Releasing the Genius Releasing the Genius Magazine - Issue 2 | Page 9

I f you’ve followed the news at all recently, you have probably heard of Greta Thunberg. Born on January 3, 2003, in Stockholm, she has recently become so well known for her activism and inspiration that she is quickly becoming a favourite to win the Nobel Peace Prize. What many people don’t know is the many struggles that she has had to overcome in order to be so inspirational to people. Her desire to change the world began in 2011 when she first began to learn about climate change. She began by throwing down a challenge to her parents: lower the footprint of the family by becoming vegan and give up flying. For her mother, this meant giving up a career as an international opera singer. She has since credited their response to this challenge with giving her the hope that she might actually be able to make a difference. The recent trips she has made around the world, including Canada, echoes the young women who broke ground before her. Severn Cullis Suzuki was only 12 years old when she made a plea to the world to help stop ecological damage in Rio de Janeiro at the 1992 Earth Summit. Likewise, Autumn Peltier, a 15-year-old member of the Wikwemikong First Nation from Northern Ontario, attended the Children’s Climate Change Conference in Sweden in 2015 and addresses the United Nations regularly. These young women are disruptors. Greta is a disruptor. That is, by no means, a bad thing. The disruption takes two forms: the actions she is taking and the way she is responding to critics. Beginning in 2018, Thunberg began to present public speeches and stage school climate strikes. Though her parents did not like her missing school (nor did her teachers), she persisted and eventually changed their minds. Since that time, other students have joined in. After the 2018 Swedish general election, she transitioned to strike only on Fridays. Globally, this inspired others to join in. As of September 27, 2019, over six million people in over 4,500 locations begun to strike in a 150 countries. " One of the key reasons why Greta has become such an inspiration is that she has overcome her own disabilities to act in these ways. Diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome, she has managed to not only overcome it but has flipped it to her own advantage. She constantly challenges herself to speak up, even when doing so is difficult, and it makes the thing that she says and the actions that she takes all the more meaningful. In her own words, she considers Asperger’s to be her “superpower,” and while acknowledging that it has limited her in the past in some ways, she does not view it as an illness and does not allow it to hold her back anymore. HUMANITY FACES AN EXISTENTIAL CRISIS DUE TO THE CHANGING CLIMATE... " The way she responds to the people challenging her views, many of whom are attacking her either on her disabilities or as climate change deniers, is equally impressive. After she crossed the Atlantic, one critic said she was “deeply disturbed” to which she replied: "I am indeed ‘deeply disturbed’ about the fact that these hate and conspiracy campaigns are allowed to go on and on and on just because we children communicate and act on science. Where are the adults?" What Greta does, at its core, is take the ordinary and turn it into something extraordinary. A single student protesting outside of a school may not mean much, but when that single student affects what hundreds or thousands of other students are doing, suddenly it is a very different picture. What Greta is doing is the equivalent of metaphorically dropping a stone into a pond. That stone may not seem to do much, but the ripples that it creates in the waters will spread and eventually become waves. was meant to be a carbon-neutral way of crossing the ocean to reduce emissions. After the 15-day voyage, she attended the Climate Action Summit in New York put on by the United Nations. She also attended a UNICEF press conference on September 2019 where she and other children announced that official complaints had been made against nations that are not meeting their emission reduction targets as outlined in the Paris Agreement. Her message is simple to understand but not easy to execute, her main point being that it doesn’t matter if it is easy. It simply has to be done. Humanity faces an existential crisis due to the changing climate, that change will affect youth more than anyone else, and not enough is being done. Decision-makers must stop ignoring scientists, and the current goals outlined in the Paris Agreement are simply insufficient to stem the changes that are already occurring. The story of Greta is extraordinary, but it is not as unique as one might think. High-achieving children are born and are taking action every single day. The question is whether their parents, and the adult world in general, are willing to listen to what they have to say with enough of an open mind to take them seriously. When they do, it is surprising what profound sentiments these children can convey. Leadership is action and speech; it is not age. Many adults would do well to take that message to heart. Since Greta began her campaigns, droves of others have come to support her, including other students, politicians, and hundreds of scientists. For more information on Greta, the story of her family is told in the 2018 book Scenes from the Heart. In August 2019 she sailed across the Atlantic, from the United Kingdom to New York City in the United States, on a yacht powered by solar panels. This 9