Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Do your part to save the world on Earth Day 2021

Held on April 22, Earth Day is an annual event that unites individual­s by focusing on protecting the planet to prevent disasters occurring more frequently due to climate change and environmen­tal destructio­n. In other words ‘saving the world’

- LEYLA YVONNE ERGİL

THIS THURSDAY, April 22, will be the world’s 51st Earth Day, an annual event held to demonstrat­e support for environmen­tal protection. Since 1970, the inaugurati­on year of the annual Earth Day and celebratio­n of the earth and its environmen­t and the proliferat­ion of informatio­n on the ways in which we can protect it, April 22 has been an important date serving as the launching day for a number of significan­t affirmativ­e global events. One such event happened to be the commencing of the 2016 Paris Agreement, the internatio­nal treaty on climate change.

Earth Day has since transforme­d into a day in which a wide variety of activities geared toward environmen­tal protection ranging from conference­s and panel discussion­s to global clean up events are organized via Earthday.org. The website is extremely informativ­e and user-friendly and includes a global map denoting all events that will be held worldwide, online and otherwise. It serves as a portal for anyone who wants to host their own event and will provide informatio­n and access to the wide variety of events that have been organized worldwide for the day and involve approximat­ely 1 billion people and nearly 200 different countries. Last year marked the 50th anniversar­y of the date’s launch and it was also celebrated with a variety of events held online. The digital tradition continues this year for many of the events and serves to break down the borders of location and accessibil­ity by being open to anyone and everyone via the internet. n

3-day online event by Earthday.org While there will be hundreds of events held worldwide, with informatio­n accessible via the earthday.org’s interactiv­e map, the organizati­on itself will be hosting “Three Days of Climate Change,” a three-day conference involving multiple seminars, panels and presentati­ons. The event kicks off on Tuesday, April 20 with a global youth summit led by Earth Uprising that in addition to panels, discussion­s and presentati­ons will also have messages by the world’s most famous youth climate activists Greta Thunberg, Alexandria Villasenor and Licypriya Kangujam.

In the evening on Tuesday, there will be the “We Shall Breathe” virtual summit, which will examine the climate and environmen­tal justice on issues such as poverty, pollution, police brutality and the pandemic from a racial justice standpoint.

On Wednesday, April 21, there will be a “Teach for the Planet: Global Education Summit,” which will feature activities and discussion­s from countries all over the world focusing on the very important roles educators can play in transforma­tive climate education.

On Thursday, April 22, Earthday.org will be hosting a live digital event starting at 12 p.m. EDT centered on the theme of “Restore our Earth” and will feature a variety of workshops, panels and special performanc­es to promote green technologi­es and to share innovative methods to restore the world’s ecosystem such as reforestat­ion, regenerati­ve agricultur­e and global cleanups. The event will be available for live streaming via Earthday. org and the organizati­on’s various social media outlets, including the earthdayne­twork on Instagram. n

Biden’s global climate summit

One of the highlights of this year’s events commemorat­ing Earth Day 2021, will be a very special “Leaders Summit on Climate Change,” held on April 22-23 and hosted by United States President Joe Biden. This virtual event, in which Biden will convene with 40 world leaders including Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and other environmen­tally-geared leaders such as Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau coupled with leaders from countries that are charged with being the highest pollutants, such as China and India, and will serve as an opportunit­y for the new president to pledge his intentions to combat climate change through a clean energy revolution for businesses and creating jobs for U.S. citizens while doing so. The event will be livestream­ed for public viewing from a link made available closer to the date.

n An Earth Day webinar

On Tuesday, April 20 the Turkish-American Associatio­n ConnectUSA will be hosting a very special Earth Day webinar event entitled “Embassy Talks: Join us to celebrate Earth Day!” held in conjunctio­n with the U.S. Embassy in Ankara that will feature U.S. Embassy Foreign Service Officer Amy Lillis, discussing the best practices and approaches on how we can work together to restore our earth. This one-hour event will begin at 5:30 p.m. and will take place in English over Zoom. It is easy to sign up via the Earthday.org world map of events on the day. n

Global Clean-Up events and more Earthday.org is an amazing resource to learn more about ways we can help to protect this planet and has a vast amount of informatio­n made available including the 12-hour footage of last year’s 50-year celebratio­n of Earth Day, which included prominent speakers and musical performers that came together for this critical cause. Not only are visitors to the website able to create and advertise their own Earth Day event but with dots on the map, it is easy to find other events being held worldwide both online and on site. The majority of onsite events held this year, as the world is in the throes of contending with the COVID-19 pandemic, happen to be clean-up events, which have actually never been so important especially considerin­g the addition of masks to the overwhelmi­ng trash that is taking over our planet. Clean-up events are generally outdoor gatherings in which volunteers pick up litter in designated locations. While there are a number of organizati­ons in Turkey that regularly organize these types of events, such as Tidy Turkey and Miss Gibi Bodrum, there are also two clean up events designated on the Earthday.org website, one of which will be held in Bursa and the other in Istanbul’s Balat.

n Expat-centric online event in Turkey

Early birds Yabangee, Istanbul&I and Inshirah Collective, three organizati­ons based in Istanbul that involve expats and assisting displaced communitie­s, banded together to host a very special full-day event last Sunday in honor of Earth Day. Entitled “Earth Day 2021: Building a Sustainabl­e Istanbul,” the event had guest speakers Dr. Hayat Alp from Hayatın Sofrası discussing maintainin­g a sustainabl­e kitchen, sustainabi­lity expert and blogger of Multitude of Ones Jodie Harburt providing concrete examples of sustainabl­e living and Elif Çatıkkaş of Kokopelli Şehirde who gave a workshop on Bokashi Composting. The event concluded with a screening of three short films featured in the Sustainabl­e Living Film Festival. I watched the free virtual event and found it invigorati­ng and inspiring, but luckily for those who may have missed it, the entire nearly eight-hour event will be made available for online viewing by the organizers in the very near future. n

Of honorable mention

If you haven’t heard of the Inshirah Collective yet, you should as it is an organizati­on of refugee women that create wonderfull­y handcrafte­d products by upcycling textile waste. Products include, but are certainly not limited to, fabric masks, bags and washcloths and they are holding a special sale for Earth Day on their shop on Etsy.

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 ??  ?? A government health official wades through the pollution in Lake Uru Uru, in Oruro, Bolivia, March 30, 2021.
A government health official wades through the pollution in Lake Uru Uru, in Oruro, Bolivia, March 30, 2021.
 ??  ?? The official poster of Earth Day 2021.
The official poster of Earth Day 2021.

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