‘I wanted to walk in solidarity with the people I know at the sharp end of climate change’
Photo by Elizabeth Perry, damage in the Solomon Islands from Cyclone Pam
Elizabeth Perry, of the Anglican Alliance, was among a group of around 50 people who took part in the Pilgrimage2Paris in November last year in advance of the United Nations climate change talks.
”Getting caught up in a cyclone does perhaps concentrate the mind. I was in the Solomon Islands when Cyclone Pam ripped its way through last March. For me, it just meant experiencing violent wind and rain, disrupted travel, getting stranded overnight by rising water, having to wade through a river and (literally) walk the plank / fallen coconut palm because a bridge had been washed away. But for the people of the region it was another disaster from which they are still recovering.
Two days later I interviewed Tagolyn Kabekabe, the Anglican Alliance’s facilitator in the Pacific, about how climate change is affecting the region. She told me how they’re seeing changing rainfall patterns, more intense storms, rising sea levels and the salination of soil. It’s all having a huge impact – people lose crops, their water is affected and already people are having to migrate. Tagolyn told me how the Anglican Church is helping people adapt to climate change, for example introducing salt tolerant plants and planting mangroves to protect coastlines, but there’s only so much they can do - and they know it. “The biggest challenge for me”, Tagolyn said, “is when they (local people) ask the question, ‘are they going to help us control the sea coming up, and the unusual rainfall and all that?’” By they she means the people most responsible for climate change… the industrialized world… us. “[The] bottom line is we need help, and we need it now, and any pressure you can apply on politicians to respond to the urgency of the situation is appreciated”.
And so, in November I set out on the Pilgrimage 2 Paris, to “pray with my feet” and call on the leaders of the nations gathering for the UN climate talks to take bold and decisive action. I wanted to walk in solidarity with the people I know at the sharp end of climate change, not only in the Solomon Islands, but also in Vanuatu, Bangladesh, the Caribbean and Zambia.
So as I set out on my 200-mile journey, I already had a sense of being connected – but I am still completely blown away by how that awareness burgeoned during our pilgrimage.
First, of course, there were my fellow pilgrims – each with a story, each with a reason for taking part, each with a passion for our beautiful, fragile common home. Then there were all the people we met along the way: the school children who publicly led us in prayers of commitment, the local people, clergy and bishops who walked with us a while, and the many churches who provided hospitality and welcome all the way from London to Paris. All these people were part of the Pilgrimage 2 Paris too. What started as a stream at St Martin-in-the-Fields on November 13 steadily grew as we added them to our number and felt like a river when we arrived in Paris two weeks later.
But the sense of being part of something much bigger goes beyond even this. Prayer was at the heart of our pilgrimage, and it feels as if we were caught up in something there too. I have no idea how prayer works and I am not for a moment suggesting that my, or even our, prayers were responsible for anything that happened – but, for me, there were connections between some of the positive outcomes of the summit* and specific things I, and others, had been praying for. It feels like something was going on. Perhaps it’s that our prayers were part of the movement of the Spirit… that we were caught up in the Spirit’s breeze.
This experience of connectedness, of being part of something bigger, is the thing I treasure most from the pilgrimage. I always thought I would enjoy the pilgrimage; I never expected to enjoy it so much, to miss it so much, to be so blessed by it.
And now the journey continues. We have taken a huge step forward with the Paris climate deal, but the real outcome will depend on the steps we all (governments, cities, local communities, individuals) take next. We do not journey alone.
These were my thoughts on the outcome of the COP21 climate summit in Paris (written at the time):
It's not perfect... but it is a massive achievement - a breakthrough and, potentially, a turning point.
The more ambitious (and unexpected) temperature target clearly signals the end of the fossil fuel era and a transition to a low carbon energy future. It also shows that people at the sharp end of climate change were heard this time and that their voices made a difference in convicting all nations to take action (as this was one of my particular prayers, I am glad).
We now, at last, have a positive momentum. The nations came together and took action together, as a whole. The negotiations didn't break down into the usual factions of self interest; we saw new groupings emerge (especially the High Ambition Coalition) which have broken through the traditional rich/poor divide.
We have a five yearly review built in so action can be measured against current science and action scaled up.
So, for me, lots to be thankful for. We could have been looking at a post Copenhagen scenario, but we aren't. Yes, there are lots of problems, especially the gap between the stated ambition and the currently promised actions, but it feels to me like this is the beginning of a new era, where the world as a whole has finally "got it".
- Elizabeth Perry is the Anglican Alliance coordinator for Agents of Change, the distance learning development course. She will be speaking today about the pilgrimage at a fringe meeting of the General Synod.












