| The Challenge of
Global Empowerment:
Education for a Sustainable Future
Daisaku Ikeda, 2002
The Need for Change
Ten years have passed since the holding of the Earth Summit
in Brazil, an event that sparked sharply increased awareness
of the need to protect the global environment. Since then, the
term "sustainable development" has become an integral
part of our vocabulary, and on certain fronts progress has been
made. Overall, however, the agreements reached in Rio have not
been kept and the progress that has been made is not keeping
pace with the degradation of Earth's life systems. It is clear
that we cannot permit this situation to continue further into
the 21st century.
Resolving this crisis will require the commitment of more knowledge,
technology and funds. But what is even more fundamentally lacking
in my view are such intangible elements as a sense of solidarity
and common purpose with our fellow inhabitants of Earth, and
a real sense of responsibility toward future generations.
In June of this year, I had the opportunity to meet with Mr.
Tommy E. Remengesau Jr., president of the Republic of Palau,
an island nation often described as a jewel set in the Pacific
Ocean. At that time we discussed the environmental crisis and
President Remengesau shared his deep concerns. "Global
warming," he said, "is an extremely serious issue
for the people of Palau. Ocean levels have risen and salt water
is invading the aquifers. The natural beauty of our islands
is threatened. El Niño has caused the rains to fail and
the destruction of our coral reefs is progressing. Greatly increased
water temperature has caused the coral to turn white and die.
. ." The president also mentioned that Palau is actively
engaged in researching and introducing alternative energy sources
that reduce hothouse gases. The times demand this kind of active
response--this refusal to be a passive observer or victim of
circumstances--not only at the governmental level, but also
at the grassroots level of civil society.
In the film "A Quiet Revolution," which was produced
by the Earth Council specifically for the World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD), inspiring examples of such action are presented.
These include people's responses to the problem of water resources
in Nimi Village in India and to the threat of persistent organic
pollutants in Zemplinska Sirava lake in Slovakia, as well as
the example of women who have stood up to protect the forests
of Kenya. Our organization, Soka Gakkai International (SGI),
supporting the objectives of this film, cooperated in its production.
This is because we believe that the theme running through the
film--that a single person can change the world--is the message
of courage and hope most needed in these difficult times.
One of the goals of the WSSD is to draft and adopt a plan of
implementation that will serve as the basis for making the 21st
century an era of creative coexistence between humans and nature.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan has emphasized that the summit
will serve as a litmus test for countries' resolve to act. The
success of the summit will hinge on developing a constructive
discourse that transcends conflicting national interests and
focuses on the good of the entire planet and the whole of humanity.
As part of our efforts to support the WSSD, I offered, in a
proposal written earlier in the year, three suggestions for
possible reform of the international system relating to protection
of the environment. The first is the appointment of a UN high
commissioner for the environment to exercise clear leadership
and initiative for global environmental problems. The second
is the phased consolidation of the secretariats overseeing the
implementation of various environmental treaties, linked to
the establishment of a global green fund. The third is the adoption
of a convention for the promotion of renewable energy resources.
At the same time, I stressed the need to raise consciousness
and change our basic ways of thinking about the environment.
In addition to "top-down" reforms, such as the legal
and institutional measures outlined above, any lasting solution
will require commensurate "bottom-up" reforms that
build and strengthen solidarity at the people's level. These
are the two interlinked prerequisites of change on a global
scale. In this proposal, I would like to focus on the question
of how to forge global popular solidarity toward resolution
of the global environmental crisis.
International Decade of Education for Sustainable Development
If people are to take environmental issues as their personal
concern, and to harmonize their efforts for our common future,
education is vital. Only education can provide the driving force
for such a renewal of awareness. For this reason, the SGI has
proposed the establishment of an international decade of education
for sustainable development to follow the UN Decade for Human
Rights Education from the year 2005. The objectives of the decade
would be to promote education as the basis for a sustainable
human society and to strengthen international cooperation toward
the dissemination of environmental information. At the WSSD
PrepCom IV, held this past June in Indonesia, this proposal
was included in the draft plan of implementation.
The importance of education for sustainable development was
clearly stated in the Agenda 21 plan of action adopted at the
1992 Rio Earth Summit. At the heart of this concept--as stressed
in the 1997 Thessaloniki Declaration of the International Conference
on Environment and Society--is sustainability. In the words
of the Declaration: "The concept of sustainability encompasses
not only environment but also poverty, population, health, food
security, democracy, human rights and peace. " Because
environmental issues are so deeply interlinked with these global
issues, their resolution requires a fundamental rethinking of
our way of life--as individuals, as societies and in terms of
human civilization itself.
In this sense, I think the decade of education for sustainable
development should be promoted with the following three goals
in mind:
To learn and deepen awareness of environmental issues and realities.
To reflect on our modes of living, renewing these toward sustainability.
To empower people to take concrete action to resolve the issues
we face.
To Learn
It is essential to deepen understanding and awareness. Everything
starts from grasping basic facts: the amount of the world's
forests that have been lost, for example, the degree of pollution
of the air, water and soil, and the overall impact on the global
ecosystem.
We also need to understand the causes and social structures
driving environmental destruction. And beyond that, we need
to learn to empathetically understand the realities of those
who suffer, embracing their pain as our own and conscious of
our interconnectedness. Such an effort will give birth to renewed
awareness and determination to act.
It is vital to incorporate such efforts particularly into the
early years of the school curriculum, the stage of growth when
children are most rich in their sensitivity, imagination and
creativity, when their desire to learn and absorb is at its
height. A number of countries already promote environmental
education as an integral part of their school curriculum. To
cultivate in children's hearts the desire to treasure nature
and protect the Earth is a vital step toward protecting their
future.
At the Kansai Soka Junior High School, students have been participating
in experiential learning, filming the Earth from the space shuttle
and international space station as part of NASA's "EarthKAM"
program. As founder of the school, I have been moved and impressed
by the educational impact of the children visually confirming
evidence of the global environmental crisis through this process.
For some years, I have called for a World Summit of Educators
that would bring together not only those responsible for educational
policy in each country, but also those engaged on the front
lines of education. At the start of the decade of education
for sustainable development (2005) it would be good to hold
an international conference where educators from throughout
the world could exchange ideas, experiences and best practice
in this area.
At the same time, it is also important that grassroots movements
develop opportunities that encourage a deeper understanding
of the global environmental crisis. It was to this end that
the SGI organized the exhibition "Toward a Century of Hope:
Environment and Development" as an official side event
of the Rio Earth Summit. In the United States, SGI-USA has created
a traveling exhibition "Ecology and Human Life" and
the Soka Gakkai in Japan has developed the "EcoAid"
exhibition. These efforts, held in cooperation with other NGOs,
seek to contribute to public education and enhance awareness
at the grassroots.
To Reflect
Together with the provision of accurate information, it is crucial
that the ethical values we share are clarified. This is particularly
important in the case of environmental issues, which can be
so vast and complex that information and knowledge alone can
leave people wondering what this all means to them, and without
a clear sense of what concrete steps they can take. To counter
such feelings of powerlessness and disconnection, education
should encourage understanding of the ways that environmental
problems intimately connect to our daily lives. Education must
also inspire the faith that each of us has both the power and
the responsibility to effect positive change on a global scale.
The Thessaloniki Declaration states that "Sustainability
is, in the final analysis, a moral and ethical imperative in
which cultural diversity and traditional knowledge need to be
respected." We can learn from the rich spiritual heritage
and diverse cultural traditions humanity has fostered over history.
From these we can gain precious lessons and philosophical insights
into how best to live as human beings.
The Earth Charter, whose drafting was promoted by the Secretary-General
of the Rio Earth Summit, Maurice Strong, and Green Cross International
President Mikhail Gorbachev, compiles and melds together these
many different sources of wisdom. Its four pillars are: 1) respect
for all life, 2) ecological integrity, 3) social and economic
justice and 4) democracy, nonviolence and peace. The Earth Charter
offers a comprehensive overview of the values and principles
needed for a sustainable future and as such is an invaluable
educational resource.
In addition to its content, the manner in which this "people's
charter" was drafted is significant. In the drafting process,
efforts were made to incorporate the essential wisdom of cultures
and traditions from all regions of Earth. The language of the
drafts was patiently deliberated by experts as well as by many
people at the grassroots. To date, the SGI has held workshops
and symposiums around the world in an effort to promote and
introduce the Earth Charter principles at the grassroots level.
I would hope that many efforts would be made to learn from the
Earth Charter, in programs that link its principles to the specific
issues of different communities and their schools.
One of the themes of the Kenyan Green Belt Movement is that
the desert does not come from the Sahara, it begins in our backyards.
Based on a sense of responsibility toward the future, mothers
and children involved in the movement have planted and cared
for some 20 million trees. I understand that children who have
planted trees often enjoy friendly competition, pouring their
love and concern onto the saplings, vying to see whose will
grow fastest. Efforts such as this are very significant because
it is through such experiences that people--and young people
in particular--come to grasp the concrete realities of their
community and to sharpen their awareness of the global environment.
The founder of the Soka Gakkai, the Japanese educator Tsunesaburo
Makiguchi (1871-1944) described the local community as the world
in miniature. He stressed the importance of opening children's
eyes to the world through learning rooted in the local community--the
place where history, nature and society intersect.
I believe that this kind of cyclical movement--viewing the world
from the perspective of the local community, looking at the
community through the lens of the world--is vital if we are
to develop an ethical understanding and appreciation of nature
that is truly rooted in the felt realities of daily life.
To Empower
Thirdly, people must be empowered with courage and hope if they
are to take those first concrete steps. Even if we establish
agreed-upon ethics and paradigms of behavior, unless an increasing
number of people embody and practice these in their lives, the
severe realities we face will not change. In other words, if
ethics are seen as merely a set of guidelines to be passively
followed, an obligation imposed from without, bearing little
connection to our individual lives or will, they will not enable
us to respond robustly to changing circumstances. They will
be abandoned in the first crisis.
It is for this reason that environmental ethics must be felt
as a deeply personal vow and pledge, the fulfillment of which
provides us with an inexhaustible sense of purpose and joy.
At present, I am engaged in an ongoing dialogue with the environmental
economist and futurist Dr. Hazel Henderson. She has spoken of
her own inspiration to act, drawn from her efforts to protect
her daughter from the hazards of air pollution. "Most of
us who started to work on the 'Citizens for Clean Air' campaign
were mothers," she says. "Since we knew what a big
task bringing children up is, we were anxious for our children
to have the best futures possible. Thinking back, I realize
that's what gave us the strength to endure all kinds of persecution
and see the fight through to the end."
To be effective, ethics must be charged with this kind of natural
and spontaneous sentiment--the irresistible impulse to act that
moves us when we see the people and the world we love exposed
to danger. Living ethics such as these are truly integrated
into the very fiber of our humanity.
What, then, are the values that can serve to truly unite humanity,
to link ordinary citizens in genuine solidarity? At the very
heart of the values we seek must be a profound reverence for
life itself. Such a sense of respect and reverence can awaken
people to a sense of connection with all the forms of life with
whom we presently share this Earth, as well as a sense of oneness
with future generations.
This appreciation of the unity and connectedness of life has
been a part of many cultural traditions since ancient times;
it has been passed on and continues today in many indigenous
cultures. It is vital that humanity as a whole humbly attend
to this living wisdom. For example the Desana people of the
Amazon say that human beings cannot live in isolation and they
can only thrive in harmonious coexistence with their environment.
The Iroquois people of North America exhort us to make all decisions
keeping in view "not only the present but also the coming
generations, even those whose faces are yet beneath the surface
of the ground--the unborn of the future." In this worldview,
all animals and plants are seen as siblings.
A Contributive Way of Life
This reverence for life is also stressed in many religious traditions.
In the Buddhist tradition that inspires the activities of the
SGI, we find these words: "May all beings, those who can
be seen and those who cannot be seen, those who live far away
and those who live nearby, those who have been born and those
still desiring to be born, may all living beings enjoy happiness!"
These words are rooted in the view that all life is interconnected
and mutually supporting--a relationship described as "dependent
origination" in Buddhism. What is key here is the understanding
that the desire for happiness lies at the very heart of our
interconnection. It is for this reason the teachings of Buddhism
stress our role as the protagonists of positive change. While
recognizing the influence of our surroundings on us, the focus
is on our active and conscious engagement with our environment
and with other forms of life. The powerful will that drives
this dynamic process of change is the concern and compassion
we muster for others.
Through dialogue and engagement, we draw forth and inspire in
ourselves and in the lives of others a profound sense of purpose
and joy. We begin a process of fundamental change that awakens
a vastly expanded sense of identity--our "greater self."
The ultimate objective of SGI's activities is to bring about--starting
with a reformation or "human revolution" in our individual
lives--a universal flowering of the philosophy of reverence
for life.
In his 1930 book, The Pedagogy of Value-Creating Education,
Tsunesaburo Makiguchi called for a fundamental transformation
in the way people live their lives. He decried a passive, dependent
way of life, and declared that even an active, independent way
of life is insufficient. Instead he called for a consciously
interactive, interdependent mode of existence, a life of committed
contribution.
A passive and dependent way of life lacks a clearly defined
sense of self; we live at the mercy of changing circumstance.
An independent mode of living may manifest a clear sense of
individual self, but lack awareness of the realities and needs
of others. In contrast, a contributive way of life is based
on an awareness of the interdependent nature of our lives--of
the relationships that link us to others and our environment.
It is a way of life in which we actively strive to realize happiness
both for ourselves and for others.
Such a way of life is centered on what we now call empowerment,
in particular through the kind of dialogue that unleashes our
vast inner potential, inspiring people to work together for
the peace and happiness of the entire global community.
Here I am reminded of the words of Aurelio Peccei, cofounder
of the Club of Rome, whose report The Limits to Growth awakened
the world to the environmental crisis. In a dialogue we shared,
Dr. Peccei stated: "The gamut of still dormant capacities
available in each individual is so great that we can make of
them the greatest human resource. It is by grooming and developing
these capacities in a way consistent with our new condition
in this changed world--and only in this way--that we can again
put a modicum of order and harmony in our affairs, including
our relations with Nature, and thus move safely ahead."
Nothing is more crucially important today than the kind of humanistic
education that enables people to sense the reality of interconnectedness,
to appreciate the infinite potential in each person's life,
and to cultivate that dormant human potential to the fullest.
No matter how complex global issues may seem, we must remember
that it is we ourselves who have given rise to them. It is therefore
impossible that they are beyond our power as human beings to
resolve. Refocusing on humanity, reforming and opening up the
inner capacities of our lives--this kind of individual human
revolution can enable effective reform and empowerment on a
global scale.
To express my heartfelt wishes for the success of the WSSD,
I would like to share these words of my dear late friend, poet
laureate of Denmark, Dame Esther Gress.
If you want to change the world
you must change man.
If you want to change man
you must make him want to change.
--Dame Esther Gress (1921-2002)
And I would like to offer these words of the renowned Nigerian
writer, Ben Okri, from his poem dedicated to the new century.
You can't remake the world
Without remaking yourself.
Each new era begins within.
It is an inward event,
With unsuspected possibilities
For inner liberation.
--Ben Okri, Nigerian writer
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Copyright © 2002 Soka Gakkai International. All rights
reserved.
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