2020-04-01 Marie Claire

(Tina Sui) #1

CLIMATE CRUSADER Greta


Thunberg isn’t powerful in spite of her


youth; the Swedish 17-year-old’s message


resonates so deeply precisely because she


is so young. And she’s not alone. Women


and girls around the world, plenty of


whom haven’t graduated high school yet,


are fighting right alongside her, asking


everyone to do more to stop the growing


threat of a changing planet. Of course,


women have been on the front lines of


environmental activism for decades:


Rachel Carson wrote the groundbreaking


1962 book Silent Spring, which led to


federal pesticide regulation; 2004 Nobel


Peace Prize winner Wangari Maathai of


Kenya founded Africa’s Green Belt Move-


ment, responsible for the planting of mil-


lions of trees on the continent. And then


there’s Thunberg herself, the founder of


Fridays for Future, a series of weekly


strikes demanding government action on


climate change. The United Nations esti-


mates that 80 percent of those displaced


by climate-change-related disasters are


women. Young women in particular will


face growing problems associated with a


warming world, as many nations (includ-


ing the U.S.) fail annually to shrink green-


house-gas emissions. Voters-to-be are un-


derstandably scared about the future, but


they’re turning that fear into action.


“The reason so many young people


have found their call to action in the cli-


mate crisis is the narrative has shifted


from ‘It’s affecting all of us and the earth


is going to die’ to something more fo-


cused on the youth,” says Rachel Lee, 16,


the co–head coordinator of Zero Hour


NYC, a youth climate-action collective.


While their specific interests and ap-


proaches may differ, many of these envi-


ronmental activists share a common


goal: government action. Sena Wazer, a


Connecticut native, has been fighting for


cleaner oceans since she was five and her


parents read her a book about whales.


Lately, the 16-year-old, already a college


sophomore, has been organizing rallies


to push her state’s governor, Ned Lamont,


to declare a climate emergency—and


she wants to see other young people put


These five young


people have turned


their fears of a


warming planet into


action and gotten


the world’s attention


in the process


BY CADY DRELL


leaders. I am


confident that


this year we will


turn the


corner. We have


the climate


solutions, and


they come with


endless benefits,


from safer


drinking water to


more bike paths


to new green


jobs. We have


work to do, but


I know we can


do it. We have to.


Because climate


change isn’t


about just polar


bears, remote


locations, or the


distant future.


It’s about us,


our families, our


friends, and our


health—today.


This is the year


we start winning


the battle.


N E X T G E N E R A T I O N


THE


Ayisha Siddiqa, 21


Alexandria Villaseñor, 14


Rachel Lee, 16


Mariana Vargas, 20


Sena Wazer, 16


—GINA MCCARTHY,


president and CEO of NRDC (Natural


Resources Defense Council) and
former administrator of the U.S.

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

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