Vancouver marks birth of Greenpeace 40 years ago 
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/12893/vancouver-marks-birth-of-greenpeace-40-years-ago
 

12-Sep-11 
Deborah Jones 



VANCOUVER -- A simple phone call about dead sea otters washing up on the shores 
of Alaska after US nuclear tests lead to the birth of environmental 
organization Greenpeace four decades ago. 

Irving Stowe and his wife, Dorothy, were so outraged by the news that they 
launched a petition from their home in Vancouver, on the Canadian west coast, 
and set up a group called "Don't Make A Wave." 

Their daughter, Barbara Stowe, recalled the early beginnings of the group which 
eventually blossomed and grew into the international environmental activist 
group, Greenpeace, which Thursday marks its 40th anniversary. 

Her father had been told of "sea otters washing up on the shore, dead, their 
eardrums split by the explosions" after US nuclear tests on Amchitka Island, 
Alaska, she told AFP. 

With a group of other activists, the Stowes, both Quakers and peace activists 
who moved from the US during the Vietnam War, launched the committee -- named 
after concerns that the blasts would trigger a tsunami -- and announced a plan 
to send a boat to Amchitka to witness to the tests. Soon "people all around 
Canada and the world were sending money, $2 at a time," said Stowe. 

The boat, which they named "Greenpeace," was launched from Vancouver in 
September 1971. 

Although the US Coast Guard stopped Greenpeace before the boat reached 
Amchitka, it helped raise global awareness of the blasts, which the US 
cancelled the following year. 

The Don't Make a Wave Committee changed its name to Greenpeace, and in a few 
years the organization had outgrown the city of its birth. 

Today its international headquarters is in Amsterdam, it has offices in dozens 
of countries, and even its Canadian headquarters is now in Toronto. 

But officials and the founders say Vancouver, with its picturesque setting amid 
ocean, mountains and forest, and a diverse population, was key to the 
organization's start. 

"Greenpeace was a product of the times, but also of the place," Bruce Cox, 
Greenpeace Canada head, told AFP. "There's a much-heightened awareness of the 
natural environment." 

Vancouver, historically a hub of the West Coast's rich aboriginal cultural, had 
been a commercial center for Western Canada's resource economy since the 1800s. 

But by the 1960s, it had become known for its multicultural population -- and 
as a refuge for American draft dodgers and counter-culture hippies. 

Anywhere else, Greenpeace might never have have taken off, said author Rex 
Weyler, one of the founders who sailed on Greenpeace after moving here from the 
US in the 1960s as a young journalist. 

"I remember Japanese and Chinese communities then," Weyler told AFP. "There was 
an international youth movement, there were Buddhist communities, Hindu 
communities, young hippies, back-to-the-landers, and an ecology community." 

"We wanted to launch an ecology movement. There were civil rights, women's and 
peace movements. what was lacking was a real sense of ecology. 

"That's what we set out to do, not to create an international organization and 
make Greenpeace famous," Weyler laughed. "We were going to transform world ... 
it sort of worked, didn't it." 

Greenpeace has had a tumultuous path, and been sharply criticized in past years 
for some of its more provocative tactics in its early campaign to stop seal 
hunting and high-seas confrontations with Japanese whaling boats. 

But it has retained its fierce sense of independence, relying solely on 
personal donations instead of government, corporate and organizational funding. 
And it is strongly committed to rigorous science, which has earned it kudos. 

"My impression is that (Greenpeace) remains one of the most powerful and 
respected environmental organizations and that those Vancouverites who are 
aware that the organization originated here are proud of the fact," scientist 
William Rees, a University of British Columbia professor and co-inventor of the 
Ecological Footprint tool to measure environmental impact, told AFP. 

This week Greenpeace officials from around the world converge on Vancouver to 
commemorate the organization's 40th anniversary. 

Barbara Stowe, whose parents are both now deceased, said the politicians and 
officials will see that Greenpeace also made its mark on Vancouver, today 
ranked as one of the most environmentally friendly cities in the world. 

"This place draws people who love nature," said Tzeporah Berman, co- director 
of climate and energy campaigns for Greenpeace International, who recently 
moved back to Vancouver from Amsterdam. "It's a city committed to becoming the 
greenest city in the world." 




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