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Groups Work to Save Rain Forest
PalmsBOGOTA, Colombia – With
a sprinkling of holy water, a priest blessed thousands of palm seedlings in a
ceremony in Bogota’s main park, sealing an unusual Palm Sunday pact between the
Roman Catholic Church and environmentalists to save a critically endangered
parrot.Thousands of miles
away, 22 churches in the United States are for the first time using
environmentally sustainable palm from Guatemala and Mexico for their Palm Sunday
services this year.This
convergence of religion and ecology is taking root across scattered areas of the
globe amid heightened environmental awareness among some church leaders. More
than 300 million palm fronds are harvested each year for U.S. consumption alone
– most of them for Palm Sunday.“Most Christians wake up on a Palm Sunday, look at the
beautiful greenery but don’t think about where it’s being grown and whether
forests and people are being affected,” said Glenn Berg-Moberg, pastor of an
800-member Lutheran church in St. Paul, Minn. “The largest single demand of
palm fronds is for Palm Sunday, so we feel we need to be responsible in how we
are treating the forest.”The effort in America, promoted
by the Montreal-based Commission for Environmental Cooperation and the
Rainforest Alliance in New York, is aimed at protecting the rainforests in
Guatemala and Mexico whose canopy provides the shade for the shrublike
chamaedorea palms to grow.The plan is to buy certified
palms from communities using sustainable forestry practices and improve the
communities’ profit margins, giving them more incentive to protect the
rainforest instead of clear-cutting it.“Someone quipped that this is a
palm pilot, but we’re really excited about it,” Berg-Moberg said.
The Colombian initiative has a
special urgency, because the survival of a species is at stake.
There are only 540 or so
yellow-eared parrots left on the planet. They exist only in Colombia. Their sole
habitat is the wax palm, which grows on the misty flanks of the Andes Mountains
to heights of 225 feet, making it the world’s tallest palm tree.
But for centuries, Colombians
have used the fronds of the wax palm for Palm Sunday, which commemorates Jesus’
entry into Jerusalem, where residents greeted him by waving palm fronds.
When Colombian peasants cut off
the fronds from the young wax palms – Colombia’s national tree – to sell to
worshippers, the trees die or their growth is stunted. The practice has led to a
dramatic thinning of the towering palms.A top Colombian cleric said it’s
important for the church to join with environmental groups and government
agencies to promote use of other palms and save the bright green-and-yellow
parrots.“We have a slogan: God pardons
always, man pardons sometimes, but nature never does. Every abuse of nature you
pay for, sooner or later,” said Monsignor Fabian Marulanda, secretary-general
of the church’s policy-making Episcopal Conference.On a sunny, crisp morning in
Bogota’s sprawling Simon Bolivar Park, the Rev. Alirio Lopez stood before
hundreds of people holding 6-inch seedlings of the Alexandra palm – an
alternative to the wax palm – in paper cups. Schoolchildren, joggers, cyclists
and others streamed into a rotunda in the park to participate.
“Dear Lord, who created the
Earth, the waters, the plants and the animals, bless these Alexandra palms,”
the white-robed Lopez, who flicked holy water onto some of the seedlings, said
in Friday’s ceremony.Thousands of the seedlings are
being handed out, to be planted for future Palm Sunday observances. Bigger
fronds of the alternative palms will be available for Palm Sunday services this
year.Marulanda said the church
refrained from joining the campaign earlier because some groups were proposing
that worshippers display handkerchiefs, corn stalks and an assortment of other
items instead of palm fronds.“There would have been a
burlesque aspect to it all,” Marulanda said. But the church came on board after
the use of fronds from other palms was suggested.“Maintain the Tradition. Respect
Nature,” proclaim posters that have been sent to churches nationwide to promote
the program.One of the campaign organizers,
Luz Mery Cortes of Conservation International, said she does not think all
Colombians will immediately abandon use of wax palm fronds, which are legally
protected.“We cannot expect that such a
strongly held tradition will change overnight,” Cortes said. “But if we don’t
do something, the wax palm and the yellow-eared parrot will disappear from the
planet.” -
AuthorMarch 22, 2005 at 9:21 AM
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