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God and mammals: In Kenya, religious leaders pray to thwart poaching

African religious leaders toured Kenya's Nairobi National Park to learn about the urgent threat to elephants and rhinos from poaching ? and to share ideas about using their moral clout to stop it.

By Mike Pflanz,?Correspondent / September 23, 2012

On Sept. 20 religious leaders of different faiths pray around a pile of charred elephant ivory at a site in Nairobi National Park where Kenyan officials burned hundreds of ivory tusks in 1989 to draw attention to the slaughter of elephants.

Ben Curtis/AP

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Just before sunset on a low hill in Nairobi?s safari park, some 50 religious leaders stood in a solemn circle around a pit containing the charred remains of 13 tons of elephant ivory burnt to keep it out of poachers? hands.?

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Led first by an Anglican Christian, then by a Muslim imam, a trio of Hindu devotees and a Buddhist, prayers were offered, each asking for forgiveness for the damage that humans are inflicting on wildlife and the environment.?

The quiet moment under the reddening sky followed a three-day gathering of African religious leaders, organized by conservationists keen to explain to these community trendsetters the reality of the current crisis in wildlife protection on the Continent. The hope is that they then return home and pass the message on to their congregations.?

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Together, the 50 men and women here for the meeting reach more than 180 million followers, according to the Alliance of Religions and Conservation, a British-based group that helped arrange the event.?

?Protection of the environment and its creatures is I think one of the major points of convergence between all religions,? says Dekila Chungyalpa, a Buddhist and director of Sacred Earth, a new World Wildlife Fund program to forge closer connections between religions and conservationists.??We as conservationists can frame the discussion on stopping poaching, for example, in legal and ecological terms.?But these religious leaders can frame it in a moral context, and talk about the religious duty to act to protect the environment. As an individual in a congregation, it then becomes unavoidable that you must act.??

The illegal wildlife trade is now the world?s fifth-largest illicit transnational activity, after counterfeiting and the illegal trafficking of drugs, people, and oil, according to Global Financial Integrity in Washington.?

It is worth as much as $10 billion a year, and surging demand for elephant ivory in China and Thailand and rhino horn in Vietnam made 2011 the deadliest for more than two decades for these two iconic species.?

There were more large-scale ivory seizures in Africa and in destination markets last year than since records began more than 20 years ago. In South Africa alone, 448 rhinos were poached in 2011, up from just 13 four years before.?

?These statistics, they are just shocking, truly few of us had any idea,? said Rev. Denis Kumbo, a Presbyterian pastor from Buea in western Cameroon.?
One recent afternoon, The Monitor joined him, another Presbyterian from Kenya, and a Muslim from Uganda on a three-hour safari drive around Nairobi National Park.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/BCKsOaeFxec/God-and-mammals-In-Kenya-religious-leaders-pray-to-thwart-poaching

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