首页
登录
职称英语
[originaltext] An interview with Helena Norberg-Hodge, about her work in a pr
[originaltext] An interview with Helena Norberg-Hodge, about her work in a pr
游客
2023-12-20
42
管理
问题
An interview with Helena Norberg-Hodge, about her work in a pristine, ancient Himalayan culture as it faced the siren song of western-style development. Share International US editor Monte Leach spoke with Norberg-Hodge on her recent visit to the San Francisco Bay Area.
Share International: How did you first get involved with helping to preserve the Ladakhi culture?
Helena Norberg-Hodge: I trekked into remote valleys and spoke to Ladakhi people everywhere. I saw quite a remarkable self-reliant wealth and above all an amazing self-esteem of people who were models of what it means to feel completely secure in their own identity and place. They seemed to be the most open, happy and humble people. And they told me they had never known hunger. They had a standard of living much higher than I would have expected, none of it from so-called progress.
SI: How did their way of life begin to be undermined?
HNH: The Indian Government had a territorial dispute with the Chinese, and decided to develop this area as a way of ensuring that it became a closer part of India. Their approach to development was based on a Western model which had nothing to do with local knowledge and resources. This included pushing chemical fertilizers and pesticides, including DDT and other outlawed pesticides. It meant subsidizing white rice and white sugar from the outside. These subsidies for imported food were destroying local food production, and creating a total dependence on imports. It was making the region very vulnerable. Subsidized fossil fuels like kerosene and coal being brought in to heat houses also led to subsidized transport. It meant that roads the government was building were actually destroying the local economy.
Tourism also became part of the Indian Government’ s plan to develop the area. Nearly every foreigner who came there was just amazed by how peaceful, happy and beautiful the place and people were. The foreigners would say: "Oh, what a paradise. What a pity it has to be destroyed." When I heard this for something like the 100th time, something within me snapped. I was closely involved with the local people, and I knew not a single one of them thought of this as destruction. Not a single local person ever said: "Whit a pity we have to be destroyed." I realized the foreigners had seen that in the rest of the world this type of economic growth could be very destructive. I also realized the local people knew nothing about it. Around that time I read a book called Small is Beautiful. It gave me the conviction that things could be done differently and meeting the outside world didn’ t have to mean destruction.
I started talking to the local people about what development had meant in other parts of the world. I realized they were getting a completely wrong view of what life was like in the West. They were saying: "My God, you must be incredibly wealthy." They were getting an impression that we never need to work, that we have infinite wealth and leisure. It is not that they were unintelligent, but they had limited information about this other world.
That led me to realize that I could do work which would provide more accurate information. My goal was not to tell the Ladakhis what to do, not even to tell them that they should stay exactly the way they were, but to provide as much information as possible on what life is really like in the West. That included information on our problems of pollution, unemployment, and poverty, and that a lot of the poverty in the so-called Third World was due to our wealth in the developed world. I also wanted to show that many Westerners who ended up a part of this system were straggling in their own country to find a more environmentally and socially equitable way of living. I gave examples that some people were using solar energy and growing food organically, and implementing a range of more sustainable and equitable alternatives.
SI: What kind of response did you get from the Ladakhis?
HNH: On the whole the information was received with great interest and appreciation. The end result was that the message showed them they need not feel ashamed about who they were, or think they were backward or primitive. There were also modernized young men who for a while thought this approach would hold them back, but they have on the whole now changed. I think the support now for this work is tremendous, and growing all the time in Ladakh.
选项
A、are not rich
B、need not to work
C、are unintelligent
D、have the same lives as those of them
答案
B
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/3288679.html
相关试题推荐
[originaltext]M:DidyouhearabouttheaircrashthatoccurredinSouthAmeric
[originaltext]M:DidyouhearabouttheaircrashthatoccurredinSouthAmeric
[originaltext]M:DidyouhearabouttheaircrashthatoccurredinSouthAmeric
[originaltext]Whydowecry?Canyouimaginelifewithouttears?Notonlyd
[originaltext]Whydowecry?Canyouimaginelifewithouttears?Notonlyd
[originaltext]Whydowecry?Canyouimaginelifewithouttears?Notonlyd
[originaltext]Peopleenjoytakingtrips,butwhatarethereasonstheyleav
[originaltext]Peopleenjoytakingtrips,butwhatarethereasonstheyleav
[originaltext]M:Hi,Ann,welcomeback.How’syourtriptothestates?W:Very
[originaltext]M:Hi,Ann,welcomeback.How’syourtriptothestates?W:Very
随机试题
Eliot’sinterestedinpoetryinabout1902withthediscoveryofRomantic.H
答,答,答!我从梦中跳醒来。——有谁在叩我的门?我迷惘地这么想。我侧耳静听,声音没有了。头上的电灯洒一些淡黄的光在我的惺忪的脸上。纸
[img]2014m3x/ct_eyyjsam_eyyjsad_0021_201310[/img][br]【D4】[originaltext]Th
如果进栈序列为e1,e2,e3,e4,则可能的出栈序列是A.e3,e1,e4,e
下列双代号网络图中,如果钢筋2工作延误3天,则会影响施工计划工期()天。
根据《企业所得税法》,企业拥有的下列固定资产中,可以计算折旧税前扣除的是(
新疆维吾尔自治区某多民族杂居的地区(当地通用语言为汉语)发生了一起故意伤害案件,
根据《处方管理办法》,保存期满的处方销毁须A.经医疗机构主要负责人批准、登记备案
出入境人员检疫是通过检疫查验发现染疫人和染疫嫌疑人,给予()等手段,从而达到控
项目后评价的方法中,获得的信息易于定量便于对比的是( )。(新教材已删除)A.资
最新回复
(
0
)