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From YouTube: Farah - Art and Climate Change | #AWClimateAssembly
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B
I
think
art
has
the
power
to
speak
to
people
in
a
way
that
makes
sense
to
them
in
a
way
that
can
emotionally
resonate
in
a
way
that
data
and
facts
and
sort
of
these
abstract
ideas
of
of
you
know
what
carbon
is
in
the
atmosphere.
You
know
it,
it
can
do
something
that
that
those
data
sets
can't
do
it
can
make
it
make
sense
to
people.
B
I
think,
and
that's
what's
really
important
in
changing
behavior
and
changing
the
narrative
of
climate
change
and
in
creating
creating
a
real
public
and
political
will
for
action.
A
Thank
you.
Could
you
give
some
examples
about
about
how
you've
seen
this
work
in
action.
B
Yeah,
so
on
a
small
scale,
we
have
things
like
may
project
gardens,
which
is
a
great
organization
that
works
with
young
people
in
south
london.
But
it's
they
also
work
with
with
unaccompanied
refugee
minors
and
they
use
gardening
and
the
ideas
of
permaculture,
but
also
talk
about
that
using
hip-hop
and
music
to
to
sort
of
to
teach
the
refugee
children
english
to
engage
young
people
with
their
with
nature
and
to
make
it
all
accessible
to
them.
B
B
They
they
keep
going.
They
have
like
eco
schools,
they
they're
currently
fundraising
to
to
support
their
work.
They
sell
their
their
songs
and
their
music.
They
do
partnerships
with
with
other
organizations
like
cultural
organizations,
but
also
environmental
ones,
so
yeah,
it's
it's
all
about
increasing
access
and
really
making
permaculture
and
nature
resonate
in
people's
everyday
lives.
A
Thank
you.
Could
you
share
a
bit
about
how
art
can
improve
racial
and
social
justice,
especially
around
climate
change,.
B
Yeah
sure
so,
there's
a
few
really
great
examples,
and
I
think
that
the
the
thing
that
we
always
have
to
do
is
when
we're
talking
about
how
racial
and
social
justice
connect
to
climate
changes,
acknowledge
the
history
of
that,
and
you
know
the
inequalities
that
still
exist,
not
just
globally.
You
know,
we
know
that
that
the
countries
and
the
communities
that
contribute
the
least
to
climate
change
are
the
ones
who
are
most
affected
by
the
impacts,
but
I
think
that
that
can
seem
very
far
away.
B
It
can
seem
very
like
over
there
and
it's
important
to
remember
that
that
happens
in
the
uk.
Here
too,
more
deprived
communities
are
far
more
likely
to
be
subject
to
illegal
air
pollution
levels
to
be
dealing
with.
You
know
industrial
collapse
and
coastal
erosion
and
lack
of
access
to
space
to
nature
and
there's
some
really
great
examples
of
artists
who
are
trying
to
bring
those
those
histories
and
those
connections
to
the
forefront
of
of
of
what
of
the
conversation.
B
Basically,
and
so
the
you
might
have
seen
the
national
trust
report
on
the
history
of
their
their
their
homes,
and
they
worked
in
partnership
with
colonial
countryside,
which
is
a
project
that
works
with
primary
school
children.
To
talk
about
the
the
cultural
artifacts
in
these
national
trust
homes
and
they
connect
those
to
the
histories
of
the
countryside
in
the
uk
and
how
we
conceive
of
that.
B
But
also,
then,
what
that
means
for
them
as
children
as
children,
who
might
be
descendants
of
the
people
who,
who
were
you
know,
colonized
and
yeah,
make
it
like
create
a
different
kind
of
story
around
those
objects
and
and
open
up
again
access,
which
is
something
that's
quite
often
denied.
B
B
Sorry
called
worm,
art
and
ecology,
and
she
did
an
an
exhibition
in
actually
in
rotterdam
the
week
before
lockdown,
and
that
was
all
about
making
again
making
those
racial
inequalities
and
those
histories
really
clear,
but
also
making
connections
with
the
networks
of
indigenous
peoples
around
the
world
who
are
still
working
towards
climate
justice
and
what
it
means
for
communities
who
are
still
being
impacted
and
she
created
a
cultural
climate,
visuals
library
or
climate
knowledge
as
library,
sorry,
which
is
a
whole
sort
of
heap
of
resources
and
the
sort
of
last
one
that
I'll
mention
is
drill.
B
Minister,
who
some
of
you
might
have
seen
his
is
running
for
london
mayor
and
he
has.
He
has
dedicated
a
song,
he's
also
a
drill
artist,
so
he's
dedicated
a
song
to
ella
kissy
deborah
who
was
a
young
girl
who
died
because
of
asthma
complications
due
to
the
illegal
levels
of
air
pollution
in
south
london,
so
yeah
they're.
All
artists,
who
are
doing
a
lot
to
make
you
know
make
this
make
climate
change
really
every
day,
instead
of
something
that's
huge
and
overwhelming
and
and
impossible.