From Editors, Earth Island Journal <[email protected]>
Subject Wild Heritage
Date February 17, 2024 12:45 AM
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Celebrating Black History Month

News of the world environment

&nbsp;NEWSLETTER | FEBRUARY 16, 2024

Wild Heritage

It’s mid-morning in Uganda’s Mabira rainforest on the shores of Lake Victoria. Godliver Businge stands outside her home, full of good spirit and ready to get to work. Around her, a gathering of women steadily forms, creating a circle around an outdoor stove, as the sweet aromas of barbecue rise into the tree canopy. At first glance, this is a familiar scene — women preparing a meal for their families and community. Yet, within this seemingly routine gathering, a quiet revolution is taking shape.

Each woman here is participating in a training course, learning to craft and cook with charcoal briquettes made from organic waste — part of a grassroots conservation effort aimed at protecting Uganda’s last standing forests. Mabira Forest spans 74,000 acres of forests, hilltops and verdant stream valleys in central Uganda. In the forest, wide-eyed, gray cheeked mangabey monkeys hang from the branches, while flocks of tit-hylia songbirds flit through the leaves and violet-winged butterflies perch on flowering plants. The Mabira forest is one of the only places in the world to host these rare species of monkeys, birds, and butterflies. The survival of these species, however, depends on the survival of Mabira itself.

The richly biodiverse Mabira reserve is the largest remaining block of semi-evergreen rainforest in the Victoria Basin. It is also home to settled human enclaves that depend on the forest.

Today, the prevalence of deforestation threatens the forest’s longevity, along with the communities, human and otherwise, living in or around it. “One of the biggest rainforests in Africa — the Mabira Forest — is now a forest just by the roadside,” says Businge, the Women’s Earth Alliance (WEA) Uganda program lead and a co-founder of the Uganda Women’s Water Initiative (UWWI). “But if you go behind it, the forest has been cut down.”

Uganda has lost nearly a third of its tree cover in the past two decades, much of it to logging for charcoal production. Reporter Claire Greenberger writes about women leaders innovating a new way forward by using organic waste — mostly food scraps that would otherwise go uneaten — instead of wood, to make charcoal briquettes.

READ MORE

Image courtesy of Washington State Dept. of Transportation

SUGGESTED BROWSING

In recognition of Black History Month, we are sharing just a few of the stories from our archives that feature the trailblazing work of African American environmental leaders.

Standing Up for Cancer Alley

Sharon Lavigne has been leading an international campaign to stop Formosa Plastics’ massive petrochemical project in Louisiana’s St James Parish for years. So far, she’s kept the complex — which would emit an estimated 800 tons of air pollution each year — at bay.

Can't Let Up

Robert Bullard, often referred to as the “father of environmental justice,” has been calling attention to the links between race and the environment for decades. In this interview, he discusses how far the EJ movement has come, why we can’t let up when it comes to fighting for communities in “sacrifice zones,’ and where the movement must go from here.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;

The Nature Connection

Rue Mapp has made it her “business to share how black people do have a deep intergenerational connection to nature and the outdoors. And to help people understand the common ground between the Yellowstone bison and urban food deserts.”

Remembering Buffalo Soldiers

“Wilderness is just a word, and the wind got no use for anything that come out of our mouths except songs or prayers. Let the sky do the talking,” National Park Ranger Shelton Johnson writes in the voice of an African-American “Buffalo Soldier” from his novel Gloryland.

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