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Language of Water: Ancient Techniques and Community Stories for a Water Secure Future

By Minni Jain and Philip Franses

$23.95

The Language of Water: Ancient Techniques and Community Stories for a Water Secure Future

The Language of Water addresses climate change and the global water crisis by shifting the existing paradigms around our relationship to water with powerful stories and tangible techniques from communities worldwide who are reviving ancient water holding methods, inviting every human being into a new consciousness around our most precious resource.

“‘Water’ and ‘survival’ are pretty much the same thing, so it’s no wonder that local communities, facing record drought and heat, are taking matters into their own hands. These are stirring stories of the recovery of time-honored techniques that will be desperately important as the climate crisis keeps building.” —Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature

Going beyond simply addressing climate change, The Language of Water addresses how to actively change the climate by learning from communities around the world and their traditional relationships with water. With powerful stories demonstrating tangible, successful water-holding techniques, this book extends an invitation to us all: can we keep the world in balance by learning to speak the language of our most precious resource?

Authors Minni Jain and Philip Franses of The Flow Partnership draw from decades of experience with community-led management of floods and droughts in India, Africa, the United States, Europe, the United Kingdom, and other regions of the world to demonstrate, again and again, how rejuvenated groundwater can cool the atmosphere, revive local economies, restore food security, store carbon, and rebalance our planet. This timely book offers new clarity about the actions that can be taken, individually and collectively, to address our climate challenges. In an era when many villages and cities are overdrawing water from aquifers, relying on desalination for drinking water, and breaking the relationship between humans and the water cycle, this crucial work presents a vision for renewal. 

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$23.95

Description

In this practical storybook and How To manual for addressing extreme weather and climate change, authors Minni Jain and Philip Franses of The Flow Partnership draw from decades of experience with community-led management of floods and droughts using simple, low-cost traditional methods to hold the rain, and recharge the land. They aim to replenish the world’s water bank by empowering local collective action through landscape regeneration skills and educational models that can be replicated throughout the world. Their case studies—drawn from Colombia, India, Burkina Faso, Zimbabwe, the United States, the United Kingdom, and beyond—demonstrate how a rejuvenated groundwater supply can cool the atmosphere, revive local economies, restore local food sources, and allow women and children greater access to education.

The Language of Water is a message of hope for everyone invested in the future of this planet, from the urban dweller who turns on the tap without thinking twice to rural dwellers whose entire livelihood, health, and well-being can be transformed by speaking the language of water. In an era when many villages and cities are overdrawing from aquifers, directing water from floods into the sea, relying on desalination for drinking water, and breaking the relationship between humans and the water cycle, this crucial work argues that human survival will not be ensured by new, complicated hydrologic engineering and technologies, but by remembering how to speak the language of water through reviving indigenous knowledge. With ancient methods like leaky log dams and rainwater harvesting using diversion and water holding structures, we can intercept, slow, store, and filter our water, collectively slowing global warming in the process.

Everyone understands that without water there is no life, yet many are disconnected from their local watersheds and feel helpless to address the mounting ecological crises of our planet. But once we better understand the climate crisis through the language of water, we can take the effective steps to bring the earth back into balance again. The Language of Water gives us a glimmer of hope that we really can resolve our most pressing climate challenges by bringing back water—together.

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