With diverse flora
and fauna, magnificent
natural landscapes, and
an ecological biosphere
that supports life,
this wondrous planet
is our earthly home.
From our animal
co-inhabitants
to the lush rainforests
and life-giving soil,
we cherish all these
as gifts from the Creator.
It is a common theme
in the world’s major
faiths that during
our temporary stay here,
we should be good
stewards of Mother Earth.
Throughout the years,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
has shared
the message of leading
a balanced life
while following
a spiritual path.
Not only must we nourish
our spirits,
but we share
the responsibility
to care for nature
and our fellow beings.
In light of recent
scientific evidence which
pinpoint the raising of
livestock as the number one
contributor to climate change,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
affirms
the important message
she has noted for over
the past two decades:
we must be vegan and
practice sustainable living.
We invite you to listen to
a compilation of excerpts from
Supreme Master Ching Hai’s
lectures titled
“Stop Soil Erosion
and Desertification:
Make the Switch to
the Animal-free Lifestyle.”
Eco-friendly viewers, We appreciate
your company
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples
here on
Supreme Master Television.
Join us again tomorrow
for part 2 of
“Stop Soil Erosion
and Desertification:
Make the Switch to
the Animal-free Lifestyle.”
And now,
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
is coming up next, right
after Noteworthy News.
Please stay tuned.
We wish you
abundant blessings
and love from God.
It’s been a pleasure
to have your company
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Part 3 of
“Stop Soil Erosion
and Desertification:
Make the Switch to
the Animal-free Lifestyle.”
will continue next Friday.
Up next is
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants right after Noteworthy News
here on
Supreme Master Television.
Please stay tuned.
May Heavens bless you
with much love and light.
Thank you
for your company
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Up next is Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants right
after Noteworthy News
here on
Supreme Master Television.
Please stay tuned.
May Heaven bless you
and your loved ones
with abundance health
and happiness.
The livestock industry
causes a large part of
the world’s soil erosion.
It is a leading driver
of desertification,
biodiversity loss,
and water waste
and water pollution,
despite water becoming
scarcer each day
due to global warming.
Moreover, the livestock
sector inefficiently drains
our fossil fuel and
food grain resources.
In short, we throw away
12 times more grain,
at least 10 times more
water, and 8 times more
fossil fuel energy to
produce a portion of beef
compared to
a nutritionally similar
or even greater amount
of vegan food.
By the way, fishing is
also horrendously
wasteful and murderous.
A major study predicts
that all fished animals will
be 90% gone by 2050
due to overfishing and
over-wasting by-catch.
It means those fish and
other marine lives that
they don’t need, but
while catching other fish,
they kill them as well,
by the billions.
Moreover, it is such
an alarming picture when
we think about
the billions of animals
killed each year
for so-called “food.”
Fifty-five billion – which
is not even counting
fish and other species!
That is 8 times more
innocent beings murdered
each year than there are
people on the Earth.
How can our planet and
our conscience support
such unsustainable,
damaging,
and criminal practice?
And all for a piece of
dead flesh every day,
which we now know
isn’t even healthy
and, in fact, kills us.
I pray that our world’s
leaders will take
swift actions to ban
the destructive meat
production and, instead,
use subsidies for organic
vegan farming which
helps absorb emissions.
Then we can have
an immediate effect
on climate change
and have more time
to develop and perfect
our green technology
to address CO2.
I call upon the media
to help as well, and
thank you and the Irish
Dog Journal for their part.
And most important,
individuals must turn to
the planet-saving, organic
vegan lifestyle, because
the dangers are mounting
and time is urgent.
If every one of us would
only switch now,
we would ensure a future
for our children
and generations to come.
Hallo, Master.
I recently visited
the Grand Canyon
in the USA.
I heard it became like that
about 2 billion years ago
due to the movement
of the Earth’s crust
caused by gas emissions,
erosion, and weathering.
I felt a lot upon seeing
such a wide area becoming
a wasteland where
living beings cannot live.
Is the Grand Canyon
that I’ve seen similar
to the appearance
of the Earth in the future,
in the case that we cannot
stop global warming?
It is of course
very sad to remember
some unpleasant event,
or destructive phenomena
that has happened
on our planet.
I understand how you feel.
It could be similar
to the Grand Canyon,
but not all like that.
Some parts will look
similar like that,
some parts look different.
It depends on
how big the destruction.
If it is total destruction,
then it will become
like a desert.
Nothing can survive
because of too much
poisonous gas.
It’s uninhabitable for
anyone, animals and men.
And then all the water
might be evaporated,
and then there will be
no trees and no flowers;
no plants even survive.
So if you don’t want
to be sad, don’t go to the
Grand Canyon, all right?
Do not focus on
the negative side of nature.
Things happen
according to the destiny
of the inhabitants
of each planet.
So right now we should
concentrate more on
informing people how to
stop the global warming
on our planet
and to encourage people
to be veg and that
should be enough work
to do for now.
Positive thinking,
positive vision,
positive action.
Some of the
global warming effects
that we hear about
are a continued rise
in the Earth’s
atmospheric temperature,
warming of the ocean,
along with acidification,
more frequent
and stronger storms,
prolonged droughts and
intensified heat waves,
soil desertification, plant
and animal extinctions,
and even melting of
permafrost, which could
trigger massive releases
of more methane gas.
That would be
catastrophic beyond
an unthinkable scale.
Mexico and your
neighboring nations have
already suffered from
some of these effects.
Besides the drought that
has stricken parts of
Mexico for over a decade
now, other countries like
Guatemala have been
facing extreme shortages,
with over 550 fatalities
and more than 400,000
families who have been
in need of food
and water assistance.
In Ecuador, officials
have started rotating
electricity outages
due to low water levels
in the nation’s
hydroelectric dams.
Venezuela is also
beginning to ration out
water as she suffers from
the worst drought
since 1947, with
June and October 2009
being the driest months
in over 100 years.
“How is livestock
production connected to
these damaging effects?”
you will ask.
There are so many ways
that I’m sure I don’t
have enough time to tell
all of them, but we can
list the activities
that are associated with
meat production that
are causing some of the
biggest problems for us.
These include
deforestation, soil erosion
and desertification,
excessive use of precious
resources, land and water
waste and pollution, and
animal, plant and human
disease or disappearance.
Soil erosion
and desertification:
the clearing of land
for livestock has created
instability and serious
soil degradation across
the country of Mexico.
In the northern regions of
Mexico nearly two-thirds
of the land is classified as
being in a total or
accelerated state of erosion.
In these regions, which
are highly vulnerable
to desertification,
researchers have found
that the soil condition
is made worse
by livestock grazing.
So, when the livestock
eats all the vegetation
and tramples the land,
what is left behind is
cement-like ground,
unable to grow anything.
This worsens
global warming because
more carbon is released
from the dying plants
and bare soil.
The soil then becomes
hotter and overloads
the atmosphere with even
more heat-trapping carbon.
And this is on top of
the methane generated
by the livestock itself.
So, actually, the livestock
industry generates
more methane than what
we can even calculate
because of
the related effects.
Such extensive damage
makes it difficult to
revive, and continued
livestock raising in this
case obviously leaves
little hope for recovery.
In a magazine interview
over a decade ago,
the President of
the National Cattlemen’s
Confederation of Mexico
spoke of your nation’s
prolonged drought
and its adverse effect
on the cattle industry.
Already then there were
such distinct signs of
global warming effects.
But what he did not
realize then is that
the cattle industry
is causing the drought.
So, it’s easy to see that
if we stopped this raising
of animals for meat, the
weather patterns would
be quickly restored,
along with the land.
In the interview,
the president of
the Cattlemen’s
Confederation also
mentioned the need for
more government
subsidies for cattle raising.
But what we actually
need are subsidies for
life-giving practices, not
the ones that take the life
away from the animals,
take away life from us
and take away life from
our future generations
and take the life from
our one and only planet.
The government could
easily subsidize
organic farming instead,
which would provide
abundant benefits for
all the people of Mexico
and even would remove
40% of the atmospheric
carbon if all tillable land
on Earth were
organically farmed.
So, the solution
is very simple:
we just have to turn away
from the animal products.
We stop eating meat,
dairy, eggs, fish.
If everyone does this, we
will have a transformed
world in no time.
It really is that easy –
just one bite at a time.
Removing methane
from the atmosphere will
remove the majority of
the global warming effect,
and then we can have
time to find greener
power for our world
rather than oil,
after we save the planet.
Also, the vegan diet will
bring more clarity and
creativity for everyone,
so we will be able to
develop all the necessary
resources in time.
It’s just that we need to
make the switch to the
animal-free lifestyle now.
Then everything
will improve,
life will be easier, and
we can rest knowing that
our children will have a
future to look forward to.
Mexico has also been
particularly affected
by desertification, which
you know is due in part to
her arid climate,
as well as what experts
report is the effect of
excessive cattle-raising
and associated irrigation.
In 2003, United Nations
Secretary-General
Kofi Annan noted that
70% of the land in Mexico
was already vulnerable to
desertification, a situation
that he said was causing
up to 900,000 of
your fellow countrymen
to have to leave
their homes every year.
I repeat: it causes
up to 900,000 of your
fellow countrymen to
have to leave their homes
every year, with many
going to seek
better livelihoods
in the United States,
if they can find it.
This astonishing number
of nearly one million
Mexican people per year
came from a Mexican
government report.
I’m not making it up.
It comes from your
government report, which
stated that soil conditions
were too parched
for citizens to support
themselves
and their families.
Another study conducted
last year found additional
desertification, particularly
in Oaxaca State.
So it could really be said,
very regrettably, that
your people are
among the many today
who must cope with
the real and harsh status
of “climate refugee.”
These are just
a few examples of
how climate change is
already taking its toll
on the Mexican people.
It’s real,
it’s intensifying,
it’s not abstract.
And please remember,
the number 1 cause
behind it all
is animal agriculture.
People have to be
informed fast.
However, the good news
is that the way to end
all this is truly
even more real and
quickly manifested than
the problem itself,
because each and every
person can do
something significant
to stop global warming.
And you know already
what that is, right?
Yes, the vegan diet.
And here I say “vegan”
rather than “vegetarian”
because we also need to
eliminate the eggs, dairy,
and fish industry.
These products are all
part of the inhumane
cruelty to the animals
and the greenhouse gas
production of
the livestock industry that
is destroying our planet.
We can inform the people
of all this.
The government should
inform people of all this
so that they can see that
their lives and the lives
of their loved ones
are on the line
due to climate change
and livestock production.
So, even if they
can only think
for themselves
and their loved ones,
they still need to take fast,
preventive actions now
to protect their children
and families by
turning to the vegan diet.
But you see,
we are not just victims:
we are also the rescuers
and part of the solution.
If we stop the meat eating,
we stop
the animal consumption.
We must all be vegan.
There’s no other solution,
I’m sorry.
And the more people do
so, the more it becomes
like a popular trend.
So in that way, it’s also
easier for people to think
beyond themselves when
they see the positive
results of changing.
The main thing is: switch
away from meat, eggs,
dairy, fish, meal by meal,
day by day, and
we will be living in a
vegan paradise in no time.
A top Irish
environmental economist,
Dr. Richard Tol
from the Economic
and Social Research Unit
of the Department
of Economics, stated
that if you are serious
about reducing emissions
in Ireland,
there is no future for beef
and dairy in the country.
He also said
that with Ireland failing
to meet the target set out
by the Kyoto agreement,
that penalties are expected
to run close to
one billion euros a year
in the lead-up to 2020.
What alternatives
do Irish farmers have
to dairy and beef?
We can turn to
organic farming,
and it’s easy, it’s simple,
cost and water effective,
and it’s ecologically,
economically sound.
It will absorb
even 40% of CO2
if all the tillable lands are
organically cultivated.
It could be more than that.
According to
the Kyoto agreement,
if in any country where
the farmers grow organic
fruit and vegetables,
then there would be
no need to pay subsidies.
Organic food and produce
are grown and handled
according to strict
sustainable procedures,
with limited
chemical input
or we could even use
no chemical input at all.
So, organic food,
also GM-free
(free of genetically
modified organisms).
Organic farming
preserves topsoil.
Chemically intensive
practices are a key factor
in the erosion of top soil.
Scientists found that soils
in organic plots were up
to 60% more stable and
are less prone to erosion.
So, over one-third of Irish rivers
are now polluted, mainly
due to farm runoff;
could be more than that,
but we want to try
to be conservative here.
Organic farming reduces
toxic farming runoff
and pollutants that
contaminate our water,
soil, and air as well.
So organic farming is
healthier for farm workers,
the surrounding communities
as well,
and for natural wildlife.
Now, the EPA
(Environmental
Protection Agency)
considers 60% of all
herbicides, weed killers,
or 90% of all fungicides –
that means mold killers –
and 30%
of all insecticides –
that means insect killers –
are potentially
cancer-causing
for humans and animals
of course.
Organic farming keeps
harmful chemicals
and pesticides out of
the food that we eat and
the beverage that we drink.
So, farmers may
apply for a grant
from the Department
of Agriculture, for up to
a maximum of €60,000.
So, organic sales
in Ireland have increased,
you see, by 82% already,
reaching a value
of 104 million in the year
up to July 2008.
Yes.
For Ireland to meet the
Kyoto agreement target,
they need to
plant millions of trees
so farmers can
use their land to do that,
and this will help
to cool the world also.
And forestry,
it also adds to the beauty
of the landscape,
and that’s good for
Ireland’s tourist industry.
We notice that in Africa
most people do not show
concern about the issue
of global warming.
They pinpoint Westerners
as responsible for
this calamity because of
the large scale
animal agriculture
practiced there.
What could you
tell Africans to let them
understand that the issue
is a common threat and,
therefore, it must be
a common concern for
all Earth’s inhabitants?
What is the advice
you would give us
to motivate them
to change their diet?
Well, I’m sorry
that global warming
does not spare anyone.
Each person is
responsible to do
their best in awakening
noble qualities
in themselves to
save the planet and,
of course, their lives and
the lives of their family.
Also, Africa has not been
spared the effects
of global warming.
As early as 1997, a
United Nations document
refers to desertification,
which came from people
removing the protective
mangrove trees on the
western coast of Africa.
The reason was
understandable:
they need wood for fires
and for home-building.
However, the trees’ loss
resulted in salt water
contamination of crops
and also a loss of
coastal biodiversity.
While it may be true
that other countries
in the world
are responsible
for larger releases
of greenhouse gases,
there are also situations
that are a direct cause
and effect within Africa.
Another situation that
has had drastic effects
within Africa is drought,
but the biggest
cause and effect is
on an individual level,
that is, meat consumption,
or I should say meat,
fish, or egg,
milk consumption.
This category of food,
meaning animal products,
is truly one of the biggest,
or I shall say the biggest
ever, contributor
of global warming.
The biggest contributor
to global warming is the
animal product industry.
In terms of drought,
you see, one serving of
beef on average requires
1,200 gallons of water
to produce, while
an entire vegan meal
takes only 98 gallons.
That is 12 times
as much water to
produce the same amount
of energy from food –
and in this I describe
only the physical situation.
Along with the physical
is the reason behind,
which is that
we must switch to
a more compassionate
way of living
in order to survive.
At the same time,
please remember that
global warming
is not about blame.
We all have a shared planet
and we have
shared responsibility, and
we all want it to be saved
for every one of us.
Just like in the human body,
if one area is hurt,
it will affect
the whole body as well.
So even if the injury
came to Africa from
another part of the world,
we should all fix it
because we want
the entire body
to be well again.
And that is very good
for us to have such
a noble intention,
helping to save the world
because every good deed
helps balance
the entire planet’s karma
(retribution) –
meaning the atmosphere,
the energy.
So that is the key,
to be veg and spread the
message of compassion,
to let people know that
they can really
make a difference; and
we each can through
the choices we make
in putting food
on our plate.
Please try to inform
your people that
peace and the survival of
our planet begin at home,
begin on our plate.
Thank you for accepting
to be here with us tonight
to share this
so important message.
I have two questions.
The first question:
According to you,
what will be the benefits
of organic farming
regarding the current
agricultural issues
in Africa such as
erosion, drought,
deforestation,
and infertile soil?
The second question:
What are the constraints
and benefits of such
agricultural practices?
Thank you.
Thank you.
Hallo, Dr. Tounou,
thank you. That’s
a very good question.
As you may realize
from your research that
the vegan diet is
the real key and is
the essence of the change
that is needed
for saving our planet.
Organic vegan is like
a great bonus because
organic growing methods
benefit not only
human health
but also the environment.
For example,
a study conducted in the
United States found that
organic farming
preserves topsoil and
keeps water bodies clean,
and if used worldwide,
would have the potential
to absorb and store
approximately 40%
of all present-day CO2
emissions each year.
This would be a direct
benefit to our Earth.
The other aspects of
vegan organic farming
that are beneficial
include things like
crop rotation, mulching,
and natural fertilizers.
Crop rotation means that
a field is planted
each season
with different crops.
This variety approach
helps keep the plants
healthy and also restores
fertility and nutrients
to the soil.
Other methods such as
mulching and even
a new method called
no-till organic farming
help retain moisture
and reduce soil erosion
considerably.
Deforestation is mostly
caused by animals’ feed
as forests are cleared
to plant crops are
for raising livestock,
while hundreds of
millions of people are
starving in the world.
So, in general,
vegan organic farming
follows a philosophy of
living in harmony with
nature and protection for
the planet and all beings.
The methods employed
support the natural balance
between farming
and the environment.
Over time,
the combination of this
care and practice through
the techniques available
can go a long way toward
restoring the balance
from problems that may
have arisen in the past.
Also, there are many
successful stories for
organic farming already
across the continent
of Africa.
For example, in the area
surrounding Cape Town,
South Africa, the
townships are growing
100% organic gardens,
with crops
that are sold locally.
A similar operation
has begun in Kenya.
And in Uganda, where
organic fertilizers were
recently introduced,
they are already seeing
success with the soil
and harvest –
on your own continent.
There are more and more,
just too many to list here.
So the benefits
are immense.
I highly encourage you
to pursue vegan organic
farming methods,
if at all possible.
Of course, it is possible;
everything is possible
when we want to
save our planet.
Everything is possible.
It has to be possible,
for our own survival.
You can bring manyfold
benefits in doing so,
and you can be one of the
growing success stories
as it becomes
more and more popular.
Regarding your efforts
to fight global warming,
you know that we need
a stronger involvement
from politicians.
Their involvement
is necessary.
However, we noticed
that it is not
their primary concern.
My question is:
What can we do?
Or in your opinion,
what can we do so that
politicians get
more involved in matters
concerning global warming,
environmental issues,
and in the fight
against global warming?
Should we send them all
to a university of
environmental sciences?
Hallo, Mr. Secretary.
You are correct.
It is best
if government leaders can
be part of the solution.
They can assist
in helping people to
understand why
it is so important to make
the change to the veg diet.
To approach
the political leaders,
you can first get together
with others of like mind.
Then you let the leaders
know that you and others
like yourself are very
interested in this subject.
Tell them you want to
save the planet, that’s it.
Write to
your government leaders
about the veg solution,
go and visit with them,
if that is possible.
For supporting materials,
you can ask
our Association members
to provide you
with the information
you might need.
From what we are
reading in the news,
it seems that more
African leaders are now
becoming interested in
halting climate change
and realizing the need
to act on global warming.
Sadly, global warming is
affecting African countries
in all the severest,
and some of
the most visible, ways.
The world’s second
largest freshwater lake,
Lake Victoria
in Eastern Africa, is now
being jeopardized due to
over-fishing, pollutants
and climate change,
which are interrelated
anyway.
Rivers and lakes
are drying up in Africa.
Tanzania’s
Mount Kilimanjaro’s
glaciers and ice
are almost all gone
and coral reefs are
dying, bleaching.
There are water crises
from Sierra Leone
to South Africa.
Zimbabwe, Somalia,
Mauritius, Mozambique,
and Sudan –
just to name a few –
are experiencing
worsened droughts that
make it difficult to
plant crops, thus
adding to food shortages
and prices rising.
Add to this,
desertification
and deforestation that
further degrade the land.
Increased temperatures
mean erratic rainfall –
either too little or
too much at a time -
so we have ravaging floods
that drown the crops and
fires that burn the forest.
Likewise in West Africa,
home to 43% of
the total population
of sub-Saharan Africa,
if you’re a farmer,
you already can feel that
the climate is in trouble.
There are more frequent
droughts, heat waves,
floods, storms,
frosts, freezes, and locusts
than before.
These impacts
of climate change
increase food insecurity
and the food crisis
in Africa.
There is also
increased risk of diseases
such as malaria because
the mosquitoes spread
to higher altitudes.
The United Nations
is afraid that hundreds
of millions of people
in Africa are at risk.
This is just a handful
of all the news reports
coming out about
global warming
in your land.
I’m sure there are more.
For leaders,
they are aware of
these grave problems
facing their countries.
Now, if the citizens
also support them,
remind them that
they’re concerned
and that this is
for their best interests,
then they will be even
more energized to
address climate change.
Then they will remember
that global warming is
the most important agenda,
that it’s their duty,
not only professionally,
but also personally,
because it affects
themselves and
their children as well.
So let us try our best
to help remind and
encourage our leaders
to do something.
Thank you, and Heaven
bless the majestic land
of Africa and preserve it.
I’ve learned
from Ayurveda that
we become gentler
and less violent
if we become vegetarians.
If all humans become
pure vegetarians,
could we prevent
global warming and
various disasters on Earth?
In addition,
wouldn’t it be a problem
for our ecosystem
if all humans become
vegetarians? Thank you.
Thank you.
Yes, Professor Jeong,
welcome.
To your first question,
if humans become
purely vegetarian,
we would not be able to
prevent global warming
at this time, because
it has already begun,
but we would be able to
stop it in its tracks in time
so that it won’t get worse
and that we don’t have
a planetary runaway crisis,
like what they call
the “irreversible point,”
the “point of no return.”
For the question about
whether it would be a
problem to our ecosystem
if all people
become vegetarian:
it is the opposite, madam.
The real problem
to our environment
is meat eating, the way
we are doing now.
All our planetary problems
including climate change,
food crisis, soil erosion,
pollution, etc.,
can be solved by turning
to the organic vegan diet.
We have all the evidence
pointing toward
this answer.
We have proof.
It’s proven
and it is like that.
We are now consuming
meat and experiencing
so many harmful effects.
It is
destroying our health,
damaging our environment,
endangering
the lives of our animal
co-inhabitants, killing
our noble human quality
and our physical existence.
According to
the United Nations report
“Livestock’s
Long Shadow,”
raising animals for food
is very detrimental
to the ecosystem.
Some examples as follows:
Livestock occupies the
single largest human-used
sector area of land.
Livestock is the cause
for loss of 70% of
previously forested land
in the Amazon.
Livestock is probably
the largest source
of water pollution
from any industry.
It causes dead zones,
erosion, sediment runoffs,
compact soils, etc.
Livestock may well be
the leading player
in the reduction of
biodiversity of our planet.
So why not just try to
make a change in the
opposite direction to see
if things will improve.
It will improve.
It will be better for sure.
If we walk away from
violence and hatred, we
will meet peace and love
awaiting at our destination.
If all humans became
vegan, it will become
a paradise on Earth.
We hope one day we will
experience that paradise
on Earth in our lifetime.