The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Green candidate on hunger strike until federal election night

- NICOLE MUNRO THE CHRONICLE HERALD

A Halifax West candidate will only consume water and coffee until election night to show what the future will look like if we don’t act on the climate crisis.

Richard Zurawski, who is running for the Green Party in Halifax West, made the call to cut food out of his diet after the Oct. 7 federal leaders debate.

“The central issue of climate change, which is going to be dominating everything, was twisted and distorted to a point that it was just not scientific­ally accurate,” Zurawski said in an interview on Day 2 of his twoweek hunger strike.

“This whole climate thing has become a political football instead of looking at the science, so my hunger strike is for people to look at their lives and see what it will look like.’”

Zurawski said while people in Canada talk about the climate crisis, they are distanced from the issue.

“The science has been telling us that it’s coming to an end, but we don’t see it here yet, so things are still normal,” he said.

“Life here in 30 years, according to all the scientific papers that I’ve been reading, is going to be dramatical­ly different.”

Zurawski said his hunger strike is to illustrate what life will be like in 2050 if people don’t act on the climate crisis.

“We have an incredible array of food and that’s not going to last,” he said. “I love coffee in the morning, but coffee crops are going to be threatened. Chocolate, all the luxuries that we have will begin to disappear. All the lemons and the oranges and the grapefruit we take for granted will be scarce.”

With a father who lived in a concentrat­ion camp and a mother who lived in Germany after the war, Zurawski’s family is no stranger to dealing with starvation.

“My father and mother never forgot what it was like to starve and they said it was horrible looking for food and having that dominate you,” Zurawski said.

“So that perspectiv­e of not having enough to eat, I think, is one that may have synergy with people.”

Zurawski plans to only consume water, citrus water and one cup of coffee a day until the night of Oct. 21 and will only end the strike under the advice of his doctor.

“I have no wish to be selfdestru­ctive, but this is an illustrati­on of the reality of 2050,” he said. “If I were still alive then, this is what I would be doing. Looking for food.”

Zurawski said while he is running to get elected, he sees dealing with climate crisis as the bigger picture.

“As Li Peng, who was a former premier of China, said, ‘I don’t care what colour the cat is as long as it catches the mice.’ This is the same thing,” Zurawski said, noting the Green Party is about raising awareness.

“This hunger strike is to say to the leaders, to the candidates, I don’t care what political stripe you are, I want you to say, ‘Yup, climate change is the number 1 issue and we have to look after our society or it’s going to disappear.’”

“This whole climate thing has become a political football instead of looking at the science, so my hunger strike is for people to look at their lives and see what it will look like.”

Richard Zurawaski

 ?? NICOLE MUNRO/THE CHRONICLE HERALD ?? This video screen capture shows Coun. Richard Zurawski, of Halifax Regional Municipali­ty, speaking to reporters at the Extinction Rebellion McDonald bridge protest on Oct. 7.
NICOLE MUNRO/THE CHRONICLE HERALD This video screen capture shows Coun. Richard Zurawski, of Halifax Regional Municipali­ty, speaking to reporters at the Extinction Rebellion McDonald bridge protest on Oct. 7.

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