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THE
CENTER
FOR
VISIONARY
LEADERSHIP
Helping
people develop the inner, spiritual resources to be effective
leaders
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Visionary Leader |
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Featured in Soul Light #31
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How the Largest Movement in the World Came into
Being and Why No One Saw It Coming
Excerpted from a ground-breaking new book by
Paul Hawken

I have given nearly
one thousand talks about the environment in the past fifteen years, and
after every speech a smaller crowd gathered to talk, ask questions, and
exchange business cards. The people offering their cards were working on
the most salient issues of our day: climate change, poverty,
deforestation, peace, water, hunger, conservation, human rights, and more.
They were from the nonprofit and nongovernmental world, also known as
civil society. They looked after rivers and bays, educated consumers about
sustainable agriculture, retrofitted houses with solar panels, lobbied
state legislatures about pollution, fought against corporate-weighted
trade policies, worked to green inner cities, or taught children about the
environment. Quite simply, they were trying to safeguard nature and ensure
justice.
After being on the road for a week or two, I would return with a couple
hundred cards stuffed into various pockets. I would lay them out on the
table in my kitchen, read the names, look at the logos, envisage the
missions, and marvel at what groups do on behalf of others. Later, I would
put them into drawers or paper bags, keepsakes of the journey. I couldn’t
throw them away.
Over the years the cards mounted into the thousands, and whenever I
glanced at the bags in my closet, I kept coming back to one question: did
anyone know how many groups there were? At first, this was a matter of
curiosity, but it slowly grew into a hunch that something larger was
afoot, a significant social movement that was eluding the radar of
mainstream culture.
I began to count. I looked at government records for different countries
and, using various methods to approximate the number of environmental and
social justice groups from tax census data, I initially estimated that
there were thirty thousand environmental organizations strung around the
globe; when I added social justice and indigenous organizations, the
number exceeded one hundred thousand. I then researched past social
movements to see if there were any equal in scale and scope, but I
couldn’t find anything. The more I probed, the more I unearthed, and the
numbers continued to climb. In trying to pick up a stone, I found the
exposed tip of a geological formation. I discovered lists, indexes, and
small databases specific to certain sectors or geographic areas, but no
set of data came close to describing the movement’s breadth. Extrapolating
from the records being accessed, I realized that the initial estimate of a
hundred thousand organizations was off by at least a factor of ten. I now
believe there are over one million organizations working toward ecological
sustainability and social justice. Maybe two.
By conventional definition, this is not a movement. Movements have leaders
and ideologies. You join movements, study tracts, and identify yourself
with a group. You read the biography of the founder(s) or listen to them
perorate on tape or in person. Movements have followers, but this movement
doesn’t work that way. It is dispersed, inchoate, and fiercely
independent. There is no manifesto or doctrine, no authority to check
with.
I sought a name for it, but there isn’t one.
Historically, social movements have arisen primarily because of injustice,
inequalities, and corruption. Those woes remain legion, but a new
condition exists that has no precedent: the planet has a life-threatening
disease that is marked by massive ecological degradation and rapid climate
change. It crossed my mind that perhaps I was seeing something organic, if
not biologic. Rather than a movement in the conventional sense, is it a
collective response to threat? Is it splintered for reasons that are
innate to its purpose? Or is it simply disorganized? More questions
followed. How does it function? How fast is it growing? How is it
connected? Why is it largely ignored?
After spending years researching this phenomenon, including creating with
my colleagues a global database of these organizations, I have come to
these conclusions: this is the largest social movement in all of history,
no one knows its scope, and how it functions is more mysterious than what
meets the eye.
What does meet the eye is compelling: tens of millions of ordinary and
not-so-ordinary people willing to confront despair, power, and
incalculable odds in order to restore some semblance of grace, justice,
and beauty to this world.
Clayton Thomas-Müller speaks to a community gathering of the Cree nation
about waste sites on their native land in Northern Alberta, toxic lakes so
big you can see them from outer space. Shi Lihong, founder of Wild China
Films, makes documentaries with her husband on migrants displaced by
construction of large dams. Rosalina Tuyuc Velásquez, a member of the
Maya-Kaqchikel people, fights for full accountability for tens of
thousands of people killed by death squads in Guatemala. Rodrigo Baggio
retrieves discarded computers from New York, London, and Toronto and
installs them in the favelas of Brazil, where he and his staff teach
computer skills to poor children. Biologist Janine Benyus speaks to twelve
hundred executives at a business forum in Queensland about biologically
inspired industrial development. Paul Sykes, a volunteer for the National
Audubon Society, completes his fifty-second Christmas Bird Count in Little
Creek, Virginia, joining fifty thousand other people who tally 70 million
birds on one day. Sumita Dasgupta leads students, engineers, journalists,
farmers, and Adivasis (tribal people) on a ten-day trek through Gujarat
exploring the rebirth of ancient rainwater harvesting and catchment
systems that bring life back to drought-prone areas of India. Silas
Kpanan’Ayoung Siakor, who exposed links between the genocidal policies of
former president Charles Taylor and illegal logging in Liberia, now
creates certified, sustainable timber policies.
These eight, who may never meet and know one another, are part of a
coalescence comprising hundreds of thousands of organizations with no
center, codified beliefs, or charismatic leader. The movement grows and
spreads in every city and country. Virtually every tribe, culture,
language, and religion is part of it, from Mongolians to Uzbeks to Tamils.
It is comprised of families in India, students in Australia, farmers in
France, the landless in Brazil, the bananeras of Honduras, the “poors” of
Durban, villagers in Irian Jaya, indigenous tribes of Bolivia, and
housewives in Japan. Its leaders are farmers, zoologists, shoemakers, and
poets.
The movement can’t be divided because it is atomized -- small pieces
loosely joined. It forms, gathers, and dissipates quickly. Many inside and
out dismiss it as powerless, but it has been known to bring down
governments, companies, and leaders through witnessing, informing, and
massing.
The movement has three basic roots: the environmental and social justice
movements, and indigenous cultures’ resistance to globalization -- all of
which are intertwining. It arises spontaneously from different economic
sectors, cultures, regions, and cohorts, resulting in a global, classless,
diverse, and embedded movement, spreading worldwide without exception. In
a world grown too complex for constrictive ideologies, the very word
movement may be too small, for it is the largest coming together of
citizens in history.
There are research institutes, community development agencies, village-
and citizen-based organizations, corporations, networks, faith-based
groups, trusts, and foundations. They defend against corrupt politics and
climate change, corporate predation and the death of the oceans,
governmental indifference and pandemic poverty, industrial forestry and
farming, depletion of soil and water.
Describing the breadth of the movement is like trying to hold the ocean in
your hand. It is that large. When a part rises above the waterline, the
iceberg beneath usually remains unseen. When Wangari Maathai won the Nobel
Peace Prize, the wire service stories didn’t mention the network of six
thousand different women’s groups in Africa planting trees. When we hear
about a chemical spill in a river, it is never mentioned that more than
four thousand organizations in North America have adopted a river, creek,
or stream. We read that organic agriculture is the fastest-growing sector
of farming in America, Japan, Mexico, and Europe, but no connection is
made to the more than three thousand organizations that educate farmers,
customers, and legislators about sustainable agriculture.
This is the first time in history that a large social movement is not
bound together by an “ism.” What binds it together is ideas, not
ideologies. This unnamed movement’s big contribution is the absence of one
big idea; in its stead it offers thousands of practical and useful ideas.
In place of isms are processes, concerns, and compassion. The movement
demonstrates a pliable, resonant, and generous side of humanity.
And it is impossible to pin down. Generalities are largely inaccurate. It
is nonviolent, and grassroots; it has no bombs, armies, or helicopters. A
charismatic male vertebrate is not in charge. The movement does not agree
on everything nor will it ever, because that would be an ideology. But it
shares a basic set of fundamental understandings about the Earth, how it
functions, and the necessity of fairness and equity for all people
partaking of the planet’s life-giving systems.
The promise of this unnamed movement is to offer solutions to what appear
to be insoluble dilemmas: poverty, global climate change, terrorism,
ecological degradation, polarization of income, loss of culture. It is not
burdened with a syndrome of trying to save the world; it is trying to
remake the world.
There is fierceness here. There is no other explanation for the raw
courage and heart seen over and again in the people who march, speak,
create, resist, and build. It is the fierceness of what it means to know
we are human and want to survive.
This movement is relentless and unafraid. It cannot be mollified,
pacified, or suppressed. There can be no Berlin Wall moment, no
treaty-signing, no morning to awaken when the superpowers agree to stand
down. The movement will continue to take myriad forms. It will not rest.
There will be no Marx, Alexander, or Kennedy. No book can explain it, no
person can represent it, no words can encompass it, because the movement
is the breathing, sentient testament of the living world.
And I believe it will prevail. I don’t mean defeat, conquer, or cause harm
to someone else. And I don’t tender the claim in an oracular sense. I mean
the thinking that informs the movement’s goal -- to create a just society
conducive to life on Earth -- will reign. It will soon suffuse and
permeate most institutions. But before then, it will change a sufficient
number of people so as to begin the reversal of centuries of frenzied
self-destruction.
Inspiration is not garnered from litanies of what is flawed; it resides in
humanity’s willingness to restore, redress, reform, recover, reimagine,
and reconsider. Healing the wounds of the Earth and its people does not
require saintliness or a political party. It is not a liberal or
conservative activity. It is a sacred act.
Paul Hawken is author of Natural
Capitalism, The Ecology of Commerce, and Growing a Business; he is
director of Natural Capital Institute and founder of Smith and Hawken
garden tools. (www.paulhawken.com).
He created a website
www.wiserearth.org, the first on-line
data base that can be edited by the community it serves—an Open Source
format to help the movement connect and collaborate.
(This excerpt first appeared in Orion magazine:
www.orionmagazine.org)
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hip was founded by
Corinne McLaughlin and Gordon Davidson in 1996 as a non-denominational
educational center to help people develop t
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