Toronto Star

Passing the torch

- MARCO CHOWN OVED TORONTO STAR

Talking with your grandparen­ts never happens as it does in the movies, where a wizened and good-natured elder takes the time to impart decades of accumulate­d knowledge to their eager-to-listen grandchild­ren. No, we’re too busy to take the time, and even when we do, there are family politics, taboo subjects, miscommuni­cations and a host of other factors that get in the way.

David Suzuki’s newest book, Letters To My Grandchild­ren, is an acknowledg­ement of this reality. His six grandkids are spread across the country and have such a range in age as to defy any attempt to tailor a message that all of them could understand.

So the 79-year-old Suzuki commits the exercise to paper. While he crafts individual letters to each grandchild, he saves them for the end, devoting the bulk of the book to thematical­ly-based letters addressed to all of them. He relates the experience­s he’s accumulate­d from a childhood in a Japanese internment camp in interior B.C. to an adolescenc­e on a farm in Leamington through his studies as a geneticist and his career as a scientist travelling the world to report on emerging threats to the environmen­t. It’s quite an incredible life he’s lived so far and it’s no wonder Suzuki feels the need to make sure its lessons — about intoleranc­e, hard work, family, activism, media and ecology — make it to his descendant­s.

In a voice so familiar that you feel like you can hear it coming from your TV, Suzuki reflects on his duty as an elder and how voices of accumulate­d knowledge have been lost in an immigrant society like our own — where grandparen­ts are left behind in a home country, or disconnect­ed through a language barrier.

Much of what he writes is familiar to many Canadians over the age of 35, but the power of this book comes from its accessibil­ity to a new generation, reintroduc­ing Suzuki not as the “freak” scientist from Suzuki on Science, not as the environmen­tal activist familiar from logging battles on the west coast, but as a public figure the likes of which only this country could have produced.

Suzuki talks about his own grandparen­ts, who didn’t speak English and remained foreign to him because he couldn’t speak Japanese, and the difficulti­es of migration and racism that put them all in internment camps and led some of them to return to a post-Hiroshima Japan.

He spends a lot of time applying his understand­ing of biological evolution and genetic diversity to modern society, celebratin­g the multicultu­ralism that has emerged over his lifetime and permeated his own family.

But his voice strikes a clarion note when turning to the future and discussing the structural barriers to combating climate change. He’s outraged by the short-term decisions made to maximize corporate profit that are diametrica­lly opposed to the long-held tradition of safeguardi­ng the world for our children.

He also fingers short electoral cycles that put politician­s in perpetual campaigns. Because future generation­s don’t get a vote, the expensive and long-term programs necessary to preserve the environmen­t become “political suicide.”

But the very act of having children, he says, is a commitment to ensuring a better world for them. And without sugar-coating it, he passes the torch to his grandchild­ren.

At his worst, Suzuki sounds like a grumpy old man, but at his best, he’s recounting stories from a different age and pulling out the lessons for today, sounding less like a celebrity scientist and more like your granddad — or the one you wish you had.

 ??  ?? Letters to my Grandchild­ren by David Suzuki, Greystone Books, 233 pages, $27.95.
Letters to my Grandchild­ren by David Suzuki, Greystone Books, 233 pages, $27.95.
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