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Desmond Tutu

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For the Future of Our Planet, a Dialogue Between Generations

Posted: 06/08/2012 11:08 am

The month of June is upon us and as Rio+20, the UN Conference on Sustainable Development, draws nearer, I find myself reflecting on the many great changes the past 20 years have brought, since that first Earth Summit, also in Rio, when the world met to announce a vision for its collective future.

Since then we have seen many more inspiring moments of humanity, when large numbers come together for the common good. It tells us change is possible.

But the biggest of dangers still loom large, and I share the frustration of millions, outraged at the indifference world leaders are demonstrating towards some of the toughest and most urgent challenges we face today. In the eyes of future generations, our failure to resolve these problems will overshadow everything else.

Escalating poverty is eating away at our social fabric, our dwindling ecosystems are crying out for protection, the grave threat of climate change is well-documented and yet so inadequately addressed, as though it's tomorrow's problem! Why is it that so many of our leaders -- in rich and poor countries alike -- tend to put these challenges right at the bottom of their agendas, as if tackling climate change and social injustice were some sort of luxury?

Along with a few of my colleagues from The Elders, I have been debating these matters with young activists: Esther from Nigeria, Sara from Sweden, Marvin from China and Pedro from Brazil.

Their positive vision and relentless energy fills me with hope. I want to believe that the next generation of leaders will be bolder, more global in their outlook and more committed to making decisions for the common good, rather than the short-sightedness and narrow interests we have witnessed in the last 20 years.

My fellow Elders, Mary Robinson, Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Gro Harlem Brundtland and I have been inspired to hear in these Elders+Youngers dialogues from voices all over the world about what matters to people: What 'sustainable development' means, whether we can 'afford' it, whether GDP makes us happy -- and if not, then why don't we also measure what does?

For an oldie like me, it is -- there is no other word -- awesome to hold a conversation like this one, which spans the planet, digitally, and bridges generations. This is what our shared humanity is about. People are chipping in, confiding their worries and sharing their vision for the future. The whole world can read them.

For Marvin, Pedro, Sara and Esther, 'sustainability' is not just a word, it is a system that will ensure the well-being and prosperity of the planet they will inherit. They are ambassadors for the three billion youth that account for half of the world. They see that we need to abide first by our common goals and shared responsibility.

So now we are faced with a choice. We can fall in a heap or we can go to Rio+20, or watch Rio+20 from wherever we are -- and we can make a difference, exert our influence and hold leaders to account. As Mary Robinson said to Sara last week, "Make your voice heard. If necessary, interrupt!"

My fellow Elders have been expressing concern at the state of negotiations in the run-up to this summit and have urged world leaders gathering in Rio not to waste a rare and beautiful opportunity.

And we must continue to rally our global village -- before the summit, at the summit and onwards.

For the sake of our planet, a conversation that needs to be heard is the one between generations, between elders and young people around the world -- and those who are in between.

I leave you with this Kenyan proverb a young activist from Dubai sent us: "The world was not given to you by your parents; it was lent to you by your children."

The words are beautiful. Their global nature, in our digital age, is inspiring.

I hope you can join us too.

Desmond Tutu is Archbishop Emeritus of Cape Town, a Nobel Peace Laureate and Chair of The Elders, independent global leaders working together for peace, justice and human rights.

In the run-up to Rio+20 he is taking part in Elders+Youngers, an inter-generational dialogue on the future of our planet.

 
 
 
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The month of June is upon us and as Rio+20, the UN Conference on Sustainable Development, draws nearer, I find myself reflecting on the many great changes the past 20 years have brought, since that fi...
The month of June is upon us and as Rio+20, the UN Conference on Sustainable Development, draws nearer, I find myself reflecting on the many great changes the past 20 years have brought, since that fi...
 
 
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07:29 PM on 06/17/2012
Concerning Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu's optimistic approach to the young generation's attitude towards the worlds plight, I would like to post the following queries to him:
1.Over the past 20 years, has the general standard of living improved for South Africans or are we still at 'half throttle' ?
2.Is Archbishop Tutu willing to marry me and my fiancè,Lucia, whom I've been attached to for 15yrs.,next time we pass by Cape Town?
strobiz
02:41 PM on 06/13/2012
ok gan... go green
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Brygida Biedro
A liberal woman in conservative society
03:00 AM on 06/12/2012
A very important voice about important issues, as always it is pure pleasure to read the words of a great intellectual!
11:28 PM on 06/11/2012
"we must rally the global village" towards what? There is currently no proposal on the table for a mechanism that will encourage global sustainability. Voluntary goodwill will only hurt economically the ones who get duped into action. The example of Europe and its unilateral effort to save the world from climate change is the big elephant in the room, which everyone chooses to ignore. The best thing that can come out of this summit will be a realization of the failure of the ideas curently embraced by the overly idealistic environmental movement, so we can finally discard them and move towards some realistic solutions being proposed and implemented.
http://zoltansustainableecon.blogspot.com/2012/06/rio-20-part-5-future-we-want-but-no.html
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bad spelling grammar
Help save Big Cats from extinction!
11:41 AM on 06/11/2012
The only way we are going to get change is by evicting the current generation out of power and empowering my generation. We have our priorities strait and understand that through technology we can solve earths problems. Most importantly we wont give in to corporate bribery. Just because some company cant make an extra billion dollars a year will not prevent us from making the necessary decisions to save this planet and its resources. We will end the rain of Oil and Coal and purse fusion technology which will be the energy supply of the future. We wont allow stupid decisions to be made like clear cutting forests or destroying coral reefs. We will offer better alternatives to commercial farming and commercial fishing. We have plenty of good ideas that can work of a grand scale but there real hurdle is battling current corporations who are spending billions to keep things the way they are. That will end, smaller companies that have better business models should have a fair chance at the game. Big corporations who ruin the plant on a daily basis know they have to control governments across the world in order to survive and the reason they are so successful is because the people in power are a bunch of greed thugs. Get rid of them and then we can get on the road to recovery.
lastpost
see biography
06:12 AM on 06/11/2012
"change is possible."
Not to say inevitable, unavoidable, and possibly survivable.

"it's tomorrow's problem!"
If we can only over-borrow heavily enough, we might not even be here when the bailiff calls.

"Why is it that so many of our leaders -- in rich and poor countries alike -- tend to put these challenges right at the bottom of their agendas."
Maybe they trust that either they or a problem that’s beyond their individual capacity to address, will go away.

"I want to believe that the next generation of leaders will be bolder"
Some say, that as far as hirsuteness goes, grass never grows on a busy street.

"People are chipping in, confiding their worries and sharing their vision for the future."
The writing’s on the World-Wall.

"sustainability' is not just a word"
it’s a religion. Faith, a little hope, and some charity.

"Make your voice heard. If necessary, interrupt!"
Oh, and don’t take no answer for an answer.

"The world was not given to you by your parents; it was lent to you by your children."
And, they are on their way to collect it. So, what have you done with it?
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Craigers61
04:01 AM on 06/11/2012
Your argument is fallacious. Once everyone in power thought the sun went around the earth, that miasmas caused disease, that witches caused climate change and the plague. A majority can be just as wrong as they can be right, truth never depends on who believes it, nor on who propogates it.
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Bobby Anderson
Remote Viewing
12:48 AM on 06/11/2012
We are past the "tipping point", ecologically speaking! Americans and so the world will do what we have always done, attempt to adapt to the mess we have made, rather than repair it. We speak of our Grandchildren's welfare, but we have no long term orientation as species.
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Kyrani99
that Eternal Flame is the source of my shrine
10:56 PM on 06/10/2012
To solve the world problems we need to understand and stand against the methods that toxic people use to gain power and influence to manipulate and control others around them. They do not only influence at the higher levels like economics and politics, they first and foremost influence at the grass roots level, and within relationships. Toxic relationships and their effects are what is behind diseases such as cancer, diabetes and heart disease. Here http://kyrani99.wordpress.com/ are my discoveries about the methods of toxic people. I share what I have learnt to help others and to make my contribution to a better world and one that is worth living for the generations to come.
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06:08 PM on 06/10/2012
Someone is named Marvin from China?
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05:10 PM on 06/10/2012
Wouldn't it be nice to have no more war?

or at least no more war for "oil" as a "national" (energy company's profit) interest?
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04:21 PM on 06/10/2012
Rupert Murdoch, owner of FoxNews/News Corp., Feb. 2011

"we have become carbon neutral across all of our global operations and we are the first company of our kind to do so." http://tinyurl.com/74k6c4n

And 9 of the 10 world's wealthiest billionaires, all much richer than Murdoch, agree man-made global warming is dangerously real.

#1 Carlos Slim Helu ($74B, Mexican telecoms)
http://tinyurl.com/6umvcmj

#2 Bill Gates ($59B, Microsoft)
http://www.thegatesnotes.com/Topics/Energy/Recommended-Reading-on-Climate-Change

#3 Bernard Arnault ($41B, LVMH, Louis Vuitton, Chandon Moet)
http://tinyurl.com/72ruta5

#5 Warren Buffett ($39B, Geico Insurance + BNSF railroad)
http://tinyurl.com/7vwg4wk
http://www.cnbc.com/id/35644956/page/2/

#6 Lakshi Mittal ($31B, Steel)
http://tinyurl.com/7gwtk5y

#7 Amancio Ortega ($31B, Zara clothing)
http://tinyurl.com/852a8yc

#8 Eike Batista ($29 billion, Brazilian mining, oil)
http://tinyurl.com/7zwwmdz

#9 Mukesh Ambani ($27B, Indian petrochem)
http://tinyurl.com/7cyutdz

#10 Christy Walton ($26B, Walmart, Solar1)
http://www.forbes.com/profile/christy-walton/
http://tinyurl.com/7l2ux4c

These people have already committed multi-$billions to sustainable energy.

You who disagree:

do you really think you know more about how the world works than they do?
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bobt755907
03:51 PM on 06/10/2012
O.K., here is a question for all you black history buffs out there and you scholars with a PhD is black history. Can you name me one black country that has a stable government with a thriving economy and does not have a strong Western European influence? I am serious. A friend asked me that question. I could not give an answer.
08:42 PM on 06/10/2012
Western Europe doesn't so much have a thriving economy and stable government right now.
12:09 PM on 06/10/2012
I Like this Scene at Night,,,,,,Picture.
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Steelsil
Warren/Grayson 2016! Yes We Can!
03:19 AM on 06/10/2012
Dear Bishop Tutu, thank you so much for the kindness and benevolence you have always displayed to everyone, everywhere.  You are one of the great moral leaders of our time.
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paul679
10:22 AM on 06/10/2012
If not THE greatest moral leader of our time. Most world leaders are unfit to clean his shoes.