nations!

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Environment, Gender and Violence

What are the links between Gender, Environment and Violence? The Provincial Mothers Union invited Rev Rachel Mash to address their consultation on Gender Based Violence to explore this topic. LAND AND FOOD Women farm and produce most of the world’s food supplies, but  own only 20%  of the land. This means that women farmers are more dependant on rain fed agriculture. They also lack access to credit for irrigation, fertilizers, seed and capital. Because of social  norms – feed the boys – girls are more likely to die of malnutrition in drought situations. Loss of biodiversity affects women more as – 80% of the total world wild vegetables used in food  are collected by women WATER Households  in rural Africa spend 25% of their time fetching water. This is predominantly seen as a girl’s task.  Drought leads to longer distances  to walk to fetch water, earlier starts and increases the risk of sexual abuse.  Girls are more likely to drop out of school or be too tired to concentrate.  Communal sanitation is a big risk for girls as they have to go out in the dark and risk sexual harassment or rape. FORESTS AND BIODIVERSITY A Kenyan botanist said this ““The rural poor depend directly on the natural resource base. This is where their pharmacy is, this is where their supermarket is, this is in fact their fuel station, their power company, their water company. What would happen to you if these things were removed from your local neighbourhood?.” Kenyan Botanist Dr Stella Simiyu Women benefit from the food and medication  from forests to look after their families. A study in Sierra Leone showed that women could identify 31 uses for a particular tree, men could only identify eight. Men typically see commercial benefit from forests  and have disproportionate access to commercialize the land. There have been high levels of murders of ‘women  and indigenous protectors of the forest ‘ in the Amazon in particular POLLUTION 72 percent of domestic chores involving water are done  by women. If the water is polluted it puts them at risk.  Underpaid women are at  risk from  cheap chemicals (cleaning) , pesticides and other toxic chemicals. There is a particularly high  risk for pregnant and breastfeeding women Waste – if there is no municipal pickup, women burn the waste releasing toxic fumes from plastic. Four million people die annually from indoor pollution – mostly from cooking indoors over coal. FISHING Predominantly the men catch the fish and the women sell it.  A study on Lake Victoria showed that when fish stocks dropped, the women were at risk of sexual abuse to gain access to the catch. Sometimes gender roles are against women as for instance in Zambia where women are not allowed to paddle a boat CLIMATE CHANGE Climate change leads to a reduction in crops, either from drought or harvests being damaged by storms.  Due to rise in temperature there is an increase in  malaria which particularly endangers for pregnant and breast feeding mothers. With rising of sea levels, there is an increase in salinity – a risk in pre-elampsia. At the same time Bio-diversity loss means  less plants for medication DISASTER 70 percent of those who died in the Indonesian tsunami were women. Women were more likely to be at home when it struck, caring for children and the elderly. Men were at work – with transport, social media, in solid buildings and could respond faster. Culturally women wear clothes you cant run in, girls are not taught to swim or climb trees.  Many women were caught in the tsunami because they were  trying to help the vulnerable ones in their care.

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