We protect what we love, and we love what we know.  The names of the villages in our lands, of our family members and friends, of our heroes — the simple fact of knowing their names grounds us to our present, to our past, and to our future, and grounds us to each other.  But we also used to know the names of plants and other animals as well we know the names of our own loved ones and our own villages. When we can’t identify the plants and insects and animals, we find it easier to forget them, and thus to sit aside as they get erased, driven to extinction under the cancer of capitalism, of an urban concrete, and of industrial agriculture.

Here lies the power of words.

When we speak of love of our country, we speak of the land, the trees, the birds, and our own relationships to them all.  From Ghassan Kanafani to Tayeb Salem  to Gibran Khalil Gibran (in his writings in Arabic), our hearts are brought back to our lands with their words, their images, their stories.

We don’t need to have degrees in literature to paint images with our words.  Rachel Carson, who transformed legislation in the US with her powerful book ‘Silent Spring,’ had a degree in Biology.  Barbara Kingsolver, who presented the environment – with its wondrous insects, plants, and landscape – as central in her novels, also had a degree in Biology.  They reminded us, in their writings, that “what we know of the magical earth around us, we know from stories. And herein lies the wondrous power of words and the images they evoke.” 

So, tell us the stories. The stories of your villages, and the rivers, the wheat stalks and the cherry trees. The names of the understory vegetation that you harvest from under the oak trees. The music of the crickets in the night alongside the chatter of your friends.

Let us feel the wonder and magic of the multitude of life around us. Remind us, once again, that we are not alone, but that we are connected to the land, the plants, and the other animals.  Tell us their names again.

The more we know, the less we will allow for its destruction.

About the Author
Rania Masri PhD is a political ecologist, environmental justice activist, and the regional coordinator for the Academic Activist Co-Produced Knowledge for Environmental Justice. Throughout her career, she has worked to bring a holistic, interdisciplinary lens to the environmental sciences, and a recognition that environmental management must encompass a human rights and social justice practice.

Her writings have centred on issues of ecological sustainability, environmental politics, and social movements. She has also written and organized extensively against the sanctions on Iraq and the occupation of (all) Palestine, as well as civil and environmental rights.

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