Marin Independent Journal

Faith groups fight against climate change

- By Luis Andres Henao and Jessie Wardarski

POINTE-AUX-CHENES, LOUISIANA >> On a boat ride along a bayou that shares the name of his Native American tribe, Donald Dardar points to a cross marking his ancestors’ south Louisiana burial ground — a place he fears will disappear.

He points to the partly submerged stumps of oak trees killed by salt water on land where he rode horses as a kid, and to his mother’s home, gutted by Hurricane Ida. He and his wife have a mission: protecting Pointeaux-Chenes and other communitie­s at risk in a state that loses about a football field’s worth of wetlands every 100 minutes.

For years, Donald and Theresa Dardar have joined forces with the Rev. Kristina Peterson. Working with scientists and members of Pointe-au-Chien and two other tribes, they’ve set out thousands of oyster shells to protect sacred mounds, obtained financing to refill abandoned oil field canals and built an elevated greenhouse to save their plants and medicinal herbs from flooding.

“It’s saving what we know that’s going to be destroyed from both the change of the heat and the rising of the water,” said Peterson, the pastor of Bayou Blue Presbyteri­an Church in Gray, Louisiana, and a former professor of environmen­tal planning at the University of New Orleans.

Their vital work to save their bayou home and heritage is part of a broader trend around the world of faith leaders and environmen­tal activists increasing­ly joining the fight against climate change. From Hindu groups joining river cleanups and Sikh temples growing pesticide-free food, to Muslim imams and Buddhist monks organizing tree-planting campaigns, the movement knows no denominati­onal boundaries but shares as a driving force a moral imperative to preserve what they see as a divinely given environmen­t for future generation­s.

But some of them believe systemic change to protect those most vulnerable to the climate crisis must also come from world leaders meeting at the U.N. climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland.

“It’s up to them to step up to the plate and do what they’re supposed to do,” Theresa Dardar said at the tribal center where she handed out supplies to members of her tribe and others who lost their homes after Hurricane Ida hit the small fishing community 80 miles (about 130 kilometers) southwest of New Orleans.

“It’s up to you not to just give lip service, but to take action against climate change and sea level rise,” said Dardar, a longtime religion teacher at a local Catholic church and head of the environmen­tal nonprofit Lowlander Center.

Pope Francis and dozens of religious leaders recently signed a joint appeal to government­s to commit to targets at the Oct. 31-Nov. 12 summit in Glasgow. The summit aims to secure more ambitious commitment­s to limit global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius with a goal of keeping it to 1.5 degrees Celsius compared to pre-industrial levels. The event also is focused on mobilizing financing and protecting threatened communitie­s and natural habitats.

Louisiana holds 40% of U.S. wetlands, but they’re disappeari­ng fast — about 2,000 square miles (5,180 square kilometers) of the state have been lost since the 1930s. That’s about 80% of the nation’s wetland losses, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

Peterson arrived in Pointe-aux-Chenes in 1992 after Hurricane Andrew, following a call to link scientists with communitie­s hit by storms, sinking land and sea rise from climate change. Through the Lowlander Center that she co-founded, she worked to protect sacred sites from coastal erosion, refill canals dug by oil companies that allow for saltwater intrusion and build the greenhouse set to open in October. Instead, it was repurposed as a food pantry supply room after Ida.

“There’s been so much that has been interrupte­d ... and these are all critical, critical things,” Peterson said.

“We’re not going to wait on world leaders to take action. We’re doing it now,” she said. With Theresa Dardar, they’re part of the Greater New Orleans Interfaith Climate Change Coalition, which includes Buddhist, Baha’i, Christian, Jewish and other faith leaders.

They’ve also worked closely with Chief Shirell Parfait-Dardar of the Grand Caillou/Dulac Band of Biloxi-Chitimacha-Choctaw Indians. She’s the first woman to lead her tribe and the only Indigenous woman on the Louisiana governor’s climate change task force. Last year, her tribe and Pointe-au-Chien were among those that filed a formal complaint to the U.N. in Geneva, saying the U.S. government violated their human rights by failing to act on climate change.

“We should be caring for Mother Earth, not abusing her. This is a result of all of the abuse that we’ve done to her,” she said, tearing up and pointing to her home, destroyed by Ida. “If we don’t listen to the science, if we don’t listen to the wisdom of the elders, we’re going to ... keep seeing these massive amounts of destructio­n.”

Religious communitie­s are crucial in the fight against climate change, said Nathan Jessee, a researcher at Princeton’s High Meadows Environmen­tal Institute who has worked with the area’s Indigenous communitie­s.

“There’s a long history of faith-based leaders and Indigenous peoples being at the forefront of these struggles for environmen­tal justice,” Jessee said. Together, he said, they’ve demonstrat­ed the fight for clean air and water is a moral and spiritual struggle.

For many faith leaders, preserving the environmen­t is part of their mandate to care for communitie­s most vulnerable to climate change. It’s a call that Pope Francis has made often, most broadly in a 2015 encyclical, “Praised Be.” It has been echoed by imams, rabbis, patriarchs and pastors who share how their faith traditions interprete­d the call.

People of color, the poor, women, children and the elderly suffer the worst climate change impacts, said the Rev. Fletcher Harper, an Episcopal priest, and executive director of GreenFaith, a global multi-faith environmen­tal organizati­on based in New York. “For religious people, that is utterly unacceptab­le,” he said.

On the invitation of Indigenous communitie­s, more than 150 faith leaders gathered in Washington last month to pressure President Joe Biden to stop new fossil fuel projects.

GreenFaith organized other actions across the globe: In Fiji, the leader of the Pacific Council of Churches was photograph­ed on an island which goes underwater at high tide because of rising sea levels. In Jakarta, Indonesia, the largest mosque in Southeast Asia unfurled a banner that read: “Destroying the planet is haram” — forbidden. In Australia, religious groups protested against coal production and urged the prime minister to undertake bold climate action.

“The biggest plus in terms of where we are now is that there is an impatient, feisty, unstoppabl­e grassroots movement,” Harper said.

Religious groups including the World Council of Churches also have joined the fossil fuel divestment movement. “This isn’t just a stunt,” said Harper, whose organizati­on has backed such faith-based efforts since 2013. He said it evolved from a symbolic gesture to a key road map into the future.

Not all religious decision makers are on board with divestment nor is every member of a faith tradition of like mind. In the Presbyteri­an Church (U.S.A.), the general assembly voted in 2018 to continue engaging with fossil fuel companies it holds stock in.

The issue is expected to be raised again in the 2022 general assembly. “The concern with divestment was that there wasn’t anything in there for the transition of workers — to go into alternativ­e energies,” Peterson said.

 ?? JESSIE WARDARSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Donald Dardar, left, and Russell Dardar look toward the eroding shoreline of Bayou Pointeau-Chien in southern Louisiana on Wednesday. The brothers have lived along the bayou all their lives as shrimpers and fishermen. They now also work to preserve the coastal land from further erosion by refilling canals and developing living shorelines.
JESSIE WARDARSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Donald Dardar, left, and Russell Dardar look toward the eroding shoreline of Bayou Pointeau-Chien in southern Louisiana on Wednesday. The brothers have lived along the bayou all their lives as shrimpers and fishermen. They now also work to preserve the coastal land from further erosion by refilling canals and developing living shorelines.

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