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BGA in the News: Berkeley Voice 1998-04
Berkeley Voice
Butterflies Symbolize Peace for Berkeley Earth
Day '98
Organizer Alan Moore wants the butterfly to become the leading
symbol for millennium activities
1998-04-23
As a metaphor for springtime, nothing compares to the butterfly taking
off on a flower-scented breeze. For everyone who's felt like a caterpillar
in a cocoon these last months, the release of thousands of butterflies
promises to be a high point at the Earth Day celebration in Berkeley this
Saturday, April 25.
Students at several area elementary and middle schools have been nurturing
about 2,000 chrysalises for almost a month, and will release their butterflies
at noon, just after the parade, at the beginning of ceremonies at Martin
Luther King Jr. Park.
"The mayor feels that this is an amazing learning tool for children
all over the Bay Area and she's delighted to take part in it," says
Tamlyn Bright, Mayor Shirley Dean's neighborhoods liaison.
During the release, Earth First activist Julia Butterfly, who says her
life was transformed by an encounter with a butterfly, will address the
crowd long-distance from the 200-foot-high Humboldt County old-growth
redwood tree she has resided in for the past four months.
Beyond the obvious springtime symbolism, butterflies have long been a
metaphor for expanding environmental consciousness. During the transformation
inside the cocoon, the caterpillar's body at first rejects the emerging
new butterfly cells, fighting them off as an immune system threat. But
eventually they take over, replacing a pudgy worm with a beautiful creature
that flies. Those who incorporate the butterfly into peace activities
and events fancy that humanity could undergo a similar transformation
-- one "cell," or awakened person, at a time -- until the old
society and consciousness is overwhelmed by the new.
The Mayor and City Council have declared April 22-30 Butterfly Berkeley
Week and have adopted an Earth Proclamation, which expresses the hope
that the year 2000 will be the turning point for "a better world
based on equality, justice and a sustainable planet." In addition,
Mayor Dean will attend a special butterfly release by over 250 students
at the Willard School on Thursday, April 30.
Alan Moore, head of the Butterfly Gardeners' Association, a Berkeley-based
group that has sponsored such events throughout the Bay Area, wants the
butterfly to become the leading symbol for millennium activities.
He has joined with many peace, environmental, and social justice groups
to make butterfly gardening and launching a part of their events, and has
worked to bring the practice into women's shelters, homes for seniors, and
prisons.
In the last few years, Moore has urged President Clinton to start a butterfly
garden on White House grounds, met Pete Seeger at last summer's World Peace
Festival in Armenia, New York, and launched butterflies at several events
commemorating the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Moore, 52, says he has lived on a shoestring for over a year. He
came to the West Coast for a series of environmental conferences and in
January, decided to stay.
"In the six weeks I was in California I just fell in love with it."
On February 9 he was sworn in to the Berkeley Peace and Justice Commission,
and has been staying at the Berkeley Unitarian Fellowship. "Ever since
I got to California I've had people put me up in all the different cities
I went to," he says.
Since he started this work, Moore says, he has spent untold thousands of
dollars of his own money donating butterfly farming kits, which cost $35-$50
for about a dozen caterpillars.
"Within a year, [butterfly farming] should be in every school
in the area," he says. "I'd like to find a backer, because we've
got programs for nonviolence that absolutely turn kids around in a day.
There's just something about the delicacy of butterflies and the caring
for them. Teachers have reported that when kids did these projects, they
were cooperating like they never did before, and fights were down."
Moore owned a landscaping business in Allentown, Pennsylvania four years
ago when he first started organizing butterfly
launches. "Basically, the idea just flooded into me," he says.
"It took on a life of its own." But after four years, his business
was faltering and he wasn't making any money.
Last year, his wife gave him an ultimatum: "If I didn't make any money
by my birthday she was going to leave me."
She left him.
"And then six days later the United Nations invited me to do the opening
ceremony for the Earth Summit," Moore says.
"I hate deadlines."
Which is too bad, because Moore says he's writing a book.
by Jeffrey Obser
Berkeley Voice
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