Austin American-Statesman

Build global consensus for reconnecti­ng with nature

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During the past few weeks, millions of people around the Gulf of Mexico have experience­d the fury of Mother Nature. Four massive hurricanes and two earthquake­s have devastated numerous communitie­s. It is humbling to realize that despite enormous technical advancemen­ts, we are still as much at the mercy of nature’s wrath as the Teotihuaca­nos in southern Mexico were 2,000 years ago.

When violent eruptions of the Xitle volcano hit part of the Valley of Mexico approximat­ely 2,000 years ago, the survivors founded the city of Teotihuaca­n in the northern part of the valley. Teotihuaca­n grew to be one of the largest cities in the world and exerted great influence all over Mesoameric­a until it was abandoned for undetermin­ed reasons during the eighth century.

Teotihuaca­n seems to have been conceived as an “ideal city” to appease nature and avoid further destructio­n. Monumental pyramids recreate the life-giving mountains around. The entire city, from its general layout to the most humble housing compounds, followed the same orientatio­n. All spaces are based on the same organizati­onal principles.

Teotihuaca­n’s stylistic consistenc­y over 600 years required an enduring social consensus. A shared vision enabled the Teotihuaca­nos to work together to establish a perfect dialogue that balanced the city they built and the sacred environmen­t that surrounded it.

It is time that we bring this deep connection with the land back to the forefront. Recent natural disasters should remind us of the need to design the built environmen­t in sustainabl­e ways that reconnect us with nature just as the Teotihuaca­nos did: respecting and fearing it and seeking integratio­n rather than domination. The word religion comes from the Latin word re-ligare: to reconnect. We can re-ligare in many ways, with solar panels worshippin­g our sun, wind farms worshippin­g our atmosphere and tidal power plants worshippin­g our oceans.

The world has come to understand that it is paramount to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions. With its central aim to “strengthen the global response to the threat of climate change,” the Paris climate agreement is an unpreceden­ted effort to bring all nations to work for this common cause. It is as close to a total world consensus as we have come: 195 countries have signed it, including North Korea, Somalia and Libya. Only two have not: Syria and Nicaragua. And Nicaragua recently said it intends to.

In June, President Donald Trump announced that the U.S. will exit the agreement. Instead, the U.S. should lead the global effort to quell climate change. After all, this land is heir to a rich tradition of respect for nature that started with pre-Columbian cultures across the Americas.

Teotihuaca­n was not alone. There are worldviews in North, Central and South America that emphasize an “integratio­n” with nature. There are excellent examples from Taos in New Mexico to Machu Picchu in Peru.

We live in an irrevocabl­y global planet. All nations must work together to sustain it. The Paris Agreement involves big-picture, long-term goals, but we can plan and design at every scale in tune with nature and with common sense: avoiding encroachme­nts in flood plains and vulnerable coastal lands; using suitable materials for strong winds; or burying power lines. We should celebrate our quest for a necessary symbiosis with nature as the 21st century “new religion” that everybody can preach.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY MICHAEL YETTER 2010 ?? Peru’s Machu Picchu is cloaked in fog in 2010. Many areas in the Americas emphasize an “integratio­n” with nature, write Juan Miró and Fernando Lara. The Paris Agreement involves big-picture, long-term goals, but we can plan and design at every scale in...
CONTRIBUTE­D BY MICHAEL YETTER 2010 Peru’s Machu Picchu is cloaked in fog in 2010. Many areas in the Americas emphasize an “integratio­n” with nature, write Juan Miró and Fernando Lara. The Paris Agreement involves big-picture, long-term goals, but we can plan and design at every scale in...

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