French
 documentary 『The Mermaids´ Tears: Oceans of Plastic』 takes the viewer 
into the 『plastic soup』 that our global seas have become. In particular,
 the film focuses on the pollution that is affecting countless marine 
animals. 
In the Netherlands, for example, scientists who were 
looking into the decline of the nation’s fulmar bird discovered plastic 
in 95% of the deceased birds’ stomachs, while in California, USA, 
dolphins and whales have been found to have died in extreme agony, with 
their digestive tracts completely blocked by plastic debris. 
The
 phrase 『mermaid tears』 refers to the small pellets of plastic 
resembling fish eggs or even smaller that have been spilled in the 
transport of raw plastic materials, or have been broken down as granules
 of waste over the years. 
With every square kilometer of ocean 
now containing an average of 74,000 pieces of plastic, these so-called 
mermaid’s tears are nearly impossible to clean up. 
Directed by 
Sandrine Fevdel of France, the film’s thoughtful look at the destructive
 effects of plastic pollution has earned it numerous awards, including 
Best Environmental Film at the Prague Festival and the Greek Public 
Television Broadcasting Award at the Thessaloniki Documentary Festival 
2010.  
Our heartfelt thanks, Ms. Feydel for this documentary, 
which makes clear the plight of marine animals in the face of human 
contamination of the oceans. May we all move rapidly to reverse these 
harmful effects and restore the health of our planet and oceans. 
Ever-concerned
 for the balance of life on Earth, Supreme Master Ching Hai has often 
spoken of ways that humanity can show more care for the beings that 
depend on our actions for their survival, as during a May 2008 
videoconference in South Korea. 
Supreme Master Ching Hai:
 In many places there are already bans on the use of plastic bags. So I 
think that’s a very good start, and maybe we should impose a little 
stricter ban on these harmful substances. 
Maybe we can use a carton instead, something more disposable, something more eco-friendly. And then we have to change. 
The root of the problem is the cause of global warming, and that root is our unkindness to our co-inhabitants.
So,
 in order to solve the problem that we are facing right now, we have to 
reverse our actions. We have to be kind to our co-inhabitants. Instead 
of killing them, massacring them, sacrificing them, we have to take care
 of them. 
Just become vegetarian, refuse all the animal  
products, then nobody will raise animals anymore, nobody will kill them 
anymore. Then we stop the physical harmful effect of animal stock 
raising. 
 http://www.viadeCOuvertes.fr/pages/fr/reference.php?id=86  http://www.javafilms.fr/spip.php?article268 http://www.indiewire.com/article/eyes_takes_thessaloniki_doc_fests_top_prize/#