Africa – The Pollinator: Creation Care Network News http://news.lwccn.com Headlines, opportunities and prayer needs from around the world. Mon, 16 Oct 2023 11:30:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://i0.wp.com/news.lwccn.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/cropped-pollinator-icon.png?fit=32%2C32 Africa – The Pollinator: Creation Care Network News http://news.lwccn.com 32 32 164541824 New from Lausanne http://news.lwccn.com/2023/08/new-from-lausanne/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=new-from-lausanne http://news.lwccn.com/2023/08/new-from-lausanne/#comments Tue, 01 Aug 2023 13:51:49 +0000 http://news.lwccn.com/?p=1506 All the Lausanne regions are meeting in the lead-up to the global Lausanne 4 congress in Seoul, South Korea, in September 2024. Some of these meetings are online or hybrid with an open invitation for those in the region to join in. It’s a great chance to ensure creation care is discussed and profiled as mission leaders meet together!

  • South Asia: is meeting online only from 31st October – 2nd November. If you’d like to join, there’s a form at https://www.tfaforms.com/5067716. Please ignore the bit about residential—it is online only now! Please note the reduced cost of $20 has also been extended until 31st August, so do register if you wish; make sure you state you’re part of the Lausanne Creation Care network.
  • Africa and Middle East: several regions all together, meeting 14th-17th November online and also in person in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. If you are based in Africa or the Middle East and would like to be involved, please contact africa@lausanne.org and copy Rudolf Kabutz, rkabutz@lausanne.org; make sure you state you’re part of the Lausanne Creation Care network.
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Aussie ‘Forest Maker’ shares hope for a planet in crisis http://news.lwccn.com/2023/03/aussie-forest-maker-shares-hope-for-a-planet-in-crisis/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=aussie-forest-maker-shares-hope-for-a-planet-in-crisis Mon, 13 Mar 2023 20:20:58 +0000 http://news.lwccn.com/?p=1411

World-renowned agronomist Tony Rinaudo – who spoke at the LWCCN conference in Jordan in October 2022 – has helped millions through his work in Niger. Now he wants to inspire the next generation by telling his story. Nicknamed the ‘Forest Maker’, Tony Rinaudo is widely known for bringing back forests without planting trees. His work has been called “the largest environmental transformation in the Sahel and perhaps in all of Africa.” For his influential contributions, Tony has received numerous awards including the Right Livelihood Award, and was appointed as a Member of the Order of Australia.

A Rocha Australia asked him about his miraculous journey and recent autobiography, The Forest Underground: Hope for a Planet in Crisis – Australia’s Christian book of the year, 2022. This version has been edited for the Pollinator:

Tell us a bit about yourself and what you’re known for!

I am 65 years old, married with four children and eight grandchildren. Liz and I spent 17 years in Niger Republic, West Africa with SIM, working to improve the livelihoods of rural communities. Now, I’m the Principal Climate Action Advisor for World Vision. I’m called the ‘Forest Maker’ because of my work on restoring trees and landscapes. While in Niger, I began developing and promoting a low cost, rapid form of reforestation called Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR), which is spreading around the world.

 So, what is FMNR, and what potential does it have?

Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) is both a technical practice and community development approach for mobilising and empowering local communities to restore their natural environment through the systematic regrowth and management of remnant vegetation on diverse landscapes, which has climate change mitigation and adaptation benefits. Basically, FMNR is an embarrassingly simple and affordable method of regreening land by reviving trees rather than planting new ones. You can find out more about it and all its benefits at https://fmnrhub.org.au.

There is enormous potential to implement FMNR across large swathes of land in a wide range of environments – from hyper-arid, through arid and semi-arid zones, tropical, alpine and even coastal environments. Tens of millions of hectares contain remnant living tree stumps with the capacity to re-grow, or dormant seeds with the ability to germinate and grow given the right conditions. Even where there are no seeds or living stumps, if land management patterns change in previously forested areas nature has a chance to colonise the land with grasses, shrubs and trees.

What is The Forest Underground: Hope for a Planet in Crisis about?

The Forest Underground is my autobiography, tracing my early years growing up Australia, my struggles to find solutions to severe desertification and the global spread of FMNR and challenges ahead. The book speaks of my motivation and faith journey and outlines how the Lord has called, provided, and led me. Ultimately, The Forest Underground is a story of hope in the face of climate change, deforestation and land degradation, biodiversity loss and poverty. It really is the good-news story that, I hope, will move hearts and hands to care for God’s planet.

This is an incredibly powerful story. What do you hope readers will take away from it?

I hope readers will not just be inspired, but moved to action in whatever capacity God has provided an opening for. I hope those in the land restoration sector will take the hard-earned lessons to heart and incorporate an FMNR type approach to environmental problem solving to their work; that donors and governments will increasingly give to these types of interventions. I think too that The Forest Underground is a call to all of us to trust God and listen to him in the face of our most pressing problems. He is there for us. Let’s reach out and let him lead us.

If God is calling you to this type of work, or calling you to support somebody else who is—then please consider it prayerfully and with wise counsel from others.

And finally, how can we buy the book?

It’s available as hardback, paperback and e-book from major online retailers. Royalties go towards the FMNR movement! (Amazon). Tony was interviewed by Christianity Today last fall.

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Rubbish, Rubbish, Everywhere – TEAR Fund focuses on Waste in Africa http://news.lwccn.com/2019/09/news-opportunity-rubbish-rubbish-everywhere-tear-fund-focuses-on-waste-in-africa/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=news-opportunity-rubbish-rubbish-everywhere-tear-fund-focuses-on-waste-in-africa Tue, 03 Sep 2019 09:24:36 +0000 http://news.lwccn.com/?p=235 Waste is a problem in many of our countries, but TEAR Fund has chosen to draw our attention to the particular challenge of rubbish in Africa. Here’s a recent blog post by Sas Conradie, TEAR Fund’s Theology and Networking Manager for Africa, after a recent trip to Angola:

Last year I was privileged to have visited Angola for two weeks. Traveling around the country made a deep impression on me and changed my view of Angola. Despite extreme poverty, there are bustling cities, beautiful houses and growing churches.

But the one thing that struck me most was the rubbish. Especially plastic rubbish – everywhere. I found it hard to watch the way Christian leaders throw plastic bags and bottles out of cars and buses.

It made me wonder, do they not care for God’s creation? And if they don’t care for creation, do they care for themselves and their neighbourhoods? Their careless actions saddened me. The vast majority of the Angolan population is Christian. How could there be so much rubbish in a country with so many Christians?

But Angola is not unique. What I experienced there is the same throughout Africa – just visit my own city, Pretoria in South Africa, or Nairobi, in Kenya which I often visit. So naturally I am extremely excited about Tearfund’s Rubbish Campaign. It calls on companies to stop selling plastic products in communities where waste is not collected and motivates Christians to reduce their plastic use.

Find out more at
www.tearfund.org/en/about_you/action/

and do your part: Put it in the bin! (Better, try to buy without plastic in the first place!)

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