This article appeared in the Huffington Post on Sunday, April 22 and in Energy Bulletin on Monday, April 23
Growing up on Long Island, she grew to love and study the
salt marsh flora. While in high school
and later in college, she taught in a summer program about the area’s marine
and shore systems for elementary school children and teachers.
These days, as an environmentalist and religious woman, she
has worked to bring God and Nature together to promote what she calls “eco-spirituality.”
Eco-spirituality is about helping people experience “the
holy” in the natural world and to recognize their relationship as human beings
to all creation, she said.
However, eco-spirituality isn’t just a philosophy or a
prayerful way of life. For Sister
Ginny, it has been a passionate call to action.
After she joined the Sisters of St. Joseph in 1968, Sister
Ginny served as an environmental science instructor at Nazareth College (near
Kalamazoo, Michigan).
Two years later she helped host Kalamazoo’s first Earth Day
celebration on the Nazareth campus.
“During that first Earth Day event tours were held and
visits were made to a number of ‘polluted’ sites around the city, many of which
are now designated as super fund sites,” she said. “The water in Portage Creek was almost white in color and
although we did not know exactly what was wrong, it was clear that something
was very wrong.”
However, as a woman of deep faith and big ideas, Sister
Ginny had her eye on a 60-acre pristine stream and wetland located in a valley
on the Nazareth property. In 1973,
armed with a bulldozer and several students from the College, she created a
hands-on classroom project where they built a pathway leading into the valley,
mapped out trails and planted trees. They
turned the land into the Bow in the Clouds Preserve, which traverses a pristine
stream and wetland. Later on, several
Boy Scouts added a 1,000-foot boardwalk system as part of their Eagle Scout
badge project.
The name of the preserve comes from the Bible (Genesis 9:13)
where God set a “bow in the clouds” as a sign of the new covenant between Him
and the Earth.
Sister Ginny has been the preserve’s lead caretaker, however
in July 2007 after several years of negotiations, the Congregation of St. Joseph
transferred Bow in the Clouds to the Southwest Michigan Land Conservancy, which
protects the preserve and its natural qualities from development in perpetuity.
In 1990 after several years as an administrator at the
College and the sisters’ hospital, Sister Ginny’s own love of Nature took a new
turn: she established the
Eco-Spirituality Center at the Transformations Spirituality Center on the Nazareth campus. The
Eco-Spirituality Center offers programs designed to increase environmental
awareness and teach people to live in harmony with Nature.
On the side, Sister Ginny taught environmental studies for
Western Michigan University and Sienna Heights University; she also planned,
coordinated, and directed many environmental activities including local and
statewide conferences on Christianity and ecology.
One of the outgrowths of this work is Sister Ginny’s latest
and most ambitious project: the Manitou Arbor Ecovillage.
“We are forming a community of people who want to
demonstrate how to live with the natural environment,” said Sister Ginny.
Manitou Arbor is an “intentional community,” part of a
worldwide trend where people come together to share responsibilities and
resources, witness a common vision and create an alternative society. Ecovillages typically have a particular
focus. Manitou Arbor’s is one of
sustainability, community and spirituality, which is reflected in its
name.
“Manitou” is the native peoples’ term for
Spirit where they believed in the inter-relationship of humanity and Nature,
spirit and matter, the individual and the cosmos and the care for the Earth and
each other. “Arbor”
means tree. It is an archetypal
symbol where its roots spread deep into the body of Mother Earth and its
branches reach upward like praying hands.
The ecovillage will sit on 40 acres organized in an
oval. Four “apartment-style” units,
which are connected to the community center building, are planned as well as 50
detached single family or duplex units that will use a variety of
earth-friendly as well as energy- and material-efficient construction
techniques.
Sister Ginny and a team of ecovillage founders are also
exploring residents’ access to the adjacent 230 acres that is home for a
diverse wildlife community in a mature forest of hardwoods and conifer trees
with a creek, wooded paths leading to a lake and agricultural fields open to organic
and/or biodynamic farming.
In a way, Manitou Arbor represents Sister Ginny’s ultimate
wish: make Earth Day an every day
affair.
“I would really like to see Earth Day become the kind of
consciousness that focuses on our relationship to the natural world and to this
Earth that we all live on,” she said.
“It reminds us of how much we benefit from a healthy planet and how much
we can do to make it healthier for the benefit of all of us.”
Historical Background of Earth Day
The early 1970s was a heady time when the nation turned its
focus on the environment. Publication
of Rachel Carson's New York Times bestseller Silent Spring in 1962
represented a watershed moment in public awareness and concern for living
organisms, the environment and public health.
At the time, Americans drove huge, gas-guzzling V8 sedans,
industry belched out smoke and sludge and people accepted air pollution as the
smell of prosperity.
After witnessing the ravages of the massive 1969 oil spill
in Santa Barbara, California, Senator Gaylord Nelson (D-Wisconsin) wanted to
raise more public consciousness about air and water pollution to force
environmental protection onto the national political agenda.
With the help of Rep. Pete McCloskey (R-California), Senator
Nelson announced the idea for a “national teach-in on the environment” with
Denis Hayes, an environmental activist and proponent of solar power, as
coordinator for the first Earth Day.
Earth Day1970 achieved rare political of support among
Democrats and Republicans, rich and poor, urban and rural dwellers,
industrialists and labor leaders. Then,
20 million Americans took to the streets, parks, and auditoriums across the
country to demonstrate for a healthy, sustainable environment.
The first Earth Day led to the passage of the Clean Air, Clean Water,
and Endangered Species
Acts and the creation of the United States Environmental Protection Agency.


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