Wednesday, September 23, 2009

09.24.09 kulturnatib


ID2B


Last Monday, September 21, was International Day of Peace. It was also ID2B or International Day to be Bothered and to Bother. In 132 countries, at least, it was.

According to Avaaz, an international civil society and mostly cyber community pressure group, September 21 saw the actions and heard the voices of global citizens clamoring for their governments to 'wake up' and support international agreements and conventions mitigating the effects of global warming that is the subject of this weeks UN Climate Summit, the run up to the much anticipated final round of negotiations during the climate change conference in Copenhagen in December.

In Canada alone there were 198 such actions across the country. Three of these took place in the capital, Ottawa, one of which I took part of, at the grounds of Parliament.

Taking part is really just a manner of speaking. What I actually did was bringing a part. Or, better still, performing a part.

I did a performance art piece. This was a shorthand version to the piece I performed early this year at a national convention of artist run centers. The shorthand version was necessitated by the guerilla nature of the performance.

Meaning, it was not an 'official' part of the program, not in the program at all, actually, and there was an expected element of disruption although this was what could be called supportive disruption.

The piece titled, 'Bye, bye,' called attention to one of the certainties of global warming: Rising sea levels, which, just as certainly, is going to affect archipelagos and other island aggrupations as indeed it is now affecting some Pacific island groups.

The performance consisted of my wading into the group of about 60 persons who, as it happened, were listening and responding to a speech. I proceeded to randomly roll into the crowd uncapped plastic water bottles with a piece of rolled up paper in each.

The bottles didn't roll as much as skidded as it was on grass which I didn't anticipate, like I didn't one woman's reaction: “Oh, my God, plastic bottles!” To which I said, “That's just half the bad news. What's on the paper – the message in the bottle -- is worse.”

On the paper were printed facts related to global warming, rising seas and how this will adversely affect many especially in the Third World including the Philippines, which incidentally had three events for that day according to Avaaz.

While doing this I was wearing a scuba diving mask and breathing through a diving snorkel. These I continued to wear until the event was over and I had finished collecting the bottles that were left behind – just a few -- or were given back to me,“to use in a further action,” as one woman advised encouragingly.

The only time this 'costume' was interrupted was when a reporter from Radio Canada TV came around to inquire about the performance piece. “Ah, that's why the scuba gear,” she reacted. She also asked a few more questions one of which my answer to was that rising seas are doubly bad news for Filipinos of whom more than 80% do not know how to swim. That's true. Believe it or not.

For climate change, however, it is not a matter of believe it or not, but, be bothered or be more than simply bothered.

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