Operation Noah film highlights why climate change is a faith issue
Christian charity Operation Noah has launched an animated film designed to help Christians around the world recognise the human cost of climate change – particularly for women and children.
According to the charity, while most adults in the UK think that climate change is real and caused primarily by human activity, many Christians don't yet see this as a faith issue. Among theologically conservative Christians in particular, recent polling indicates that concern for the future impact of environmental issues is taken less seriously than in other parts of the church.
Operation Noah's film Sālote, developed in partnership with the World Day of Prayer, tells the story of Sālote, a seven-year old girl who is already experiencing the impacts of climate change in her South Pacific island home. The film is inspired by real-life accounts of the effects of present-day climate change, which hit the poor and vulnerable, living in sensitive parts of the world like low-lying islands, the hardest.
UN figures indicate that women and children are 14 times more likely than men to die or be injured during extreme weather events such as cyclones, which are projected to increase significantly as global average temperatures rise.
Operation Noah outreach campaigner Stephen Edwards said: 'When it comes to climate change, there's often a disconnect between head and heart. For many Christians today, the prevailing stories of climate change are dominated by impersonal statistics and complex weather patterns. So for many of us, it can feel difficult to see what this stuff has to do with loving our neighbour. Through this brief first-person story, we hope more Christians will gain a clearer picture of the human impact and moral urgency of climate change, which remains one of the most profound injustices in our world today.'
The charity's chief executive Nicky Bull said: 'Women, children and the poor make up the vast majority of those already bearing the consequences of climate change today, and for low-lying island nations, climate change increasingly threatens the lives and livelihoods of those least responsible for today's climate crisis. On this most pressing injustice, the Church today can, and must, make its moral voice heard.'
Sālote is a free resource and is available to watch on YouTube and Operation Noah's website, with an activity pack, factsheet and colouring-in pages.