Lets make the world wild again Kristine Tompkins

Transcriber: Ivana Korom
Reviewer: Krystian Aparta

My siblings and I grew up
on our great-grandfather’s farm

in California.

It was a landscape
of our family and our home.

When it was clear
that nobody in our generation

wanted to take on
the heavy burden of ranching,

the ranch was sold to a neighbor.

The anchor of our lives was cut,

and we felt adrift
in the absence of that land.

For the first time, I came to understand

that something valuable
can be best understood

not by its presence,

but by its absence.

It was impossible to know then

just how powerful the absence
of those things we love

would have an impact far into my future.

For 23 years, my working life
was with Yvon Chouinard.

I started when he was designing
and manufacturing

technical rock and ice climbing equipment

in a tin shed near
the railroad tracks in Ventura.

And when Yvon decided
to start making clothes for climbers

and call this business Patagonia,

I became one of the first six employees,

later becoming CEO

and helping build a company

where creating the best products
and doing good by the world

was more than just a tagline.

Doug Tompkins, who would become
my husband years later,

was an old friend and climbing
companion of Yvon’s

and also an entrepreneur.

He cofounded The North Face
and Esprit company.

All three of these businesses

were created by people
who had grown up through the ’60s,

shaped by the civil rights, antiwar,
feminist and peace movements.

And those values
were picked up in those years

and carried throughout
the values of these companies.

By the end of the 1980s,

Doug decided to leave business altogether

and commit the last third of his life
to what he called

“paying his rent
for living on the planet.”

At nearly the same time, when I hit 40,

I was ready to do something
completely new with my life.

The day after retiring
from the Patagonia company,

I flew 6,000 miles to Patagonia the place

and joined Doug as he started
what was the first conservation project

of that third of his life.

There we were, refugees
from the corporate world,

holed up in a cabin on the coast
in southern Chile,

surrounded by primaeval rainforest

where alerce trees
can live for thousands of years.

We were in the middle
of a great wilderness

that forms one of the only two gaps
in the Pan-American highway,

between Fairbanks, Alaska, and Cape Horn.

A radical change to our daily lives

spurred on as we had begun to recognize

how beauty and diversity
were being destroyed

pretty much everywhere.

The last wild protected places on earth

were still wild

mostly because the relentless
front lines of development

simply hadn’t arrived there yet.

Doug and I were in one
of the most remote parts on earth,

and still around the edges
of Pumalín Park,

our first conservation effort,

industrial aquaculture
was growing like a malignancy.

Before too long, other threats
arrived to the Patagonia region.

Gold mining, dam projects
on pristine rivers

and other growing conflicts.

The vibration of stampeding
economic growth worldwide

could be heard even in the highest
latitudes of the Southern Cone.

I know that progress is viewed,
generally, in very positive terms,

as some sort of hopeful evolution.

But from where we sat,

we saw the dark side of industrial growth.

And when industrial worldviews
are applied to natural systems

that support all life,

we begin to treat the Earth

as a factory that produces all the things
that we think we need.

As we’re all painfully aware,

the consequences of that worldview
are destructive to human welfare,

our climate systems and to wildlife.

Doug called it the price of progress.

That’s how we saw things,

and we wanted to be a part
of the resistance,

pushing up against all of those trends.

The idea of buying private land
and then donating it

to create national parks

isn’t really new.

Anyone who has ever enjoyed the views
of Teton National Park in Wyoming

or camped in Acadia National Park in Maine

has benefited from this big idea.

Through our family foundation,

we began to acquire wildlife habitat
in Chile and Argentina.

Being believers in conservation biology,

we were going for big, wild and connected.

Areas that were pristine, in some cases,

and others that would need time to heal,

that needed to be rewild.

Eventually, we bought
more than two million acres

from willing sellers,

assembling them into privately
managed protected areas,

while building park infrastructure
as camp grounds and trails

for future use by the general public.

All were welcome.

Our goal was to donate all of this land
in the form of new national parks.

You might describe this
as a kind of capitalist jujitsu move.

We deployed private wealth
from our business lives

and deployed it to protect nature

from being devoured by the hand
of the global economy.

It sounded good,

but in the early ’90s in Chile,

where wildlands philanthropy,
which is what we called it,

was completely unknown,

we faced tremendous suspicion,

and from many quarters,
downright hostility.

Over time, largely by doing
what we said we were doing,

we began to win people over.

Over the last 27 years,

we’ve permanently protected
nearly 15 million acres

of temperate rainforest,

Patagonian step grasslands,

coastal areas,

freshwater wetlands,

and created 13 new national parks.

All comprised of our land donations

and federal lands
adjoining those territories.

After Doug’s death
following a kayaking accident

four years ago,

the power of absence hit home again.

But we at Tompkins Conservation
leaned in to our loss

and accelerated our efforts.

Among them, in 2018,

creating new marine national parks
covering roughly 25 million acres

in the southern Atlantic Ocean.

No commercial fishing
or extraction of any kind.

In 2019, we finalized
the largest private land gift in history,

when our last million acres
of conservation land in Chile

passed to the government.

A public-private partnership

that created five new national parks
and expanded three others.

This ended up being
an area larger than Switzerland.

All of our projects
are the results of partnerships.

First and foremost with the governments
of Chile and Argentina.

And this requires leadership

who understands the value of protecting
the jewels of their countries,

not just for today,
but long into the future.

Partnerships with like-minded
conservation philanthropists as well

played a role in everything we’ve done.

Fifteen years ago,

we asked ourselves,

“Beyond protecting landscape,

what do we really have to do
to create fully functioning ecosystems?”

And we began to ask ourselves,
wherever we were working,

who’s missing,

what species had disappeared

or whose numbers were low and fragile.

We also had to ask,

“How do we eliminate the very reason

that these species went extinct
in the first place?”

What seems so obvious now

was a complete thunderbolt for us.

And it changed the nature
of everything we do,

completely.

Unless all the members of the community
are present and flourishing,

it’s impossible for us to leave behind
fully functioning ecosystems.

Since then, we’ve successfully
reintroduced several native species

to the Iberá Wetlands:

giant anteaters,

pampas deer,

peccaries

and finally, one of the most difficult,
the green-winged macaws,

who’ve gone missing
for over 100 years in that ecosystem.

And today, they’re back,
flying free, dispensing seeds,

playing out their lives as they should be.

The capstone of these efforts in Iberá

is to return the apex carnivores
to their rightful place.

Jaguars on the land,
giant otters in the water.

Several years of trial and error
produced young cubs

who will be released

for the first time in over half a century

into Iberá wetlands,

and now, the 1.7-million-acre Iberá Park
will provide enough space

for recovering jaguar populations
with low risk of conflict

with neighboring ranchers.

Our rewilding projects in Chile

are gaining ground on low numbers
of several key species

in the Patagonia region.

The huemul deer
that is truly nearly extinct,

the lesser rheas

and building the puma
and fox populations back up.

You know, the power
of the absent can’t help us

if it just leads to nostalgia or despair.

To the contrary,

it’s only useful if it motivates us

toward working to bring back
what’s gone missing.

Of course, the first step in rewilding

is to be able to imagine
that it’s possible in the first place.

That wildlife abundance
recorded in journals

aren’t just stories
from some old dusty books.

Can you imagine that?

Do you believe the world
could be more beautiful,

more equitable?

I do.

Because I’ve seen it.

Here’s an example.

When we purchased
one of the largest ranches

in Chile and Patagonia, in 2004,

it looked like this.

For a century, this land
had been overgrazed by livestock,

like most grasslands around the world.

Soil erosion was rampant,

hundreds of miles of fencing

kept wildlife and its flow corralled.

And that was with the little
wildlife that was left.

The local mountain lions and foxes
had been persecuted for decades,

leaving their numbers very low.

Today, those lands are the 763,000-acre
Patagonian National Park,

and it looks like this.

And Arcelio, the former gaucho,

whose job was to first find and kill
mountain lions in the years past,

today is the head tracker
for the park’s wildlife team,

and his story captures the imagination
of people around the world.

What is possible.

I share these thoughts and images with you
not for self-congratulations,

but to make a simple point

and propose an urgent challenge.

If the question is survival,

survival of life’s diversity
and human dignity

and healthy human communities,

then the answer must include
rewilding the Earth.

As much and as quickly as possible.

Everyone has a role to play in this,

but especially those of us with privilege,

with political power,

wealth,

where, let’s face it,
for better, for worse,

that’s where the chess game
of our future is played out.

And this gets to the core of the question.

Are we prepared to do what it takes
to change the end of this story?

The changes the world has made
in the past few months

to stop the spread of COVID-19

are so promising to me,

because it shows we can join forces
under desperate circumstances.

What we’re going through now
could be a precursor

to the broader potential damage
as a result of the climate crisis.

But without warning,

globally, we’re learning to work together
in ways we could never have imagined.

Having watched young people
from around the world

rising up and going out into the streets

to remind us of our culpability
and chastising us for our inaction

are the ones who really inspire me.

I know, you’ve heard all of this before.

But if there was ever a moment
to awaken to the reality

that everything is connected
to everything else,

it’s right now.

Every human life
is affected by the actions

of every other human life
around the globe.

And the fate of humanity
is tied to the health of the planet.

We have a common destiny.

We can flourish

or we can suffer …

But we’re going to be doing it together.

So here’s the truth.

We’re so far past the point
when individual action is an elective.

In my opinion, it’s a moral imperative

that every single one of us

steps up to reimagine
our place in the circle of life.

Not in the center,
but as part of the whole.

We need to remember

that what we do
reflects who we choose to be.

Let’s create a civilization

that honors the intrinsic
value of all life.

No matter who you are,

no matter what you have to work with,

get out of bed every single morning,

and do something that has nothing
to do with yourself,

but rather having everything to do
with those things you love.

With those things you know to be true.

Be someone who imagines human progress

to be something that moves us
toward wholeness.

Toward health.

Toward human dignity.

And always,

and forever,

wild beauty.

Thank you.

抄写员:Ivana Korom
审稿人:Krystian Aparta

我和我的兄弟姐妹
在我们曾祖父

位于加利福尼亚的农场长大。


是我们家和我们家的风景。

当很明显
我们这一代人都

不想
承担牧场的重任时

,牧场被卖给了邻居。

我们生命的锚被切断了,

没有那片土地,我们感到漂泊。

我第一次明白

,对有价值的东西
最好的理解

不是通过它的存在,

而是通过它的缺席。

那时不可能知道

我们所爱的那些东西的缺失

会对我的未来产生多大的影响。

23 年来,我的工作生涯
一直伴随着 Yvon Chouinard。

当他在文图拉铁轨附近的一个锡棚里设计
和制造

技术攀岩和攀冰设备时,我就开始了

当 Yvon
决定开始为登山者制作服装

并将这家公司称为 Patagonia 时,

我成为了前六名员工之一,

后来成为首席执行官

并帮助建立了一家公司,该公司

创造最好的产品
和为世界做好事

不仅仅是一个标语 .

多年后成为我丈夫的 Doug Tompkins

是 Yvon 的老朋友和登山
伙伴,

同时也是一名企业家。

他共同创立了 The North Face
和 Esprit 公司。

所有这三个企业

都是由
60 年代成长起来的人创建的,

受民权运动、反战
运动、女权主义运动和和平运动的影响。

这些价值观
在那些年被拾起,

并贯穿
于这些公司的价值观中。

到 1980 年代末,

Doug 决定完全放弃生意

,将他生命的最后三分之一投入
到他所谓的


为生活在这个星球上付房租”。

几乎同时,当我 40 岁时,

我已经准备好用
我的生活做一些全新的事情了。 从巴塔哥尼亚公司

退休后的第二天

我飞了 6000 英里到巴塔哥尼亚这个地方,

并加入了道格,因为他开始

他生命中三分之一的第一个保护项目。

我们是
来自企业界的难民,

躲在智利南部海岸的一间小屋里

周围环绕着原始雨林

,alerce 树木可以在那里
生存数千年。

我们身处
一片广阔的荒野

之中,它是泛美高速公路上仅有的两个缺口
之一,

位于费尔班克斯、阿拉斯加和合恩角之间。

当我们开始认识

到美丽和多样性几乎无处不
在被破坏时,我们的日常生活发生了根本性的变化

地球上最后的野生保护

区仍然是野生的,

主要是因为无情
的开发前线

根本还没有到达那里。

Doug 和我
在地球上最偏远的地方之一

,仍然在
Pumalín 公园的边缘,

这是我们的第一次保护工作,

工业
水产养殖正在像恶性肿瘤一样增长。

不久之后,其他威胁
来到了巴塔哥尼亚地区。

金矿开采、
原始河流上的水坝项目

和其他日益严重的冲突。

即使在
南锥体的最高纬度地区,也能听到全球经济快速增长的震动。

我知道,总体而言,进展被视为非常积极的进展,是

某种充满希望的演变。

但从我们所处的位置,

我们看到了工业增长的阴暗面。

当工业
世界观应用于

支持所有生命的自然系统时,

我们开始将地球

视为生产我们认为需要的所有东西的工厂

正如我们都痛苦地意识到的那样,

这种世界观的后果
对人类福利、

我们的气候系统和野生动物都是破坏性的。

道格称之为进步的代价。

这就是我们看待事情的方式

,我们想成为抵抗的一部分

反对所有这些趋势。

购买私人土地
然后将其捐赠

以创建国家公园

的想法并不新鲜。

任何曾经欣赏
过怀俄明州提顿国家公园美景

或在缅因州阿卡迪亚国家公园露营的人

都从这个伟大的想法中受益。

通过我们的家庭基金会,

我们开始在智利和阿根廷获得野生动物栖息地

作为保护生物学的信徒,

我们追求的是大的、狂野的和相互联系的。

在某些情况下,原始区域

和其他需要时间愈合的区域

需要重新野化。

最终,我们从自愿卖家那里购买
了超过 200 万英亩的土地

,将

它们组装成私人
管理的保护区,

同时将公园基础设施建设
为露营地和小径

,以供公众将来使用。

所有人都受到了欢迎。

我们的目标是以
新的国家公园的形式捐赠所有这些土地。

您可以将其描述
为一种资本主义的柔术动作。

我们
从我们的商业生活中部署私人财富,

并部署它来保护自然

不被
全球经济之手吞噬。

这听起来不错,

但在 90 年代初期,在智利

,我们称之为荒地慈善事业

完全不为人知,

我们面临着巨大的怀疑,

以及来自许多方面的
彻头彻尾的敌意。

随着时间的推移,主要是通过
我们所说的我们正在做的事情,

我们开始赢得人们的支持。

在过去的 27 年中,

我们永久保护了
近 1500 万英亩

的温带雨林、

巴塔哥尼亚阶梯草原、

沿海地区、

淡水湿地,

并新建了 13 个国家公园。

所有这些都包括我们捐赠的土地


毗邻这些领土的联邦土地。 四年前


格因皮划艇事故而去世后

,缺席的力量再次袭来。

但我们在汤普金斯保护协会
接受了我们的损失

并加快了我们的努力。

其中,2018 年在南大西洋

新建了
占地约 2500 万英亩的海洋国家公园

禁止商业捕鱼
或任何形式的开采。

2019 年,我们完成
了历史上最大的私人土地捐赠

,我们
在智利的最后一百万英亩保护土地

移交给了政府。

建立了五个新的国家公园
并扩大了另外三个国家公园的公私合作伙伴关系。

这最终成为
一个比瑞士更大的区域。

我们所有的项目
都是合作的成果。

首先
是智利和阿根廷政府。

这需要领导层

了解保护
其国家珍宝的价值,

不仅是为了今天,而且是为了
长远的未来。

与志同道合的
保护慈善家的伙伴关系

也在我们所做的一切中发挥了作用。

15 年前,

我们问自己:

“除了保护景观,

我们还需要做些什么
来创造功能齐全的生态系统?”

我们开始问自己,
无论我们在哪里工作,

谁失踪了,

什么物种消失了,

或者它们的数量少而脆弱。

我们还不得不问:

“我们如何

消除这些物种一开始就灭绝
的原因?”

现在看起来如此明显的事情

对我们来说是一个彻底的霹雳。

它彻底改变了
我们所做的一切的本质

除非社区的所有成员
都在场并蓬勃发展,

否则我们不可能留下
功能齐全的生态系统。

从那时起,我们成功地
将几种本土物种重新引入

了伊比利亚湿地:

巨型食蚁兽、

潘帕斯鹿、

野猪

,最后是最困难
的一种绿翅金刚鹦鹉,

它们
在那个生态系统中失踪了 100 多年 .

而今天,他们又回来了,
自由翱翔,分发种子,

过着他们应有的生活。

在伊比利亚,这些努力的顶峰

是让顶级食肉动物
回到他们应有的位置。

陆地上的美洲虎,
水中的巨型水獭。

经过几年的反复试验,

崽将

在半个多世纪以来首次被释放

到伊比利亚湿地

,现在,占地 170 万英亩的伊比利亚公园
将为恢复美洲虎种群提供足够的空间


并且冲突风险较低

与邻近的牧场主。

我们在智利的野化项目在巴塔哥尼亚地区的几个关键物种

数量较少的情况下取得进展

真正濒临灭绝的

Huemul 鹿,较小的美洲鸵

和建立美洲狮
和狐狸种群的备份。

要知道,缺席的力量

如果只是导致怀旧或绝望,就无法帮助我们。

相反,

它只有在激励我们

努力
找回丢失的东西时才有用。

当然,重新野化的第一步

是首先能够
想象它是可能的。

日记中记录的丰富的野生动物

不仅仅是
一些旧书上的故事。

你能想象吗?

你相信世界
会更美丽、

更公平吗?

我做。

因为我见过。

这是一个例子。

当我们

在 2004 年购买智利和巴塔哥尼亚最大的牧场之一时,

它看起来像这样。

一个世纪以来,这片土地
一直被牲畜过度放牧,

就像世界上大多数草原一样。

土壤侵蚀十分猖獗,

数百英里的栅栏

将野生动物及其水流圈住。

那就是剩下的小
野生动物。

当地的山狮和狐狸
已经被迫害了几十年,

数量非常少。

今天,这些土地是占地 763,000 英亩的
巴塔哥尼亚国家公园

,它看起来像这样。

而前高乔人 Arcelio,过去几年

的工作是首先寻找并杀死
山狮,

如今
是公园野生动物团队的头部追踪者

,他的故事吸引
了世界各地人们的想象力。

什么是可能的。

我与您分享这些想法和图像
不是为了自我祝贺,

而是为了提出一个简单的观点

并提出一个紧迫的挑战。

如果问题是

生存、生命多样性
和人类尊严的生存

以及健康的人类社区,

那么答案必须包括
重新野化地球。

尽可能多和尽可能快。

每个人都可以在其中发挥作用,

但尤其是我们这些享有特权、

拥有政治权力、

财富的人

,让我们面对现实吧
,无论好坏,

这就是
我们未来棋局的下场。

这就是问题的核心。

我们准备好做些什么
来改变这个故事的结局了吗?

在过去的几个月里

,世界为阻止 COVID-19 的传播而做出的改变

对我来说是如此有希望,

因为它表明我们可以
在绝望的情况下联合起来。

我们现在所经历的
可能是气候危机

造成的更广泛潜在
损害的前兆。

但毫无预兆,

在全球范围内,我们正在学习以
我们从未想象过的方式合作。

看到
来自世界各地的年轻人

站起来走上

街头提醒我们我们的罪责,
并因为我们的无所作为而责备我们,

这些才是真正激励我的人。

我知道,你以前听过这一切。

但是,如果有片刻
可以唤醒现实

,即一切都
与其他一切相连,

那就是现在。

每个人的生命
都受到全球其他每个人的行为的影响

人类的命运
与地球的健康息息相关。

我们有着共同的命运。

我们可以繁荣

,也可以受苦……

但我们将一起做。

所以这是事实。

我们已经远远超过
了个人行动是选修课的地步。

在我看来,

我们每个人都必须

站出来重新构想
我们在生活圈子中的位置,这是道德上的当务之急。

不是在中心,
而是作为整体的一部分。

我们需要记住

,我们所做的事情
反映了我们选择成为什么样的人。

让我们创造

一种尊重
所有生命的内在价值的文明。

不管你是谁,

不管你要和什么一起工作,

每天早上起床

,做一些
与你自己无关的事情,

而是
与你所爱的事情有关。

有了那些你知道是真实的事情。

做一个想象人类

进步是推动我们
走向完整的人。

走向健康。

走向人的尊严。

永远

,永远,

狂野的美。

谢谢你。