Arts & Culture as Modicum to Climate Awareness & Action Highlighted as PM Kakar Resonates

Islamabad - (Connect Pakistan): The Climate-Change Challenges ‘Arts Crafts & Techno Exposition’, conceived, initiated, and organized by the Centre for Public-Cultural Diplomacy (CPCD), Islamabad, held at the PNCA Art Gallery mid-Nov, was chosen by the Ministry of Climate Change & Environment Coordination and supported by National Heritage & Culture Div. and, to pleasant surprise of CPCD, it became a major segment of the Pakistan Pavilion at UN Summit COP-28, in Dubai, 30 Nov-13 Dec. 2023. Earlier, the weeklong Exposition at Pnca with captivating artworks, crafts & techno demos/workshops by budding talents and university students, showcasing poignant manifestations on climate preservation, nature conservation and reduction of plastic usage, at both Inauguration and Closing Ceremonies, was graced by high dignitaries including Dean of Dip. Corps and ASEAN and SAARC Group Heads and EU Missions and applauded as a mega success. They welcomed the creation of an Endowment Fund for the disadvantaged artists. The spirituality and thinking that is inherent in a great cause and went into the making of climate-change related arts & crafts exposition at a cultural hub like Dubai indeed called for high appreciation and appraisal as expressed by many dignitaries, patrons & aspirants including Pak Prime Minister. While speaking to the press & media about the success story of Pak Pavilion & COP-28 Climate Action, CPCD Chairman and a former veteran Pakistan career diplomat, Ambassador Salahuddin Choudhry, reiterated that the foremost necessity for adoption or adaptation toward mitigation of climate crises is to go all-out setting a positive mindset at grass-root level and developing the needed culture of rehashed lifestyle, fully motivated to understand, respect & love the Nature & Habitat of our mother-planet. This is where “Love thyself & Love Thy Nature” as the theme of the CPCD Climate Exposition so well fitted in and adapted to the whole occasion! In his firm view, awareness or readiness to accept the significance & fortitude of Nature – before anything, be it about funding, be it in terms of any kind of projects initiation or novel solutions – must precede among the youth in particular doing things correctly and justice to the implementation of new initiatives, scientific or technological. Here creativity – artistic or scientific both of which are part of cultural pursuits – surely becomes the mainstay. That’s why man’s passion & inspiration through creative manifestation is the key to all human endeavours and development activities. Often, side by side, they affect the creative mind in spirituality, mysticism & sufism to secure climactic gaps & impacts in human life by dint of science & technology. Interestingly, and almost as Amb. Choudhry’s reverberation, Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar also called upon various stakeholders, including scholars, architects, poets, and literary people, to contribute towards the global efforts of addressing the climate change issue by raising their voices in their articles, sermons, addresses, and poetry. According to him, the science is there to guide us, lead us and we talk about trillions of dollars, etc, but “this is where I feel something is missing as the opposite of science, and that is arts”, where is the aesthetic part to climate change, where’s the emotional investment with climate change; well, we do have an aspiration to have 2-3 trillion dollars of investment to promote the implementation part of climate change, but there are billions of souls who need to invest emotionally in realization of goals…and that is the bit of ‘missing link’….missing link in our poetry… missing from our folklore, missing from our music, missing from our rituals, missing from our languages; all it needs is an inspiration, a thought where lies the emotional part or the missing link. Are we thinking on that side? It should be advocated by the activists, by the civil society, NGOs, by scholars, and eventually by the govts. Nobody is against structured approach, but “we human beings want fun, we want colour, we want festivity; let’s all become committed climate change global citizens; we have to have religion associated with climate change and with diversified faith groups, with diverse ethnic groups, with diverse linguistic groups – all of us moving towards our commitment to climate change”. In this context, ‘Living Indus’ is an umbrella initiative aimed at restoring the ecological health of the Indus within the boundaries of Pakistan, which was most vulnerable to climate change. “And we are here to collaborate and give voice to our rivers. The Indus River needs a voice, and we are here to give that voice. The Indus feeds us, and if we do not take care of it, it will not be there to take care of us”, he remarked. He said, Pakistan launched ‘Recharge Pakistan’, which was the first concrete step towards the Living Indus. “This flagship project with an international climate finance of near

Arts & Culture as Modicum to Climate Awareness & Action Highlighted as PM Kakar Resonates