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Peace for Humans, Extinction for Other Species

We always talk about world peace as a very sacred and lofty goal. I once watched the Miss Universe contest on TV. The contestants are very beautiful girls from all over the world. The contest involves evaluation of not only physical beauty and looks, but also talents in swimming, dancing, singing, debating, and many other skills. After many tests, five finalists are selected. In a final test each of these finalists is asked to respond to one question. That question was ``If you are granted just one wish, what will it be?''. The winning finalist's response was ``world peace''. She explained that it means peace for all the people all over the world. She received very wild applause, and was selected as Miss Universe for that response.

We human beings are so damn self-centered. We talk about peace only for ourselves. The numbers of other large animals and trees etc. are already down to very small numbers due to merciless killing by the already 7 billion and soon to be 15 billion humans. Don't you think the 200 manitees living in coastal waters of Florida, 300 pink dolphins living in the sea around Hong Kong, 150 mountain lions still left in California, a few thousand elephants, lions, tigers, gorillas in Africa, Asia; a few thousand majestic mahogany trees in South America, a few hundred rhinoceros in India, etc. deserve some peace for themselves at least now? Their home is being encroached upon by the ever growing human population relentlessly.

Let me relate an experience from my childhood. As a teenager growing up in India, I remember going on a vacation trip by boat on Kolleru (a huge shallow lake, wetlands area) with my family in the 1940s. It was a sailboat maneuvered by two oarsman, and did not have any motor powered equipment on it. To my kid's eyes the lake appeared very huge. Our destination was a temple for the lake goddess Kolleru on a small island in the middle of the lake. It took us two whole days to reach the temple, and another two days to return. All along we saw innumerable types of water fowl, and an abundantly growing lake tree called ``bendu'' (``cork''). The trees have two to four inch thick trunks of corklike material which was very soft and spongy inside with a green colored bark on the outside. We kids had lot of fun fighting with each other with the branches of this tree. You can hit siblings with great force with this branch, but it would not hurt because of the softness of the wood.

During a recent trip to India, I went to visit Kolleru again. Alas, the lake is completely gone. It was drained for building houses for the growing human population, and for growing more rice for human consumption. All the nice waterfowl are gone, and the beautiful cork tree in that lake is now extinct. Unfortunately, the Lake Goddess was not able to protect her beautiful lake, and all the gentle creatures and plants she created in it, from being destroyed by humans. All these species have perished from human encroachment of their habitat. Today, the same thing continues at a faster rate all over the world, perhaps more so in USA than elsewhere.

We humans want peace to produce more of our own. Our actions, and treatment of other species is such that they can find peace only in their death and extinction. When will we humans realize that it is our sacred duty to keep the human population low?


next up previous
Next: Converting Nice Trees Into Up: Two Critical Problems Facing Previous: Solution to Pollution
Katta G Murty
10/28/2000