Cathedrals and churches on four continents have come together to raise awareness and activism about water by launching the JustWater website. This website is part of a new project focussed on celebrating, protecting and ensuring equal access to the gift of water for all, with an international programme organised by St George's Cathedral (Cape Town); St Paul's Cathedral (London); St Paul's Cathedral (Melbourne); and Trinity Church Wall Street (New York). Archbishop Thabo spoke at the launch of the initiative in London.
Water is Life, Sanitation is Dignity
JustWater 2017
Archbishop Thabo Makgoba
London, February 2017
Thank
you Dean David and your team for inviting me here to help launch this
initiative. Hillary and David are spoiling me at the deanery – thank you
for your generous hospitality. Barbara thanks for all the practical
arrangements.
As
I was preparing for this event, we learned in Cape Town that as a
result of diminished rainfall over the past year, the dams supplying
water for our metropolitan area are only 29 percent full, this at a time
when we cannot expect our winter rains to begin before May. While I
won't go here into the linkages between the El Niño phenomenon and
global warming, our water crisis had the effect of concentrating my mind
on how precious water is and on how devastating the effects of scarcity
can be.
But
apart from that, why would an archbishop be talking about water? Well,
to begin with, water is mentioned 722 times in the Bible. It literally
frames the Biblical story. The first book, Genesis, starts with a
wonderful poetic image of water and Creation.
In
the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. 2 And the earth was
without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And
the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. (Genesis 1)
Before
creation even took place, the waters were there. Water is a primal
element giving birth to life. It is no wonder that when a child is
created the waters break to symbolise the start of the journey – a new
life coming into the world. And in the last book of the Bible,
Revelations, we have a wonderful vision of re-creation. The followers of
Jesus are being persecuted and in the midst of pain and destruction,
John the writer encourages them to persevere, with this vision of
re-creation.
22
Then the angel showed me the river of the water of life, as clear as
crystal, flowing from the throne of God and of the Lamb down the middle
of the great street of the city. On each side of the river stood the
tree of life, bearing twelve crops of fruit, yielding its fruit every
month. And the leaves of the tree are for the healing of the nations. No
longer will there be any curse.
What
a beautiful vision! Here, at the heart of restored creation, we
encounter the river of the water of life, flowing from the hand of God.
Water is channelled, sustaining life, not ravaging through floods.. The
water is clear and clean. What a vision for our nations, if we work
together to clean our rivers, and to plant trees – for the healing of
the nations. Imagine clean rivers and trees soaking up carbon pollution
and breathing out life-giving oxygen.
Water
is particularly important in Scripture because of the lands where the
biblical stories take place. They are dry lands, with no great rivers
like the countries of Egypt or Mesopotamia. Israel only has one main
river – the Jordan, the rest of their water supply is dependent on the
rains. So the yearning for water as the spring of life is a part of
daily life. And so these scriptures resonate with us in sub-Saharan
Africa where rain-fed agriculture accounts for more than 95% of farmed
land. Without water there is no life. (International Water Management Institute)
Water was present at the start of creation, and the entire history of God’s work on Earth is framed by rivers.
- Water in Southern Africa
As
I have mentioned, we are currently experiencing drought where I live.
We have only three months' supply left. And in South Africa as a whole,
the drought impacts us all in many ways – the most obvious being food
shortages leading to price increases, affecting the poor
disproportionately. Many casuals workers have lost their jobs. The lack
of water is one of the biggest business risks to our country , and with
climate change drought will become more and more common. Last year the
following story brought the shortages home as a reality.
The
family of a young pupil killed at Hlathelidumayo at KwaNongoma in
northern KwaZulu-Natal, apparently over drinking water, is battling to
come to terms with their loss. Fifteen-year-old Qiniso Mhlongo was
stoned by a group of boys and died a day later in hospital. Community
members say the altercation started over water. It's believed boys from
another village accused some girls of dirtying the available water.
Qiniso was apparently trying to protect the girls from the boys who were
harassing them. His mother, who tried to stop the fight, was also
injured in the face. Police in the area have since then arrested two
people in connection with the murder.
In
another part of the church in Southern Africa, Mozambique, climate
change leads to the opposite effect – of severe flooding which washes
away homes and topsoil, leaving the land degraded and crops destroyed.
- Water justice
The
theme for tonight is Water Justice and we can see so clearly that the
distribution of water is based on inequality. We cannot talk of water
without talking of sanitation and for that reason the title of my talk
is Water is Life, Sanitation is Dignity. Many
of the threats to water are coming from companies who pollute rivers
with industrial pollution. We suffer a lot from acid mine drainage
affecting our water systems.
The
shareholders of mining companies make a profit, but the local
communities are left with water degradation. As a church we stand firmly
against fracking, since for short-term profit there is a danger of
water systems being polluted for decades. Large corporate farms are also
responsible, as the run-off from artificial fertilisers and pesticides
pollutes the rivers. In robust deabates with such company, called
courageous conversations with the mining sector in particular, we are
slowly finding each other in service to the community.
Southern
Africa is one of the most unequal countries in the world. This is seen
nowhere as clearly as in terms of access to water and sanitation.
Whereas one family waters their vast lawn and fills their swimming pool,
another shares a single tap with 20 neighbours. Whereas one family has
four bathrooms, another shares a communal toilet with dozens of people.
Girls
going out to use the toilet at night risk being raped and residents are
afraid of being robbed Children play in dirty water draining from
toilets and polluted water and raw sewerage routinely flow between and
through homes, making these communities places of illness and death.
Lack of access to clean and safe sanitation routinely emerges as the
number one concern for those living in these communities It has recently
been estimated that sixteen million people in South Africa do not have
access to basic sanitation facilities (1 in 3 people). (“Water is life, sanitation is dignity” South African Human Rights Commission.)
According
to the World Council of Churches' Ecumenical Water Network, almost 900
million people do not have basic access to the lifesaving 20 litres of
clean water they need each day – not only because water is scarce but
because the needs and rights of marginalised communities are not given
priority. Poverty and power relations are reflected and reinforced in
who has access to and control over water. I have experienced this myself
in the Kingdom of Lesotho, which has vast dams of water for South
Africa, yet the country's own people are suffering severe water
restrictions. In Lesotho, you bathe with a basin, yet when you travel to
the neighbouring city of Bloemfontein, the taps run freely and the
water sprinklers are keeping lawns green and the pools full.
What we can do
What can we do about this?
- Remember that water is sacred.
We
have lost the sense of sacredness of water, seeing it as ‘something
that comes out of a tap’. How can we reconnect with water as something
holy and precious? Christians know the name of the river that Jesus was
baptised in - the Jordan River. And yet where did the water come from
that was used for your baptism? Where is your Jordan River? Can you
identify it and see if it is clean and free from rubbish?
Water
is a sacred gift from God and, speaking for Christians, it's not only
not just full-time conservationists who are called to be stewards of
God’s creation – it's all of us! So we need to educate ourselves and
understand where the water we use comes from. We need to look at how we
use it – make sure we use water carefully, turn off dripping taps, check
our water meters to make sure there are no leaks. In the South African
summer, we have to water our gardens early in the morning so as not to
waste water through evaporation in the midday sun. I am proud to see
some of our churches now putting in boreholes. When one of our churches
in Mozambique built a new church building, they put in a water pump
right at the church door to encourage people to come!
Let
water inspire and heal us – let us keep connected to natural water
source areas and help ensure we have examples left of pristine habitats
to leave as a legacy to our children and children’s children.
- Care for our oceans and rivers
Enormous quantities of rubbish end up in rivers and oceans. The statistics on waste are shocking – by 2050 there will be more plastic in the oceans per weight than fish.
The
best way we care for our oceans and rivers is to be passionate
campaigners against waste – in the Diocese of Harare in Zimbabwe each
church has adopted a local area where they clean up, such as a taxi rank
or a stretch of street. They talk there of the “4 Rs”: Reduce, Re-use, Recycle and then Rejoice! because
once they have cleaned up they plant something beautiful in place of
the trash. Last year I was proud of the church's Mothers' Union, when
they banned the use of Styrofoam cups at church social functions –
stopping the use of a material that breaks down into tiny particles that
are now forming endlessly circulating masses in the sea.
- Reduce your meat eating
One
of the biggest environmental impacts of a meat-eating diet is the
consumption of vast amounts of water for livestock production. Most of
it is used to irrigate the grains and hay fed to the animals.
According
to the World Wildlife Fund, in South Africa it takes 860 litres of
water to produce a 500g grain-fed steak. That is the equivalent of 13
showers! Switching to a plant-based diet or reducing the amount of meat
in your diet is one of the most important choices you can make to save
water.
- Fight climate change
The
most important message I can leave you with is this – if you want to do
something to help the people of Africa, change your lifestyle,
influence your politicians and let us make fighting climate change the
highest priority on all of our agendas. Churches, NGOs, businesses: the
time has come for us to work together and to fight climate change.
Without much more action, the future is bleak, very bleak indeed. We
stand at the Eleventh Hour.
I want to end with a challenge to us all:
In
the Anglican Communion's Environmental Network we have learned that to
conquer the environmental challenges we face we must learn from
indigenous people and so I would like to end with this prophetic quote
attributed to an elder of Hopi people of Arizona, one of the First
Nations of the United States.
You
have been telling the people that this is the Eleventh Hour, now you
must go back and tell the people that this is the Hour. And there are
things to be considered . . .
Where are you living?
What are you doing?
What are your relationships?
Are you in right relation?
Where is your water?
Know your garden.
It is time to speak your Truth.
Create your community.
Be good to each other.
And do not look outside yourself for the leader."
What are you doing?
What are your relationships?
Are you in right relation?
Where is your water?
Know your garden.
It is time to speak your Truth.
Create your community.
Be good to each other.
And do not look outside yourself for the leader."
Then he clasped his hands together, smiled, and said, "This could be a good time!"
"There
is a river flowing now very fast. It is so great and swift that there
are those who will be afraid. They will try to hold on to the shore.
They will feel they are torn apart and will suffer greatly.
"Know
the river has its destination. The elders say we must let go of the
shore, push off into the middle of the river, keep our eyes open, and
our heads above water. And I say, see who is in there with you and
celebrate. At this time in history, we are to take nothing personally,
Least of all ourselves. For the moment that we do, our spiritual
growth and journey comes to a halt.
"The
time for the lone wolf is over. Gather yourselves! ………, All that we
do now must be done in a sacred manner and in celebration.
"We are the ones we've been waiting for."
God bless you.
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