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Jennifer Marohasy

Jennifer Marohasy

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Priorities, Life is a Journey – And Happy Birthday to My Daughter

February 19, 2021 By jennifer

I remember picking my daughter up from school, years ago. It was her first year, so she was about six years old. The last class for the day had been art, and the teacher had asked they paint the solar system. Most of the children had something to show their mothers, that included moons and planets in various shades and shapes painted onto a white background. My daughter, meanwhile, had spent the entire art class painting a black background. Only after that, had she intended to paint the Sun, and after that the planets. At the end of that school day, most of her classmates had finished paintings. The teacher was clearly frustrated my daughter only had a black background to show me.

In the scheme of things did it matter that my daughter hadn’t finished her picture on time? I thought it wonderful that she had thought through what was needed to create the best picture, rather than concern herself with being finished on time.

There is always a lot of pressure for us to have something to show, something completed. But how much more important can it be, getting the process/the method correct especially when it comes to art, and also science and medicine.

I only have the one daughter, and she has always been concerned with the fundamentals – and getting them right.

While I have always been most interested in the environment and how to best care for it, she has always been more concerned about people.

At University she got herself a scholarship for a study tour to Kenya, and from that she wrote a paper explaining the taboo issue that is preventing so many girls from finishing school:

Investment in projects that directly support women and girls is essential to reducing poverty. In 2012, the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said that ‘the greatest return comes from investing in girls and women. When they are educated, they drive development in their families, communities and nations.’

A single year of primary education correlates with at least a 10-per-cent increase in a woman’s wages later in life, with the returns on a year of secondary education estimated to be double that. Moreover, educating girls remains the single best policy for reducing fertility.

However, in Sub-Saharan Africa only 57 per cent of all girls attend primary schools, with only 17 per cent enrolled at a secondary level. A UNESCO study has found that about 150 million children currently enrolled in primary schools globally will drop out before they finish. At least 100 million of those will be girls.

One reason young girls are not attending school is commonly overlooked: gender taboos and menstruation. Ngeru, for instance, is a 14-year-old girl from Kenya. During her period, she has no access to sanitary pads. Instead, Ngeru will improvise with cloth, or bark tree lining, or mattress stuffing.

Needless to say, these DIY techniques are ineffective and humiliating. Health risks abound, including infections and genital sores. She will likely end up with blood on her school uniform or clothing, but attitudes to menstruation mean that Ngeru would rather drop out than confront the bullying of peers and male teachers alike. She enjoys studying mathematics, but her education is wholly subject to her cycle.

A study of the attitudes of Kenyan school-aged girls to menstrual health found that ‘one of the most effective ways to deal with menstruation is to go home’.

There are now enough masks for everyone in Australia it seems. But I wonder when there will be enough sanitary pads for young girls needing to complete school, in Africa?

In the article Caroline did write:

Moreover, educating girls remains the single best policy for reducing fertility.

I’m also for smaller families, including so there is less pressure on the natural environment. Africa’s wildlife and wild places are under so much pressure from so many people. There was hope for tourism, as an economic reason to protect all the animals. But who into the foreseeable future will be visiting Africa to see the elephants?

Caroline has seen the elephants, and so much of Africa. She perhaps holds the record for fastest ascent and descent of Mount Kenya. So, she can get things done quickly, when there is a real need.

Lindsay, with Caroline following, as they climbed Mt Kenya in 2018.

It was back in July 2018 – by then Caroline had moved to Kenya, she was living and working in Nairobi – she told me she would be climbing Mt Kenya. I thought that would take about 5 days, there is the issue of altitude sickness, and normally one would be accompanied by a porter and a local guide.

But, no, the ever-intrepid Caroline told me she only had the weekend, she had to be at work on Friday, and back by Monday. She told me she was planning to run-up on Saturday, and down on Sunday with her girlfriend, Lindsay.

I grumbled to myself all that weekend, wondering what the chances might be, of finding any remains, should she be eaten by a Lion, after being trampled by a buffalo. Then I got the phone call, on Monday, she was back in Nairobi, sending photographs and videos including of them summitting. I felt inspired and relieved. And her friend Lindsay wrote about the adventure on her blog, as a three part series.

Caroline, she has a heart of gold. She doesn’t settle for less, and she sometimes takes her time. She never gives up, and she is fearless. She was born 32 years ago today.

Yes. It is her birthday!

I wish her every happiness. And I’m so grateful for all the love she bestows on me, and also her Grandma.

I’m so proud of all that she has achieved this last year. May the next year be everything she has worked towards, and more, even if it means that she will be leaving Australia for yet another overseas adventure.

Happy Birthday!

Caroline in the dark, but not lost as she climbs Mount Kenya those few years ago.

***
Photo credits all to Lindsay. Thank you.

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: Caroline

Editorial The Guardian: Fourteen days to seal history’s judgment on this generation

December 8, 2009 By jennifer

TODAY 56 newspapers in 45 countries take the unprecedented step of speaking with one voice through a common editorial. We do so because humanity faces a profound emergency.

Unless we combine to take decisive action, climate change will ravage our planet, and with it our prosperity and security. The dangers have been becoming apparent for a generation. Now the facts have started to speak: 11 of the past 14 years have been the warmest on record, the Arctic ice-cap is melting and last year’s inflamed oil and food prices provide a foretaste of future havoc. In scientific journals the question is no longer whether humans are to blame, but how little time we have got left to limit the damage. Yet so far the world’s response has been feeble and half-hearted.

• How the Copenhagen global leader came about
• Write your own editorial
• The papers that carried the Copenhagen editorial
• In pictures: How newspapers around the world ran the editorial

Climate change has been caused over centuries, has consequences that will endure for all time and our prospects of taming it will be determined in the next 14 days. We call on the representatives of the 192 countries gathered in Copenhagen not to hesitate, not to fall into dispute, not to blame each other but to seize opportunity from the greatest modern failure of politics. This should not be a fight between the rich world and the poor world, or between east and west. Climate change affects everyone, and must be solved by everyone.

The science is complex but the facts are clear. The world needs to take steps to limit temperature rises to 2C, an aim that will require global emissions to peak and begin falling within the next 5-10 years. A bigger rise of 3-4C — the smallest increase we can prudently expect to follow inaction — would parch continents, turning farmland into desert. Half of all species could become extinct, untold millions of people would be displaced, whole nations drowned by the sea. The controversy over emails by British researchers that suggest they tried to suppress inconvenient data has muddied the waters but failed to dent the mass of evidence on which these predictions are based.

Few believe that Copenhagen can any longer produce a fully polished treaty; real progress towards one could only begin with the arrival of President Obama in the White House and the reversal of years of US obstructionism. Even now the world finds itself at the mercy of American domestic politics, for the president cannot fully commit to the action required until the US Congress has done so.

But the politicians in Copenhagen can and must agree the essential elements of a fair and effective deal and, crucially, a firm timetable for turning it into a treaty. Next June’s UN climate meeting in Bonn should be their deadline. As one negotiator put it: “We can go into extra time but we can’t afford a replay.”

At the deal’s heart must be a settlement between the rich world and the developing world covering how the burden of fighting climate change will be divided — and how we will share a newly precious resource: the trillion or so tonnes of carbon that we can emit before the mercury rises to dangerous levels.

Rich nations like to point to the arithmetic truth that there can be no solution until developing giants such as China take more radical steps than they have so far. But the rich world is responsible for most of the accumulated carbon in the atmosphere – three-quarters of all carbon dioxide emitted since 1850. It must now take a lead, and every developed country must commit to deep cuts which will reduce their emissions within a decade to very substantially less than their 1990 level.

Developing countries can point out they did not cause the bulk of the problem, and also that the poorest regions of the world will be hardest hit. But they will increasingly contribute to warming, and must thus pledge meaningful and quantifiable action of their own. Though both fell short of what some had hoped for, the recent commitments to emissions targets by the world’s biggest polluters, the United States and China, were important steps in the right direction.

Social justice demands that the industrialised world digs deep into its pockets and pledges cash to help poorer countries adapt to climate change, and clean technologies to enable them to grow economically without growing their emissions. The architecture of a future treaty must also be pinned down – with rigorous multilateral monitoring, fair rewards for protecting forests, and the credible assessment of “exported emissions” so that the burden can eventually be more equitably shared between those who produce polluting products and those who consume them. And fairness requires that the burden placed on individual developed countries should take into account their ability to bear it; for instance newer EU members, often much poorer than “old Europe”, must not suffer more than their richer partners.

The transformation will be costly, but many times less than the bill for bailing out global finance — and far less costly than the consequences of doing nothing.

Many of us, particularly in the developed world, will have to change our lifestyles. The era of flights that cost less than the taxi ride to the airport is drawing to a close. We will have to shop, eat and travel more intelligently. We will have to pay more for our energy, and use less of it.

But the shift to a low-carbon society holds out the prospect of more opportunity than sacrifice. Already some countries have recognized that embracing the transformation can bring growth, jobs and better quality lives. The flow of capital tells its own story: last year for the first time more was invested in renewable forms of energy than producing electricity from fossil fuels.

Kicking our carbon habit within a few short decades will require a feat of engineering and innovation to match anything in our history. But whereas putting a man on the moon or splitting the atom were born of conflict and competition, the coming carbon race must be driven by a collaborative effort to achieve collective salvation.

Overcoming climate change will take a triumph of optimism over pessimism, of vision over short-sightedness, of what Abraham Lincoln called “the better angels of our nature”.

It is in that spirit that 56 newspapers from around the world have united behind this editorial. If we, with such different national and political perspectives, can agree on what must be done then surely our leaders can too.

The politicians in Copenhagen have the power to shape history’s judgment on this generation: one that saw a challenge and rose to it, or one so stupid that we saw calamity coming but did nothing to avert it. We implore them to make the right choice.

This editorial will be published tomorrow by 56 newspapers around the world in 20 languages including Chinese, Arabic and Russian. The text was drafted by a Guardian team during more than a month of consultations with editors from more than 20 of the papers involved. Like the Guardian most of the newspapers have taken the unusual step of featuring the editorial on their front page.

[This editorial is free to reproduce under Creative Commons]

Filed Under: Community, Events, Good Causes Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Not Evil Just Wrong

September 6, 2009 By jennifer

HOLLYWOOD loves a movie full of dire predictions about the end of the Earth.   Of course global warming has been all the rage with Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth winning an Oscar.  Although I did prefer The Day After Tomorrow in which a climatologist, played by Dennis Quad, tried to save his son in New York from an ice age.

There is a new movie due for release on October 18, Not Evil Just Wrong, which explores society’s interest in Armageddon-type scenarios with a particular focus on the cost, and potential costs, of the policies following concerns about DDT and AGW [anthropogenic global warming].

I was lucky enough to be given a sneak preview of the feature length documentary by Phelim McAleer and Ann McElhinney last week.   [Read more…] about Not Evil Just Wrong

Filed Under: Events, Good Causes, News, Opinion Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

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Jennifer Marohasy Jennifer Marohasy BSc PhD has worked in industry and government. She is currently researching a novel technique for long-range weather forecasting funded by the B. Macfie Family Foundation. Read more

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To get in touch with Jennifer call 0418873222 or international call +61418873222.

Email: jennifermarohasy at gmail.com

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