Man Versus Nature
When moving
between cities and regions in Africa, you leave tarmac (and sometimes dust) to meet
the prominent nature, a green decor that imposes itself to the few who dare
confronting it. A luxurious nature that can only partially be grasped, even by
the most famous painters, from Van Gogh to South African John Pemba.
The natural
rhythms of Africa’s rural areas seem to be altered over time by the penetration
of the urban way of life. Traditional houses are progressively transforming,
with cement and steel rooftops being marks of an unstoppable evolution towards
modernity, if one subscribes to the dichotomic comparison between tradition and
modernity. In actual fact, tradition and modernity remain intertwined in the
wooden boutiques selling essential staples from local produce to
telecommunication recharge cards, even deep in the dense forests. City dwellers
bring their gadgets and services in response to emerging business opportunities.
Mechanics are now established across the road to service unlucky car travelers and,
it is no longer surprising to see a TV antenna, a used car, or a peeping new
motorcycle close to traditional huts and artisanal drying stations.
As community
projects strive to ensure that no one is left behind in this fast race to
development, rural populations have slowly changed their living rhythm,
replacing long walks to fetch water and wash clothes in the river by pumping
water in the neighborhood water borehole, and watching movies from all over the
world in local cinemas. Supported by widespread schooling programmes, children
proudly wear their colorful bags to school every morning instead of spending interminable
hours with their spinal cords bent plowing fields with hoes. (Here, to focus on
my core message, I avoided using the word “child labour”. We can leave that
discussion for another day. I promise!)
Men and
women can access new job opportunities as roads and other infrastructure are built.
Schools, local administrations, and other development initiatives are set up to
curb the overwhelming unemployment, an increasingly worrisome issue in rural
areas as we depart from a past where roles and occupations did not always revolve
around paid employment in our African villages. Despite all that, it seems that
nature doesn’t abdicate that easily. If you are coming from any capital city,
you can still recognize the heavy imprint of nature at a pace of life different
from the encroaching external urban impulse. The marks of conservation based on
a system that took millenniums to establish, where Men were following the
rhythm imposed by their environment; seasons, available natural resources, and
environmental whims obliging Men, and
not the opposite.
Nature has been
expertly able to sustain the survival and expansion of humanity till the day an
ever-increasing and voracious population started to break the delicate balance
at an unsustainable rhythm and less structured manner, at each every step,
relentlessly. Realistically, the perfect balance between humanity evolution
needs and nature conservation may not be attainable. The limitations and whims
of nature that men tried to address (at least in part) through technological
advancements are far less significant than the destruction and efforts to
bridle our environment and its dire consequences. In nature and culture alike,
changes and progress have to be sought and thought over carefully to avoid
disturbing the existing equilibrium. Piles of cut wood, desolated forests, and
distorted water flows are to the environment the equivalent of addictions and
abuses of imported drugs, or desocialization. When you cut the roots, of trees
and socialization alike, introducing alien components in the natural or social
environment, you risk jeopardizing the fragile equilibrium that once ensured harmony.
We swapped
our traditional way of life, our natural resources, and our habits and principles,
for the promise of the so-called modern services, goods, and social structures,
all embedded in a different paradigm. One that relies on the understanding that
men stand above their environment, being both transcendent and transcendental
(with the capacity to transcend and create their own environment).
In our
race, competing one against the other to be the fastest to evolve, it is
critical to consider one of the protagonists (if not the main) in that
equation, the non-human environment. Both visible and non-tangible weaved in the
unwritten rules of nature that our ancestors have strived to understand and
pass on, one generation to the next. Paradoxically, today, we are as better
equipped and skilled to understand these principles as we can be deaf to the
warning signs it sends. We know, we can monetize the ecological services
offered by nature, doing intelligent swaps to fund our most needed development.
Experts have been advocating for the mainstreaming of natural capital
accounting in the way we measure the wealth of our nations. Yet, many stand to
ignore and fail to harness these opportunities.
The 20th
century has witnessed global efforts in addressing local issues, consequences
of the global movement towards modernity. Or what was defined as such. It is
important today to support these global efforts through intentional and
conscious decisions taken towards or about the environment we live in.
Considering its plentiful resources as a coveted and limited gift rather than
an endless supply source.
Mankind has
been so used to win the “men against nature” battle that we need to resist
becoming too proud to understand that nobody wins when we do it forcefully…
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