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Thursday 16 October 2014

A Review: Wilderness Shop Box Hill

 
I visited this shop on Wednesday morning. I have been shopping at the Wilderness Shop for about 20 years. I first visited it when it was in Carrington Street, Box Hill. Back then it was a pokey little shop full of hiking and climbing equipment and enthusiastic, friendly staff. I no longer live in Box Hill, I live in Clayton, so visiting this shop required planning and about half an hour each way travel time.

Now, the staff that work there during the week days are simply awful. There needs to be a serious adjustment in their attitude, in particular the middle aged male with a beard. He just didn't make an effort to engage me....though this has been the rule with this guy. He radiates hostility. I can't figure out whether the issue is my much younger wife or the fact that she is Asian. Either way radiating hostility at the people who pay your wages just isn't smart.

As it happens I was shopping for a sleeping mat for an upcoming trek. I was shown the limited selection in the shop. I explained that at 105 kg that I needed something that wouldn't compress all that much...which the mats on display were doing. I was told by the younger staff member that such a mat didn't exist. When I replied that I had found just such a mat at Anaconda I was told that I had already found my mat. Absolutely NO effort was made to engage me, to make sure I spent my money in this shop rather than the competition. You can forget any mention of:  give us the brand and the price and we'll match or better it.

My wife is a chatty, happy woman. She tried to engage the bearded horror with no success. The guy literally did not get off his stool the entire time we were in the shop.

When we mentioned that we are expecting twins....happy news by any standard we got grunted at. No smiles or congratulations.

In the final minutes of our visit to the shop, we think a Gay couple came in, certainly two males who clearly knew each other. The bearded horror was at best indifferent...afterall why treat your customers as if they're something special? So there is clearly an attitude problem. Given the age difference between Selina and myself there are always going to be wankers who have issues with us. Extending this attitude towards a same sex couple is simply stupid.

I won't return to this shop. I can find what I want in shops that are much closer to me and have friendly staff who both like their jobs and are without the bad attitudes. This is a shame because I genuinely used to like shopping at the Wildnerness Shop.
 

Sunday 12 October 2014

The Green Credentials of Islam: A comparison between Islam & Christianity

Islam, Christianity and Environmentalism.
Islam and Christianity have so much in common as religions, that I began to wonder whether they were comparable in terms of scripture that supported “Green” practices. In 1994 The World Conservation Union published an Environmental Policy and Law Paper on Environmental Protection in Islam. This paper outlines in some depth the basis for what are now considered Green practices in the Quran. I wanted to know more. Because I am neither Muslim nor Christian, I in particular I wanted to know which parts of the Quran and Hadith and the Bible were used to ground Environmentalism in Islam and Christianity.

In the West of the 21st Century, Islam is known for many things, most of them quite awful. What is not known in the West are Islams surprisingly Green credentials. Islam can claim with some justification, to be a Green Religion.  Christianity, which is the dominant Abrahamic religion in the West, in my opinion struggles with being Green. A comparison between the two religions in terms of their respective “Greeness” would make  for an interesting intellectual exercise.    
Environmentalism runs surpisingly deep in Islam, with people we wouldn’t naturally think of as being “Greenies”, having very clear opinions in support of the environment. The much loathed and unlamented Osama Bin Ladin certainly had Green beliefs and expectedly he used them to attack the West and in particular the US for not signing the Kyoto Protocols: Osama's concern for the environment is not exactly new-found, but it is intermittent. In a 2002 letter to the American people, Bin Laden wrote: "You have destroyed nature with your industrial waste and gases more than any other nation in history. Despite this, you refuse to sign the Kyoto agreement so that you can secure the profit of your greedy companies and industries." (Goldenberg, 2010).     
Apart from this a quick search of online Quran and Bibles provided the quotes below:                                           
Islam
"But seek, through that which Allah has given you, the home of the Hereafter; and (yet), do not forget your share of the world. And do good as Allah has done good to you. And desire not corruption in the land. Indeed, Allah does not like corruptors. "[Quran 28:77]
“Eat and drink from the provision of Allah, and do not commit abuse on the earth, spreading corruption." [Quran 2:60]
"Corruption has appeared throughout the land and sea by (reason of) what the hands of people have earned, so He (i.e. Allah) may let them taste part of (the consequences of) what they have done that perhaps they will return (to righteousness).” [Quran 30:41]

“The world is beautiful and verdant, and verily God, be He exalted, has made you His stewards in it, and He sees how you acquit yourselves.” (Saheeh Muslim)
If any Muslim plants a tree or sows a field, and a human, bird or animal eats from it, it shall be reckoned as charity from him.” (Saheeh Al-Bukhari, Saheeh Muslim)
“If anyone plants a tree, neither human being nor any of God’s creatures will eat from it without its being reckoned as charity from him.”
“If the day of resurrection comes upon anyone of you while he has a seedling in hand, let him plant it.”
The approach of Islam toward the use and development of the earth’s resources was put thus by Ali ibn Abi-Talib, the fourth Caliph, to a man who had developed and reclaimed abandoned land: “Partake of it gladly, so long as you are a benefactor, not a despoiler; a cultivator, not a destroyer. (Bagader, 2006)
Christianity
A search using “creatures of the earth” provided these quotes from the Bible:

Psalm 104:24: How many are your works, Lord! In wisdom you made them all; the earth is full of your creatures.

Romans 8:39: Neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Genesis 1:28: God blessed them and said to them, “Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky and over every living creature that moves on the ground.”
Genesis 2:15: The Lord God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to work it and take care of it.
Christianity seems to base its environmentalism on Psalm 104 which in addition to the very brief quote above goes onto say:
25 There is the sea, vast and spacious,     teeming with creatures beyond number—    living things both large and small.
26 There the ships go to and fro,  and Leviathan, which you formed to frolic there.
27 All creatures look to you to give them their food at the proper time.
28 When you give it to them, they gather it up; when you open your hand, they are satisfied with good things.
29 When you hide your face, they are terrified; when you take away their breath, they die and return to the dust.
30 When you send your Spirit, they are created, and you renew the face of the ground.
31 May the glory of the Lord endure forever; may the Lord rejoice in his works—
32 he who looks at the earth, and it trembles, who touches the mountains, and they smoke.
33 I will sing to the Lord all my life; I will sing praise to my God as long as I live.
34 May my meditation be pleasing to him, as I rejoice in the Lord.
35 But may sinners vanish from the earth and the wicked be no more.

We can quite readily see that in Islam the scripture itself deals with the environment in a much clearer and explicit manner. The quote from the Quran 2:60 is remarkably clear when it comes to explaining how Allah feels man should behave in terms of the environment. Whereas the quotes from Genesis 2:15 and Psalm 104 are remarkably vague and actually don’t address caring for Creation at all.
To me this is quite curious. It becomes more so when we remember that Christianity arose a little over 1200 km from where Islam was born. The origins of Islam and Christianity share the same geography and semi to arid environment. You would be forgiven for thinking that they would share the same theological approach to Creation. Surprisingly they don’t. Christianity seems to stop its theology at everything being for mans use (Blocker, 1996).  In fact in their article in the “Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion” Eckberg and Blocker argue that large sections of Christianity are traditionally actively hostile to the environment. Eckberg and Blocker are far from alone in this argument. This perhaps helps explain why in the West environmentalism traditionally has been such a secular event.
Reasons for this secularism may be found in “One Body of Christian Environmentalism” by Raymond E. Grizzle and Christopher B. Barrett who argue that the reason for an almost complete absence of environmentalism in Christianity is an extreme anthropocentric perspective in Christianity (Raymond E. Grizzle and Christopher B. Barrett, 1998). Eckberg and Blocker in their paper “Christianity, Environmentalism, and the Theoretical Problem of Fundamentalism” written in 1996, quoting  an earlier paper on the subject provide us with this opinion as an explanation for Christianitys lack of explicit environmentalism: Briefly, he proposed that the desacralization of nature in Genesis 1 predisposes Christians to regard the environment as having value primarily through its use by humans, and as falling properly under human dominion. People living in such a culture could be expected to be unconcerned about the general state of nature insofar as they would be oriented primarily toward its exploitation.

With these two quotes in mind it isn’t hard to see why the teachings of the traditional denominations of Christianity in the forms of the dominant Roman Catholic, the Protestant and the various Orthodox churches and environmentalism aren’t natural companions. In direct contrast to opinions expressed in the Quran and by Islamic authors, it is almost impossible in the above mentioned forms of the Christian religion with such a clear anthropocentric world view to be an environmentalist and a “good Christian”. The two ideals are functionally incompatible.

Fortunately there is a strand of Christianity that does embrace environmentalism. The Evangelical form of Christianity is the most Green of all Christian groups (Kearns, 1997), though James L. Guth et al in their article for the Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion “Theological Perspectives and Environmentalism Among Religious Activists (James L. Guth, Lyman A. Kellstedt, Corwin E. Smidt and John C. Green, 1993) do provide evidence of environmentally inclined theologians in even the Roman Catholic Church. In particular they name Matthew Fox as being a prominent Roman Catholic theologian who teaches on environmentalism in a positive light (Fox, 2014), though Fox seems to have paid dearly for his environmentalist views. His website states he was defrocked from the Dominican Order by none other than Cardinal Ratzinger, who became Pope Benedict the 16th.  For the Evangelical form of Christianity Dr Calvin DeWitt is a leading theoretician (Calvin DeWitt et al, 2014). Though all authors note that Christians who adhere to a literalist interpretation of the Bible are the ones who are the least interested in any form of environmentalism.
BioLogos which is an organisation associated with Calvin DeWitt has on its “About Us” section of its webpage these entries: We believe that God also reveals himself in and through the natural world he created, which displays his glory, eternal power, and divine nature. Properly interpreted, Scripture and nature are complementary and faithful witnesses to their common Author. And We believe that the methods of science are an important and reliable means to investigate and describe the world God has made. In this, we stand with a long tradition of Christians for whom Christian faith and science are mutually hospitable. Therefore, we reject ideologies such as Materialism and Scientism that claim science is the sole source of knowledge and truth, that science has debunked God and religion, or that the physical world constitutes the whole of reality.
 We believe that God created the universe, the earth, and all life over billions of years. God continues to sustain the existence and functioning of the natural world, and the cosmos continues to declare the glory of God. Therefore, we reject ideologies such as Deism that claim the universe is self-sustaining, that God is no longer active in the natural world, or that God is not active in human history.  
When it comes to interpreting Scripture BioLogos has this: Applying a method of interpretation to scripture passages can be a daunting task.  C.S. Lewis advises us to, “Look. Listen. Receive.” Reading and understanding the Bible is a process of discovery that goes beyond a hasty read-through. One must carefully study and seek to interpret the author’s intended meaning without projecting meaning onto the text. In order to read scripture in a meaningful and accurate way, it is logical to use what the Rev. Ernest Lucas calls the “standard methods of biblical interpretation that have been well established since the time of Augustine and the early church fathers.” Lucas, who has doctorates in both biochemistry and theology, explains that these standard methods involve asking the following five questions: What kind of language is being used? What kind of literature is it? What is the expected audience? What is the purpose of the text? What relevant extra-textual knowledge is there?  Which to my understanding isn’t all that different to what Al-Jayyousi and Özdemir put forth below as Islamic opinions. Matthew Foxs website simply isn’t as well organised as DeWitts and I can’t get a sense of if or where his environmentalism connects with his Christianity. To be completely fair, Fox seems to have left Christianity behind since his defrocking.
In direct contrast to most forms of Christianity, Islam appears to not only have put more thought into the environment, but to be positively Green. In a religion that is, in its present incarnation so conservative, Islam is devoting considerable intellectual energy in its modern form to the environment than Christianity seems remotely close to doing. With Christianity proving to be very limited in Green credentials, the only way left for us to move forward is to explore Islams Green credentials.
There is the observation that Islam is a more pragmatic religion, which fits in perfectly with Islams belief that it is the final and perfect communication from God to man. With Islam “God finally got it right” and feels no further need to communicate with us. This is why Islam directly applies itself to the matter of environmental sustainability. Islam in the 21st Century sees that there is a problem in terms of the environment that needs fixing and is setting about the task.  As we have already explored and in direct contrast to this, in the West the very fiercest of climate change deniers are Christians.
It is fitting that an examination of where environmentalism actually fits into modern Islamic thought. Environmentalism in Islamic thought actually covers a great more intellectual ground than simply doing what Allah tells us to do, which I illustrated in the quotes at the beginning of this essay. The logic supportive of environmentalism in Islam is both circular and internally consistent. Environmentalism involves: Wisdom (Hikma), Justice (Adl), Public Interest (Malasha) and Innovation (Ijtihad). 
In page 15 of “Islam and Sustainable Development” Odeh Rashed Al-Jayyousi defines Wisdom as “the purposeful acquisition and embodying of wisdom from all nations (my italics). Justice is good governance which is based on rights. Public Interest is based on consensus within the community. Most interestingly Innovation refers to applying effort and intellectual capital to solving present and emerging problems. It also involves the reinvention of tools in order to make the transition to sustainability (Al-Jayyousi, 2012).
I think the title of al-Jayyousi’s book is, in and of itself deeply interesting. Not only does the West rarely think of Islam as being Green, we equally as rarely think of it as being sustainable, the development part of the title, the West has no problems with. Just ask anyone who has been to Malaysia, Qatar or Dubai in the last ten years and they will tell you about the massive development happening in those countries. With Wisdom Al-Jayyousi explores how Islam can, and should, go about being sustainable. Importantly and in direct contrast to Osama Bin Ladin, Al-Jayyousi leaves open intellectual and technological borrowing from, presumably the West in order to solve environmental issues in Muslim countries. The important word is “all”. To me this means that if, for example, the Israeli’s develop a solar powered desalination plant that converted gigalitres at a time, then Muslim nations would be obliged to purchase it. It also means that Muslim countries are obliged to pursue research into renewable energy technologies, which are currently something the West has a technological advantage in.
Justice is interesting in an environmentally sustainable context when we remember the opinions expressed in “Environmental Protection in Islam” by Abu Bakr Bagader et al. On page 9 of the Review, there is clear mention of plants and animals having Rights. Justice in the way that Bagader uses it is derived from the fact that all plants and animals are the creation of Allah. Given that Bagader goes on to say on page 10, that Allah created plants and animals so that they may also praise him, the concept of legal equality between humans and animals is the subject of Justice in an Islamic context. We are obliged to give justice to the environment for two reasons: the first is that, in Islam and in direct contrast to Christianity, in the first place it isnt our property. It is the “property” and creation of Allah. In the second place is that in the eyes of Allah there is as I understand it, no functional difference between a person and a goat. We are both expressions of Allahs love and wisdom and both species can offer praise to Allah. Thus justice in terms of environmental sustainability and Islam means that a Muslim is obliged to treat the environment with the same love that he or she has for Allah.
Public Interest given the interpretation of Justice by Bagader is open to interpretation. I won’t venture into the intellectual and philosophical quagmire as to whether animals have the capacity to reason. Though if we take Justice to a logical conclusion, Islam accepts that animals do have a very clear ability to engage in reasoning due to their ability to know Allah and to praise Him. However, as I said, that is a door I’m only too happy to leave closed in this essay. Though what is left open is opinion from ecologists etc., on the likely impact that an environmental project is going to have on the ecosystem where it will be located. This leaves only the Public Interest of humanity as the subject of discussion. Even with just the human community in mind, with Public Interest Al-Jayyousi is opening the door to democracy, something Islam as a religion is experiencing difficulties practising. Public Interest implies consensus with and consultation from the humans who have vested interests in the environmental project. When Public Interest is taken into account in Islam, everyone affected has the right to have their opinions heard and respected when it comes to environmental issues.
Innovation is an aspect that I have in part already discussed in Wisdom. There is a crucial difference between Innovation and Wisdom in that Wisdom is the ability to recognise superior technology when you see it and then buy it for use in your own projects. Innovation on the other hand, in English means investing in and conducting your own research into how your environmental problem can be solved. Al-Jayyousi is of the opinion that a Muslim has no excuse when it comes to rectifying environmental damage. If a Muslim nation cannot buy existing technology to repair damage from another nation regardless of either religious or ideological differences between them, then it is obliged to invent the technology needed to repair the damage.
The above is all fair and reasonable, and from the perspective of a Western environmentalist perfectly logical and acceptable…even if it does wear religious clothes. Al-Jayyousi then steps into country that I understand very few Western environmentalists or ecologists or animal rights activists ever venture into. Al-Jayyousi begins to use the words Beauty (Ihsan) and Tasbeeh (Prayer) when discussing environmental sustainability. Al-Jayyousi holds the opinion that environmentalism in Islam must restore the environment to or ennable it to remain in a state of Beauty. The logic is simple, because the environment is a creation of Allah and was created for His and not our enjoyment, it is therefore beautiful in its natural state. Because environmental damage is an act of man, and not Allah who is apparently either incapable or unwilling to damage his own Creation, it is our duty to restore it to  the Beauty that it had when Allah created it and before we destroyed it, so that the Beauty of the environment may please Allah.
Prayer  is part of Islamic environmentalism according to Al-Jayyousi because of the direct connection between the environment and Allah. I think this is a significant difference between environmentalism of Islam and Christianitys extremely limited engagement in environmentalism. To find a Muslim author that directly connects, for example, noxious weed removal or Clean Up Australia Day to Prayer is, for me, to enter new intellectual ground. If, I am correct in the understanding that Prayer is the glorification and praise of Allah, then Al-Jayyousi holds the opinion that the practice of environmental sustainability is identical to other forms of worship in Islam. To practice environmental sustainability in Al-Jayyousi’s opinion is to be a good Muslim. I simply don’t know of any Christian authorities who hold the same opinion.
Given that I have been taught that Islam regards the Quran and Hadith as the sources of all Wisdom, that they teach Justice, are in the Public Interest and encourage Innovation the loop of logic can now be closed. 
However, it is unwise to accept only one opinion on a subject as complex and as relevant as environmentalism, especially Islamic environmentalism. I will now explore a number of other opinions, “Islam and Ecology” is an anthology of essays (Richard C. Foltz, Frederick M. Denny et al, 2003).
In the essay “Toward an Understanding of Environmental Ethics from a Qur’anic Perspective” Ibrahim Özdemir covers much the same ground as Al-Jayyousi. Özdemir writes: Nature has been regarded as “the prime miracle of God, cited untiringly in the Qur’an, due to its well knit structure and regularity.” The Qur’ans insistence on the order, the beauty and harmony of nature implies that there is no demarcation between what the Qur’an reveals and what nature manifests. We can see this at once if we reflect in the way that the Qur’an invites us to, by using our intellect and freeing ourselves from the boundaries and limitations of culture and tradition, looking at everything with an observant eye in the name of God” (Özdemir page 9). In another part of the same page Özdemir writes: The Qur’an employs the perfect order of the universe/nature as the proof not only of God’s existence, but also of His unity, which is known as the “cosmological evidence of Gods existence” in the philosophy of Islamic theology”.  Thus we can see that Özdemir is in agreement with Al-Jayyousi when he includes Beauty as part of enviromental sustainability, both authors directly connect the environment with Allah.
Özdemir includes a quote from the Quran in his essay that reinforces Al-Jayyousi’s opinion that we are obliged to view the environment as being created for Allahs enjoyment and not ours: “Not for (idle) sport did We create the heavens and the earth and all that is between! If it had been Our wish to take (just) a pastime, We should surely have taken it from the things nearest to Us, if We would do (such a thing)! (Quran 21:16-17)
Özdemir takes the position: “One immediate conclusion, from an environmentalist perspective, is that every individual creature or being has its own ontological existence as a sign of God, and by its very being manifests and reveals His majesty and mercy. Therefore, every creature deserves attention and consideration for its relation to the Divine. A sincere follower of the Qur’an is always aware of the fact that “Our Lord is He who gave to each (created) thing its form and nature, and further gave (it) guidance” (Qur’an 20:50) (Özdemir page 10).
Özdemir on page 16 introduces the concept that nature, the environment itself is Muslim. When we remember that nature was created by Allah in part to praise and glorify Him and that because nature is Allahs creation it submits to Allah, this makes nature Muslim.  Özdemir then quotes a number of verses from the Quran that show, that if anything, nature is more Muslim than any man or woman can hope to be: Quran 22:18, 13:13, 24:41-42, 3:83. Özdemir in common with many Islamic scholars is of the opinion, which I quote above, that a good Muslim learns about Allah from nature. Thus we have the concept that Allah and his Creation are indivisably intertwined and that a practising Muslim stands in awe of them both. So if we were to ask Al-Jayyousi and Özdemir the question: Can a practising Muslim knowingly engage in the wilful destruction of the environment? Their answer would have to be an emphatic: No!
To balance these opinions I turn to Richard C. Foltz in his essay “Islamic Environmentalism: A Matter of Interpretation” in the anthology “Islam and Ecology”. It should be noted that Al-Jayyousi is a more recent author than both Foltz and Özdemir, who incedentally contradict each other. Foltz for all the faults in the arguments he makes (word play pun intended) finds it hard to challenge the Green credentials of Islam and quotes without attribution passages where the Prophet taught that if animals are to be slaughtered it is to be done as quickly and as humanely and that the environmental impact of conflict is to be minimised.
Foltz does go on to make the valid point that most of the Green orientated writings in Islam are being sourced from either Muslim writers resident in the West or who have been educated in the West. Which seems to be true of both Al-Jayyousi and Özdemir. Foltz then points out an all too common dichotomy and problem in Islam, in that there is a very clear gap between what the Quran teaches, Muslim intellectuals write about and what happens in Muslim countries and the latter point has little or nothing in common with the former two points. Even with this troubling and ongoing inconsistency, Foltz struggles to find where Islam is less Green than Christianity.
So it is that in this essay we have explored the Green credentials of Christianity and Islam. We have sourced not only the Bible and the Quran, but also the thoughts of intellectuals both religious and secular. The only conclusion that I was able to arrive at is that Islam whilst a long way from being completely Green in outlook is still substantially closer to it than Christianity is.
There is a very clear and acknowledged dichotomy between the Quranic teachings on environmentalism and the practices of most Muslims in the modern world. What is a source of hope is that in Islam there is the basis for environmentalism in the Quran itself and that mainstream Muslim authors such as Al-Jayyousi are actively promoting environmental sustainability in an Islamic context. Another source of hope for Islamic Environmentalism is that even people as reviled as Osama Bin Ladin expressed support for the environment...even if it was in the context of giving the Western democracies he so deeply opposed another kick.
This is in complete contrast with Christianity where the Bible has very little, if anything, that supports environmentalism. In Christianity, the dominant churches are actively hostile to environmentalism, and this is perhaps best  illustrated by the defrocking of Matthew Fox by the future Pope Benedict the 16th for his stance on the environment. It is only in the Christian Evangelical movement, which is still something of a fringe element in Christianity is an environmentalist theology being actively promoted. It is in the theology of the Evangelical Churches that Christianity comes closest to the Islamic environmentalist theology, which is, unlike its Christian cousin, part of the Islamic mainstream teachings.
Thus it is very hard not to find that Islam has the better environmentalist credentials when compared with Christianity.

Bibliography
1.       Al-Jayyousi. Odeh Rashed “Islam and Sustainable Development”. MPG Books. London, UK. 2012
2.       Foltz. Richard C.  “Islamic Environmentalism: A Matter of Interpretation” from the anthology “Islam and Ecology”.
3.       Foltz. Richard C., Denny. Frederick M et al “Islam and Ecology”. University of Harvard Press. Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. 2003. An anthology of writings
4.       Grizzle. Raymond E and Barrett. Christopher B. “One Body of Christian Environmentalism” .  Zygon Press. Upland, Indiana, US. 1998.
5.       Guth, James L., et al. "Theological perspectives and environmentalism among religious activists." Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion (1993): 373-382.
6.       http://biologos.org
13.   Özdemir.  Ibrahim “Toward an Understanding of Environmental Ethics from a Qur’anic Perspective” from the anthology “Islam and Ecology”.