Ottawa Citizen

PRaYER FOR THE PLANET

Afghanista­n has recruited its influentia­l imams to spread the word about climate change

- SHADI KHAN SAIF

KABUL, AFGHANISTA­N Fruit seller Kher Uddin and his two sons regularly attend Friday prayers with other labourers at a mosque in Bagrami, on the eastern outskirts of Kabul.

But during recent prayers, the message — delivered to rows of worshipper­s clad in warm winter cloaks and jackets — took a somewhat different turn, to the need for action on climate change and environmen­tal concerns, through measures such as reducing litter and planting trees.

“It is a common lesson of moral and Islamic teachings not to create extra and hazardous waste in public places and water bodies, be it plastic, bottles or whatever,” said Mawlawi Obaid Ullah, the mosque’s imam, after the prayers.

“I teach people to the best of my knowledge on being responsibl­e and sensible,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Uddin, 40, said he found the sermon “very different than usual” but also “much needed and relevant.”

The past year of harsh drought and frigid winter weather in Afghanista­n is “all in the hands of Allah — but we can do our bit of good work,” he said.

“I have almost lived my life,” he added, smiling at his sons. “Now we need to think and act for our future generation­s.”

A NEW DEAL

Afghanista­n is suffering worsening climate change impacts, from prolonged droughts to torrential rain and deadly flooding, with few resources to prepare or adapt.

Now the country’s influentia­l clerics are being brought in to help the faithful understand what is happening and encourage them to do what they can to protect and improve the country’s fragile environmen­t.

Afghanista­n’s National Environmen­tal Protection Agency (NEPA) last year inked a deal with the Ministry of Hajj and Religious Affairs to have religious leaders — in rural as well as urban areas — address such issues during prayers.

Now, imams in the deeply conservati­ve and war-battered country are preaching about the need to better protect the environmen­t.

“By encouragin­g people to plant more and more trees and be friendly to (the) environmen­t, we are actually inviting and enlighteni­ng them with the powers of Allah, who gives new life to trees after harsh winter,” said Mawlawi Fazal Karim Siraji, one of the leaders of the green prayer movement.

The imam, who grew up in the country’s green Panjshir Valley, near the Hindu Kush mountains, addresses hundreds of the faithful on environmen­tal issues each Friday in Kabul.

“Allah and his prophet Mohammad, peace be upon him, want all humans to be constructi­ve and responsibl­e towards the environmen­t, not destructiv­e,” urged the 43-year-old cleric, in a sermon broadcast through the mosque’s speakers throughout the neighbourh­ood.

Siraji said he sees raising environmen­tal awareness as part of his holy responsibi­lity, and particular­ly hopes to reach children, who need greater awareness of the threats and opportunit­ies.

GROWING RISKS

Last year, extreme weather displaced more than a half million people in Afghanista­n, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs (OCHA).

The country also ranks as one of the nations most at risk of and least prepared for climate threats ranging from food insecurity to worsening disease outbreaks, according to the Notre Dame Global Adaptation Index.

Droughts are likely to be the norm by 2030, leading to land degradatio­n and desertific­ation affecting more than a third of the country’s 38 million people, according to the U.N. Developmen­t Programme.

Afghanista­n’s environmen­tal agency is working on a draft strategy to attract at least $500 million from the Green Climate Fund to help it adapt to coming risks, including a drop in groundwate­r levels and worsening air quality.

Residents of Kabul, Afghanista­n’s capital, also have just suffered a long winter of heavy air pollution as residents burn materials such as waste plastic, rubber and low-grade coal to try to keep warm.

At times, thick black smoke has covered the city of six million from dawn to dusk, making breathing hazardous.

Sayed Maisam Ehsani, a senior adviser at NEPA, said religious figures can be an effective way to deal with the country’s environmen­tal problems because they have such revered status.

“People seriously listen to them five times a day and in larger number on the weekly Friday prayers,” he said.

Under the NEPA deal, up to 5,000 mosques across Afghanista­n have now delivered an estimated 33,000 sermons on environmen­tal and climate change issues, in line with Islamic principles and local levels of understand­ing, he said.

“This has been one of our most successful initiative­s in spreading awareness,” Ehsani said.

In particular, the message has reached beyond urban centres to some of the most remote corners of the country, as well as to informal settlement­s in urban areas, Ehsani said.

EARLY RESULTS

Siraji, one of the clerics, said the effort is showing some concrete results.

Next month, for instance, prayer leaders newly trained on environmen­tal issues will plant thousands of trees “to encourage people to plant millions more in their homes, neighbourh­oods and public places,” Siraji said.

Uddin, who attends the mosque on Kabul’s outskirts, said he appreciate­d such efforts to educate on environmen­tal themes.

“My children don’t know anything about tree planting and farming. Thankfully, with such sermons from the cleric, the environmen­t here can be improved,” he said.

“Keeping the environmen­t clean and green does not need plenty of money and resources. It just requires attention and affection.” Reuters

 ?? SHADI KHAN SAIF/THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION ?? Kabul, Afghanista­n is often covered by a thick layer of smog. Imams are now being encouraged to speak about climate change.
SHADI KHAN SAIF/THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION Kabul, Afghanista­n is often covered by a thick layer of smog. Imams are now being encouraged to speak about climate change.
 ?? WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Afghan labourers work on agricultur­al farmland west of Kabul. Soil erosion caused by deforestat­ion often triggers floods in parts of the country. Imams are now incorporat­ing discussion­s about environmen­tal protection into their prayer sessions.
WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Afghan labourers work on agricultur­al farmland west of Kabul. Soil erosion caused by deforestat­ion often triggers floods in parts of the country. Imams are now incorporat­ing discussion­s about environmen­tal protection into their prayer sessions.
 ?? SHADI KHAN SAIF/THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION ?? Mawlawi Fazal Karim Siraji, one of the leaders of the green prayer movement in Afghanista­n, offers Friday prayers at a mosque in Kabul, Afghanista­n.
SHADI KHAN SAIF/THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION Mawlawi Fazal Karim Siraji, one of the leaders of the green prayer movement in Afghanista­n, offers Friday prayers at a mosque in Kabul, Afghanista­n.

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