Youths performing alash-mob dance
© Robert vanWaarden www.vanwaardenphoto.com
“I think we live in a really exciting moment. We have the opportunity to do fantastic things - because we have to. How often do we see people flourish in such a way because there’s a need for it to happen?” Emma Biermann
 
London, UK: There is a ashift taking place. Against the odds, climate change is being treated by an increasing amount of people as something that can be turned into a positive opportunity. This became visible when hundreds of young adults from across the country, converged in London this autumn for Power Shift ‘09. The aim was: “To connect young people and inspire and equip them to organize in their local communities, raising the youth voice on climate change,” explained Amy Mount, the event’s media coordinator.
 
The event culminated with a ‘flash-mob dance’. Waves of young people suddenly appeared, seemingly out of nowhere, to perform a co-ordinated routine. With a public display of solidarity and celebration, they injected a note of creativity and passion into the climate change debate.
 
“Doing the dances was amazing,” said participant, Rosie Sullivan. “You’ve got to have fun together and celebrate the fact that we are alive and live in a beautiful world, right now. It’s not completely dysfunctional.”
 
The Power Shift weekend was run by UK Youth Climate Coalition (UKYCC), which was set up by codirectors Emma Biermann and Casper ter Kuile. Emma, age 23, is concerned about the emerging impacts of climate change, such as potential mass displacements of people. She learned of the effects of forced migration through her mother, a war refugee from Cambodia: “She came over as a result of conflict in 1975. She couldn’t speak English, her medical qualifications were not recognised and she lost all her family. If we create that type of situation for many more people, through man-made climate change, that’s just not cool.”
 
Power Shift was set up to mobilise young people and empowerment was its foundation. “We’re the moral reminder,” said Emma. “We’re prepared, co-ordinated, have all the technology we need and hold a vision for a world that is going to be much healthier.
 
The central tool put forward was the power of stories. Based on the techniques of Marshall Ganz, who designed the grassroots campaign that led Barack Obama to victory, workshops helped participants share their ‘Stories of Self’: personal accounts of how they came to be concerned about climate change.
 
Diversity was vital to the Power Shift agenda. “UKYCC is centred on being inclusive,” Emma explained. “I think that, as the defining issue of our generation, climate change is very much over-arching. You don’t have to be a ‘greenie’ to care, because it’s about our jobs and future income and the welfare of our families and friends.”
 
Speaking to the event’s audience, Kofi Hope, founder of Black Youth Coalition Against Violence, put it eloquently: “We are all connected to one struggle: to build proper relationships between human beings and proper relationships between us and our environment.”
 
A strong feeling of hope arose as the weekend progressed. The event highlighted that, due to the urgency of the climate crisis, now is a time of tremendous possibility. As Ashok Sinha from the Stop Climate Chaos Coalition shared: “We can be the generation that grasps the opportunity that no generation has had before – to create a better future.”
 
When the four days came to an end, the UK’s new youth climate movement dispersed from the capital, energised and confident. “I feel positive about what we can achieve in the world,” Rosie Sullivan said. “I’m filled with this great feeling of joy, that we have an opportunity to make changes happen, which we’ve all been waiting for.”
 
 
Story from Positive News UK
A New Generation Shifts into Gear
by Sean Dagan Wood
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