Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Canadian Images


Dear Children

I have kept and re-looked at all the Australian Christmas cards that people have sent me from Australia. The ones with kangaroo's, koala's, boomarangs have now been scanned and uploaded to my digital picture frame. Aboriginal art work and so on. So I looked through my Christmas cards to see if any had photos of things that were truly Canadian, and found none. We have a new colour printer, so I went through many of the photos I have taken since I have been in Canada. Here is the result for you. Today I have added a description beneath all of them for you.

You will need to click on each one to get the message underneath. Or you can use the slide show. Enjoy



Here are the rest of the Photos


Love

Julia

Saturday, December 05, 2009

Copenhagen Climate Change Conference

Dear friends

By now you must of heard and felt the effects of the Climate Change that is upon us. Here is how you can participate. http://unfccc.int/2860.php

You can get your own clock at this link http://unfccc.int/home/items/4688.php


Love
Julia

Friday, December 04, 2009

International Peace Garden, Manitoba Canada; North Dakata, USA.


My dear children

I had a phone call with Douglas Hevenor, CEO of the International Peace Garden. He is very interested in sharing our vision and website resource, with schools that visit their peace garden. Here is a little of what is on their website.

Peace
Julia
...............

Since 1932, nestled on the U.S. and Canadian borders of North Dakota and Manitoba in a symbol of friendship, lies a “One of a Kind” International Peace Garden. Reflecting pools and dazzling colorful floral displays of over 150,000 flowers splash across the grounds of the Formal Garden’s terraced walkways. The 14-bell chime echoes faintly, as the length of the formal garden area is viewed from the upper terrace. In the distance, the 120-foot concrete Peace Tower, and the Peace Chapel can be seen at the end of the formal garden. Tourists ponder the beauty of the two floral displays of the American and Canadian Flags, the only two floral designs that remain the same each year. Presented to the Garden by the Japanese Government, seven Peace Poles in which, “May Peace Prevail” is written in twenty-eight different languages.

Food and Population Roundtable Statement

Science for Peace and Canadian Pugwash,
Global Issues Project
Global Sustainability Education Concepts

FOOD AND POPULATION ROUNDTABLE November 20 - 21, 2009

Written by Julia Morton-Marr. Edited by Adele Buckley, Heiner Benking, Richard Schwartz, Helmut Burkhardt, and others at Science for Peace.

Recommendations to the Interdisciplinary Roundtable:

1. Whereas the outcome statement from the Global Issues Project, Climate Change and Energy Roundtable, ‘Wasan Action Framework’ held in September 2007, identified the root causes of many crises, identified the large and growing human population as a root cause of many current crises; and

2. Whereas the world is rapidly approaching an unprecedented climate catastrophe and is also severely and increasingly threatened by deforestation, rapid species extinction, soil erosion, desertification, air and water pollution, scarcities of water, energy and other valuable resources and other environmental threats; and

3. Whereas the Club of Rome identified the population growth paradigm in 1972 in the “Limits of Growth” and little has been achieved to slow the growing population; and

4. Whereas we are currently at the mid-point of the ‘UN Decade of Education for Sustainable Development’ (UNDESD 2005-2009); and given that UNESCO held a 5 year International congress which unanimously endorsed the ‘Bonn Declaration’; and given that the Declaration (subsequently unanimously endorsed by UNESCO) emphasizes the need for improved educational efforts worldwide regarding food security, health, biodiversity, climate change, lifestyle changes, risk reduction, healthy water, and sustainable economies; and

5. Whereas many universities and Ministries of Education are re-orienting education towards sustainability; and

6. Whereas long term existence of human civilization must be the main value in Sustainability Education and curriculum decision-making for the future.

WE urge action by all Ministers & Departments of Education and Health within Governments, Universities, Schools, Colleges and Communities to:

7. Examine population issues in depth within Sustainability Education curricula, as a life saving value, on the basis that all humans have the right to exist.

8. Educate for long term sustainability, using interdisciplinary methods of system science. Teach the negative effects of compounding forest removal, increasing agricultural land use for housing, roads and other non-agricultural purposes, and the burgeoning population increase, thus placing all species at risk because of the resultant food & water insecurity.

9. Promote the importance of plant-based diets, and encourage major reductions in the animal-based portions of Western diets. Animal-based diets contribute significantly to many diseases, climate change, deforestation, species extinction, soil erosion, water and air pollution, decertification, and wasteful use of water, land, and energy.

10. Develop population programs and sex-ed curricula that develops awareness and knowledge on current population and food crises, to empower lifestyle changes.

We call upon our governments and education systems to involve their entire citizenry in positive actions to achieve the following goals:

11. Provide training and government support to prevent food wastage, in a way that is applicable to the differing social structures of both developed and developing countries.

12. Support the United Nations Food & Agriculture Organization’s work on the severe global food crisis. and increase sharing food as part of the global larder.

13. Re-construct soils by organic agricultural methods, and use bio-carbon sequestration with the intent to restore lost carbon. Establish gardening and re-cultivation schemes in rural and urban areas, to re-create fertile soils and reverse desertification.

14. Grow food in many local gardens and promote the purchasing of locally grown food. A useful example: IHTEC’s International School Peace Gardens program.

15. Remove all products that degrade species procreation hormones, with particular focus on plastics.

16. Ban all products that deplete the ozone, as increased UV radiation decreases crop yields.

17. Empower women to achieve lower birthrates through sex education, and promotion of the use of condoms and abstinence.

Media & Laws

18. Remove advertising of sex and fertility drugs on TV around the world. Instead use TV, Radio programs and Magazines to promote women’s health and population stability.

19. Involve NGO’s, women’s networks and computer networking with these messages.

20. Facilitate workshops for governments, and encourage local and national governmental officials to champion the issues of food and population.

Poverty and Women’s Health and Equality

21. Wherever food or agricultural aid (e.g. crop seeds, goats etc. ) is provided, deliver condoms and education.

22. Encourage women’s meetings and dovetail sex education with other programs, as already practiced by the Grameen Bank, which gives micro loans in Bangladesh.

23. Empower women in developing countries to provide community education on population issues and family planning. Population is a women’s health issue.

24. Include mothers and daughters in western countries in the process of population education.

25. Involve fathers and sons in conception education. Men must understand the implications of additional children for their families and for society.

26. Engender respect and equality for women in all societies.

27. Use dance, dramatic presentations and soap opera’s to help educate people about birth control and other population-related issues.

Religious Communities

28. Involve all organized religions as well as interfaith groups. Globally, all must recognize that all life on earth is at risk.

29. Request all religious groups to accept and teach these population and food concepts.

Monday, November 09, 2009

Sustainability Education. What is it?

Sustainability Education. What is it?
By Dame Julia Morton-Marr, DStG, B.Ed., Dip.T.

(NB: This has been translated into Spanish, by Andrea Mendez Brandam, Buenos Aires, Argentina, and was included in her newspaper "Positive News" = Noticias Positivas which was an insert in "The Clarin" main newspaper in Argentina, that sends out 300,000 copies with about 2 million readers.)

See the whole paper here: Noticias Positivas

See the Sustainable Education article here:


How important and how can we achieve sustainability in schools? IHTEC’s educators (website: www.ihtec.org ) created the International School Peace Gardens to teach sustainability education. This includes peace education, basic human values, inter-cultural understanding, environmental education, and dedication at various class levels through celebration in a peace garden.

Sustainability: “We must have peace first, if we are to be sustainable.” Prof. Helmut Burkhardt

“This includes a well managed global commons”. Global Commons include forests, oceans, atmosphere, space, fresh water, ozone, arctic and antarctica, and bio-diversity. Our planet has so many global issues right now that we need to teach everyone restorative methods. Issues such as climate change, energy use, plastic pollution are some of many concerns that can be improved through positive thought and action in a peace garden.

Peace in Ourselvers:

Peace means to become one with yourself . You have to understand your beliefs and values. Peace means to think and speak positively, reversing negative and hurtful words making them positive. Peace is calmness with others and silence when words are not required. For peace, people should forget about one=s small differences. Peace is safety, no fear in people=s hearts. Peace means to be joyful.

Tool: In your peace garden, plant a tree that represents peace, that grows in nature where you live. This tree can be special or sacred to your region, your State or Provincial tree.

Peace in the Environment.

Peace and the environment can no longer be separated. Peace means cooperation and understanding with the surrounding environment. We must take care of it, and not abuse it. Peace means caring for every living thing on the planet by supporting the web of life.

Tool: In your peace garden, plant a sample of all the plants that live together in nature. Make a list of the plants and learn how they help all species. You might like to help plant a forest as a school.

Peace in Our Schools

The message of peace should be spread to children starting at a very young age, because in Year 1 & 2, that is when the teasing and all of the other negative things start. It is important to concentrate more on the similarities rather than the differences, so that there is a healthy, peaceful environment to learn in. Some students make peace posters, and placing them all over the school, to give the message of peace. Others create a peace corner in each classroom.

Tool: Build two friendship benches facing each other, and learn how to solve local problems in the peace garden. If your climate is too cold, these benches can be inside your school.

Values

Peace must include basic human values for all humans. Each human and all other species on planet earth need food, water, clothing, and a home to live in. (See Maslow’s Basic Needs) This includes food supplies for migrating birds and animals.

Tool: In your peace garden, plant vegetables and fruits so no one will go hungry. This is a food security garden. Collect seeds and learn to store them for another year and teach which seeds grow which food. Contact your local botanical gardens for more information.

Children in Hawaii are focused on returning to their original food plants and helping to feed the homeless. These islands only have two weeks of food at any one time, so the students are making lists of what each household grows, so that they can share the excess.

In Argentina there is to be a conference on Sustainability Education for Head Masters of Private Schools on May 6,7 & 8, 2010

Sunday, July 05, 2009

St. Cyril Catholic Elementary School Dedication

Dear children

On Wednesday June 24, 2009 I visited St. Cyril Catholic Elementary School to dedicate their International School Peace Garden with their teacher, Laure Abou-Jaoude. We used the new ISPG dedication which their Principal read and who asked the children to repeat it after her. IHTEC gave two awards, one to the Principal for the school to keep. The other was a special award to Laure for 10 years of volunteer service pin, IHTEC's highest award, the 'leaf for peace'.

The main peace garden committee received their ISPG pin and the others received a 'peace dove' pin.

Granny was told that many of the children had benefited from working for peace in their peace garden.

I am looking forward to their photos to share with you all.

Julia

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Hawaii children sing - Garden Song

Dear children

I had a wonderful surprise today, Chris Zorn sent me an MP3 of children at the Laboratory School, College of Education, University of Hawaii, singing the 'Garden Song'. Do visit IHTEC's podbean to listen to them.

http://ihtec.podbean.com

Hope you make a comment here for the children.

Cheers
Julia

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Water Dedication

Water Dedication


Canadian Pugwash & Science for Peace Expert Roundtable on Water, Nov. 2008



I ..........................................................................................................................................................
from ................................................................................................................. dedicate myself as a
trustworthy person to protecting freshwater wherever I am in the world. I understand that I am 80% water, that water is sacred for the web of life in this time of climate change, which is heating the planet. I will endeavour to:

1. Understand that climate change is increasing the rate of evaporation and that in many parts of the world precipitation is decreasing, which means less fresh water.

2. Keep the planet cool with all my actions.

3. Reduce my water footprint, as Nature needs it to prime the pump for the hydrological cycle.

4. Keep water where it is on planet earth returning water to water courses.

5. Protect rivers and streams from pollution.

6. Build rain water tanks to collect water for the garden and household needs. Plant lawn cover and garden species that can grow with no or only minimal water other than rain water.

7. Wash my car with a bucket, not a hose. Wait until the next rainstorm -- this saves more water.

8. Drink tap water wherever it is safe. Boil water otherwise.

9. Remove water in plastic bottles (8 & 9 messages are brought to you by David Suzuki and the Canadian Federation of Municipalities)

10. Wash dishes by hand where possible, with the plug in the sink. Run the dishwasher only when fully loaded, after 8 pm.

11. Turn off the tap when brushing my teeth; use a low-flush toilet or reduce flushes; take a 3 minute shower.

12. Conserve electricity as it takes water to generate your power and power to pump water to my tap. Encourage my family, school & community to share their water bills to see how much we can reduce together.

13. Share water with all species.

Signed:

Date:


Instructions: The “Water Dedication” is a great example of action on sustainability for Earth Day, April 22, 2009. It has been edited by the Canadian Pugwash, Science for Peace, IHTEC; The Global Issues Project, Expert Roundtable on Freshwater.

It has been written for individuals, teachers (who can use it for teaching), students and their communities, who can distribute, read, sign, keep and frame the dedication. We are inviting everyone to dedicate themselves in their International School Peace Garden to water conservation, so that the work is achieved. Other water documents are available on http://www.ihtec.org/index.php?id=214

Saturday, April 11, 2009

There is nowhere to throw away to!

Environmental Design

Think of something that you would like to invent. Find out which materials you will need and think what will happen to the material when people throw it away. How can it be recycled? Can it be used again?

Julia

Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Plastic Bottle removal letter

His Worship Mayor Ted Salci
and Members of the Municipal Council
City of Niagara Falls, Ontario
PO Box 1023
Niagara Falls, Ontario L2E 6X5 Canada
March 18, 2009

“There is nowhere to throw away to”

Dear Mayor Salci (Ted)

Congratulations to you Mayor Ted Salci and to your Council Members and also the Youth Council for stimulating such great action, eliminating the sale of bottle water as well as all beverages in plastic bottles within Municipal Buildings. Your decision is towards a positive tipping point that supports the web of life, nature, water, pollution reduction and reduces carbon emissions and the associated climate changes. David Suzuki has been a global leader in this environmental issue, so I am sure he will be most encouraged that you are requesting local residents to use safe and healthy Municipal tap water. As a major Tourism destination, a ‘Peace through Tourism’ educational brochure promoting Niagara Falls’ safe drinking water, will also reduces use of plastic water bottles within the Tourism Industry.

The Pugwash / Science for Peace Global Issues Project, Experts Roundtable on Water, have noted that Nature needs water to 'prime the pump' for the hydrological cycle. The world's population is already using some of Natures needs, while the planet heats up. Additional goals must include conservation and reduction in water use.

The role of public education is vital with scientific facts to back them. Recently I was in Hawaii, and heard about the plastic mat, half the size of the US, that is floating in the Pacific Ocean. How much plastic I wonder is in the Niagara River, or goes over Niagara Falls and into the Great Lakes? Your Earth Day clean up could focus on water and removal of plastics. The effects of all plastic’s have gone further than we expected. Plastics have been labeled as ‘disruptor of endocrine function’* a hormone in plastic which affects fertility in all species. This especially in the Great Lakes region. These hormones are poisonous to human babies and children.

Companies’ role is to be part of the solution. Send a message to companies that the Green Revolution has begun and their ‘out of the box’ expertise is needed to invent a positive future. All future products must be developed from ‘cradle to cradle’ and not end up as waste. “There is nowhere to throw away to”.

The Ontario Government has mandated Environmental Education and educators may be encouraging all schools to eliminate the use of all plastics in school grounds, to reduce pollution. I must compliment your schools who are experts at recycling. Please also, through your Niagara Falls Schools in Bloom program, encourage your School Boards to collect all plastics and eliminate the use of plastic bottles on school grounds.

Your sincerely


Dame Julia Morton-Marr, DStG, B.Ed., Dip T.
Founding President, IHTEC

* http://www.worldandi.com/public/2001/October/ee.html

Removing Plastic Water Bottles from Municipalities

Dear friends

Recently I was asked to support an action by the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, who are asking each city and town to illiminate the sale of drinking water in plastic bottles on their facilities. They will increase water fountains in public buildings instead. Some are asking for the removal of all drinks out of plastic bottles. This would be a saving for the council and for the environment. Their drinking water out of the tap is 100%. Here is what one Municipality says:

Waste:
1. plastic bottles account for 1.6 kg from each household each year which goes to the dump or are burnt. In addition there are 6.6 kg that are recycled.

2. Their city dumps 1,521 tons of plastic bottle per year.

3. The cost of collection and recovery is $265 per ton.

4. Also they become street litter.

5. City of Toronto recycled 1,000 tonnes or 65 million plastic water bottles last year.

6. About 35 million plastic bottles end up in landfill.

Coorporations and Transportation:

7. Manufacturing 29 billion plastic bottles = 17 million barrels of crude oil.

8. Fuel required to transport bottled water = 38,000 eighteen-wheel transport trucks a week.

9. 20% of municipalities have faced water shortages recently.

To try and help the situation your Granny has written a 'Water Dedication" for you to sign and try and put into action. Please ask your schools to do this with every student.

Love
Julia

Sunday, March 08, 2009

International Women's Day & Year 2007

PeaceWomen Across the Globe - Partnership Project

During 2007 Granny arrange for the support of two other organizations to help her search for 100 Canadian PeaceWomen for the 'PeaceWomen Across the Globe - Partnership Project".

http://www.1000peacewomen.org/typo/index.php?id=128&L=1

The other two organizations are

1. Canadian Voice of Women for Peace

2. Science for Peace.

While Granny and others have gathered information on many Canadian women, Lillian Ross has editing their materials in preparation for a book. This project is still ongoing in 2009 and we hope to have enough materials for the 100 at the end of the summer in time for the International Day of Peace.

As you grow up please work for peace.

Love
Julia

International Women's Day 2006 - Parliament Hill, Ottawa, Ontario

In 2006, for International Women's Day I was invited to give a keynote speech for the Parliamentary Library staff and govenment officials. This was held at the West Building on Parliment Hill, in Ottawa, Ontario.

http://www.ihtec.org/index.php?id=210

There were over 200 people in attendance. Dianne Leggatt, retired principal, came with me. Security was very tight.

International Women's Day 2008 - Kadina South Australia

NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK - INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY

Anne Sutcliffe invited Julia to write a speech for women in Kadina to allow her to read it. A podcast record is here.

http://ihtec.podbean.com/international-womens-day/

Thanks Anne for this opportunity.

Cheers
Julia

International Women's Day 2009

UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA, FAIRBANKS, USA
(Taken from the 'Women at the Top' blog)


On Friday, March 6, 2009, Dame Julia Morton-Marr connected with us, LIVE online from Mississauga, Ontario, Canada. The recording of Julia's presentation is available at the following URL. (The recording is a large file, so may take a long time to open if you have a slow internet connection.)


http://elive.uaf.edu/play_recording.html?recordingId=1233801250389_1236356393988

Julia spoke about the history of women's peace, justice, environmental, and global sustainability work, as well as initiatives that we can join today!
Check out these links to Julia's work, and to the information and projects she shared:

International Holistic Tourism Education Centre - IHTEC http://www.ihtec.org/

Canadian Voice of Women for Peace http://www.vowpeace.org/

Science for Peace http://www.scienceforpeace.ca/

PeaceWomen Across the Globe http://www.1000peacewomen.org/


AND, for those interested in the upcoming World Water Day, March 22nd 2009, http://www.worldwaterday.org/ check out the SUPER resources below.

Global Issues Project - Papers from 2008 Roundtable on Water
http://www.ihtec.org/index.php?id=214

United Nations Decade of Education for Sustainable Development - IHTEC Watershed Peace Pathways Special Edition on Water
http://www.cafeweltgeist.org/ihtec/GIPWaterRT/WaterEdition-76pg-26Nov08-medres.pdf