Once upon a time, in the vast lands in Kenya, Africa. There lives a brave, intelligent, and outspoken warrior named Wangari Maathai. She wants to raise her empire. She did everything to persuade her community and gave them reasons to conserve nature.
When she became the Chairman of the National Council of Women of Kenya, she realized that humans' countless potentials, especially women. So, she introduced community-based tree planting, and she built the Green Belt Movement. Their mission is to plant trees to conserve nature and to help to reduce poverty. She became the first African woman to win the Nobel Peace Award in 2004. She opens the eyes of the human race and gives the reasons to conserve nature.
Nature Is All It Takes
She and many more conservationists and environmentalists share these simple reasons to conserve nature to attain tremendous results.
Longer Human Life- It is the invisible power that increases the human lifeline. It is the source of everything; losing, destruction, and nature is death to the human race.
For the Animals, Trees, and Plants Sake- Humans are not the only inhabitant of this world. Animals, plants, trees, and more are as important as human life. Without them, humans will not exist. Conserving nature provides home and shelter to these living organisms that the human race needs to survive.
World Balance- Humans consume and benefit from nature and in exchange, conserving and protecting the natural environment is the key to attain world balance and prevent natural disasters and destruction.
It only needs one person, one action, to start having changed. It may take a long time to achieve, but these changes are significant factors for better and healthy living for everyone. The more humans use and consume from nature, the more they should repay.
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