Putting the Puzzle Together Teaching People to Use Water Wisely By Prince Talal Bin Abdul Aziz
As the Special Envoy for Water of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), it is my pleasure to contribute towards increasing awareness of water, our most precious resource. In some parts of the world, demand far exceeds supply: in Kuwait, only 10 cubic metres of water are available per person per year; and my own country, Saudi Arabia, fares scarcely better, with a mere 118 cubic metres per person per year. Water is essential to lifefor drinking, basic needs, energy, industry and food; it is scarce and precious, and it is therefore essential to learn how to use it well. It sustains each and every one of us, as well as the ecosystems on which we all depend. None of these exists in isolation, and we are only now coming to understand the many ways in which water cuts across human and environmental issues, affecting each in turn and all in concert.
As important as the efforts made between institutional and governmental walls are, the International Year of Freshwater 2003 is a platform of opportunity to extend beyond those walls, to reach out and connect to a larger and more diverse audience. We all have a role to play in ensuring the resource's healthin our businesses, schools, companies and homes. We need to teach each other the art of governing water wisely. One of the stepping stones to this is encouraging the full participation of all groups, including women, youth and indigenous peoples.
In Australia, an extraordinarily dry island-continent, Aboriginal people have a profound understanding of the land, including knowledge of where water runs, when the rains are coming, and where to find waterholes in the harshest drought. Through paintings depicting waterholes and ways of accessing the life-giving substance, the Aborigines display their knowledge. Although the dissemination of information varies from schooltaught methods, indigenous knowledge and traditions can go a long way towards teaching communities about wise water governance.
Along the same vein, by applying the traditional land management system, a local Tanzanian soil conservation project, HASHI, has succeeded in restoring land health after severe degradation. Traditional forms of enclosures have allowed farmers to provide fodder longer during dry seasons, and there is better food production. The system has proven equally advantageous to the environment, with native tree and animal species returning.
The International Year is an opportunity for everyone, from national leaders to schoolchildren, to be involved and enjoy learning about and protecting water. Youth are the future and can bring energy and imagination to water-related projects, both of which can be sorely lacking in other programmes. In an innovative approach, a group of Canadian high-school students at the Great Lakes Challenge Race in July will crew a ship and dock in twelve ports in Canada and the United States. While at port, they will create an interactive educational display on water quality, focusing particularly on household products and pesticides to provide the expected 5 million visitors with facts and ways to use and safeguard water.
Mural, photo and drawing contests, puppet shows and conservation and tree-planting projects are a few of the initiatives of young people worldwide to promote awareness in their communities. Although traditionally women have been excluded from water projects, even those so simple as managing irrigated land parcels, their contributions to water management practices are both useful and necessary. This was the case, for example, in Patan, Indiaa trade union of 215,000 self-employed women launched a ten-year campaign to use water more effectively, which led to a variety of benefits: the recharging of 120 tube wells, the construction of ponds, a healthier land, salinity decreased, and women's incomes increased.
One cannot sit people down in a classroom and teach them to use water wisely. It must be seen, felt, understood and, most importantly, practised so that it becomes a habit. We need to embrace the broadest vision of lessons and teachers as possible, so as to bring a full range of knowledge to the world. This, ultimately, is the goal of the International Year of Freshwater: to break down the barriers separating us, in order to build a more sustainable future.
|
|
H.R.H. Prince Talal Bin Abdul Aziz, President of the Arab Gulf Programme for United Nations Development Organizations (AGFUND), is the UNESCO Special Envoy for Water. He is also President of the Arab Council for Childhood and Development, and of the Board of Trustees of the Arab Network for Non-governmental Organizations, both in Cairo, Egypt. |
Go Back Top
|