Saturday, April 23, 2005

Earth Day, Religion & Me



I was reading through the many Earth day articles when this particular picture caught my attention. The picture felt very apt and in tune with the day’s emotion. The picture was taken by 14 year old Chamaiporn Pongpanich of Thailand. A moving picture of monks, draping saffron cloth round the trunk of a huge tropical tree. The draping signifies the "Ordaining" of the tree.

Traditionally, a Thai Buddhist novice is ordained by the shaving of the monk’s hair and by his acceptance of saffron robes. Thai monks have used this symbolic act of initiation to “ordain” trees in the rain forest. This rather unique tactic has actually prevented the logging of quite a number of acres of forest.

The picture is powerful in what it represents. Religion could indeed save the environment. It got me very interested in how and what world religions are doing in the area of conservation and environment protection. So I googled and I googled. What I found was quite heartening and saddening.

Buddhism by far appears to be in the forefront of environmental conservation. One of its main principles being equilibrium with nature. I came across this very poignant view by a Thai Monk,Buddhadasa Bhikkhu , "The entire cosmos is a cooperative. The sun, the moon, and the stars live together as a cooperative. The same is true for humans and animals, trees, and the earth. When we realize that the world is a mutual, interdependent, cooperative enterprise . . . then we can build a noble environment. If our lives are not based on this truth, then we shall perish.

Engaged Buddhist activists are tackling global issues head on. Most visible among them, the Dalai Lama himself.

In sharp contrast to Buddhism stands Christianity. Sad ! My own religion is weak here. I think it is very necessary to say that Christianity in the modern period lost interest in the natural world and has exploited it. Christian theology in many ways gave a free reign for the scientific conquest of nature. All in the name of human dominion. The concept of human dominion comes from a myopic interpretation of the Bible.

Genesis 1:28
God blessed them and said to them, Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air and over every living creature that moves on the ground

Today many Christians, especially the evangelists are reexamining that argument. Many are environmentally concerned and caring. They are slowing becoming a voice and go by the name "Creation Care". So why don't they call themselves environmentalists?. Well…that would make them liberal. In the strange world of politics, a conservative cannot be seen favoring a liberal. Politics aside, it is great to see a green movement among the conservatives too.

This brings me to India and its present. A country which places a huge importance to religion.

Free market economy and ideology has gripped India. The country has been growing steadily both in terms of population and economy. Consumerism is the new mantra. The 500 million strong middle class is fast becoming a force in itself and globalization is a welcome word. While there exists a sound infrastructure to aid consumption, there is sadly none for disposal, reuse and preservation. Environmental safeguards are usually considered a nuisance. That to me is precarious and unacceptable. Clean air, clean water and a healthy environment is everybody's right.

Is the common man worried ? Does the common man care ? If not, how do we educate ? Television is an effective medium. I am beginning to think religion is much more powerful

I wonder what the Christian religious leaders in India feel about “Creation Care”. I think, I need to find out.

Thursday, April 14, 2005

Curse of the Junk Mail




Each day I open my snail mail box and in comes a flood of mail. Almost all the time it is Junk Mail (JM). Credit card offers, pizza coupons, PC deals, hair growth products, hair removal products... The list goes on. If you happen to be away for a couple of days your entire mail box gets "junked out".

There is much concern about junk in your email box. Why is there no concern about junk in your snail mail box?

According to a report from Berkeley, U.S. produces 35% of the world’s new printed information each year and 40% of the world's card and letter postal volume. About half of all postal mail in the United States is junk mail.

It is estimated that about 100 million trees are cut each year to create this menace. All in the name of better business and a stronger economy. Reputable companies like Dell, AOL, Chase are all in on this. The irony is in the fact that these companies claim themselves to be environmentally responsible.

When it comes to JM, it is a bad thing to have a conscience. Each time you see it, you end up exasperated. Worrying about all those precious trees and what not. So I try and recycle all this junk very religiously. If you happen to live in a state where environment is a back burner, recycling is easier said than done.

Recycling is great. Stopping JM altogether would be even better. Hmm.... I wondered. What would Napoleon Dynamite say ? The answer came back, "See for your self" :)

A few googles later, I found out about DMA (Direct Marketing Association). Apparently I could opt out of JM all together. My tree hugging heart skipped a beat. Off I went filling the request forms. I even contacted some of the JM proliferating companies individually, and requested my name be taken off their JM list.

It felt good.

Days went by. JM kept happening. I waited patiently and hoped that things would improve. Then I started noticing a difference. The mails were no longer addressed to me. Instead it was to a
Current Resident
Good neighbor
Valued Customer
Car Enthusiast
Frequent Flyer
Single And Looking

My name apparently was off the list and with that the companies were no longer liable. But JM kept happening. The Postal service had absolutely no problem delivering the JM. I am pretty sure my name is neither Hairy & Scary; nor is it Balding & Boring. Why Lord why ?

Let me guess...All that really matters is revenue.To the postal department. To the big companies. To everybody!

Tuesday, April 12, 2005

iPodism



It is official. I have converted to iPodism. I am now a proud owner of a shuffle. Miraculously small. Both in size and price. I do wish it had a display screen to control the playlist. Then again, you can pack 120 of your favorite songs and let shuffle randomize things for you.

Work isn't the usual anymore. I don't have to struggle to ignore the country music over the PA system. I don't have to listen to a certain Florida trip repeated over and over again. I don't have to listen to people ordering crab rangoons for lunch. It is just me jammin to my tunes. So here is what my latest iMix looks like

1) Lajjavathiye - Jassie Gift - Malayalam
2) Vaadi Vaadi - Soundtrack Sachien - Tamil
3) Aika Dajiba - Vaishali Samant - Marathi
4) Bulla Ki Jana - Rabbi Shergil - Punjabi
5) Fanaa - Soundtrack Yuva - Hindi
6) Come on Closer - Jem - English
7) Somebody Told Me - The Killers - English
8) Cold - Crossfade - English
& of course the must have .... 9) Sugar by Trick Daddy !

With a shuffle in my hand nothing looks daunting anymore. Not even a NullPointerException !