A Spirituality of Sustainability - Part 1
I
attended yesterday's kickoff luncheon for Spokane's Sustainable
September. I enjoyed a delicious lunch and was impressed with the
turnout of several hundred people. I was impressed with the
thoughtfulness and obvious commmitment to sustainability expressed by
the presenters.
Dan Baumgarten, the Executive Director of
Community Minded Enterprises, the driving force behind Sustainable
September, talked about his organization's vision for community in
Spokane where people are involved with each other in meaningful,
empowering ways.
Jeremy Hansen, the chef from Sante', was
introduced by Mr. Baumgarten as an "idealist." He spoke passionately
about his vision for local, sustainable food. I can't remember his exact
words but I came away with the sense that his way of running a
restaurant is a way of life as much as it is a business.
The
keynote speaker was Kevin Danaher, co-founder of Global Exchange and
leading voice in the Green movement. His presentation mostly focused on
the reasons US corporations should develop a sustainable approach to
business. His argument is that it's good for the earth and good for the
bottom line.
But his concluding powerpoint slide and remarks
made specific what I had been intuitively picking up on from other
speakers. He concluded by talking about the need to merge spirit and
science. He pointed to the big picture and said we need to pursue
sustainability because we're all more than just a "bag of skin." He
didn't overtly use the words "spirituality of sustainability" but that
was the implication of his comments. According to Mr Danaher there is
something deeply spiritual about sustainability. When people stood to
applaud his closing remarks, he bowed with hands together, in a
traditional East Asian gesture with roots in Buddhism.
As was
evident at the gathering on Wednesday, there is an inherent striving
after meaning and purpose and the big picture in the sustainability
movement. There is something spiritual about seeking sustainability and
among the diverse crowd gathered at the Masonic Temple (irony alert),
everyone seemed in agreement. The fusion was flawless. Exclamations of
"Amen" and "Preach it brother." would have fit right in. We even took up
an offering after the sermon/talk.
In a follow up post tomorrow
I'm going to flesh out more specifics of a spirituality of
sustainability, but I'm curious if anyone can chime in on the
connections you experience between the two.