A Critique on the Lost Eden
Dr Abe V Rotor
Light in the Woods, acrylic, AVR 1994
Every time we destroy a forest, a coral reef, or grassland, we are repeating the fault of our ancestors. The biblical story is fiction if we fail to grasp its essence. True, exile comes in many ways. But definitely, if an ecosystem is destroyed, if it loses its capacity to provide the basic needs of its inhabitants, starvation, death, and other forms of deprivation follow. Does this not trigger exile – or exodus, which is the ultimate recourse for survival?
Here is a poem I wrote upon reaching Tagum. It is about the destruction of a forest I related in the first part of this article.
Lost Forest
Staccato of chirping meets the breeze and sunrise,Waking the butterflies, unveiled by the rising mist;Rush the stream where fish play with the sunbeamAnd the rainforest opens, a stage no one could miss,With every creature in a role to play without cease.John Milton wrote his masterpiece of Paradise,While Beethoven composed sonata with ecstasy,Jean Fabre and Edwin Teale with lens in handDiscovered a world Jules Verne didn’t see,But found Aldo Leopold’s ecosystem unity.
For how long to satiate man’s greed can nature sustain?It was not long time ago since progress became a game,Taking the streets, marching uphill to the mountain,Where giant machines roar, ugly men at the helm -Folly, ignorance and greed are one and same.
AVRotor, 2001
Forest Fire, Acrylic, AVR 1995
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