LEADERS
FARWIZA FARHAN
36 · Defending an Ecosystem
BY JANE GOODALL
When I began, everyone said, “You can’t do it all. You have got to focus. You can’t do education and forestry and agriculture and education—you’ve got to choose.” But what’s the point of educating a young woman if she goes back to her village and dies because of a lack of sanitation? It’s all interconnected. We need to solve for these problems at the same time—and it’s clear Farwiza Farhan has taken this truth to heart.
Forests like those in the Leuser Ecosystem are one of the great lungs of the world, absorbing CO₂ from the atmosphere and storing it in their leaves and trunks and the forest soils. And if these forests are cut down, then that means all that CO₂ is released back into an already burdened atmosphere, into the greenhouse gases that are blanketing the world and trapping the heat of the sun. Defending the ecosystem from industry, from development, from poachers, as Farwiza and her fellow activists are doing, is essential work. And that work and the work of other like-minded young people will make a difference to the future of our world.
Goodall is a conservationist, a U.N. Messenger of Peace, and the founder of the Jane Goodall Institute
FRANCIA MÁRQUEZ MINA
40 · Forging the Future
BY CARLOS ALVARADO QUESADA
Protecting the environment and the communities that depend on it. Working with and for the most vulnerable. Fighting for real equality. This is what Colombian Vice President Francia Márquez Mina stands for.
In her own words, she is not an ornament or a political symbol. Francia is a woman of action and a leader who aspires to drive positive change. She knows, literally, how to walk the talk, as this winner of the 2018 Goldman Environmental Prize did in her fight against illegal gold mining.
The Afro-American, Indigenous, and rural communities in Colombia have in her a champion—as do those across Latin
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