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In this issue we present people who, by dint of character and spirit, undertook campaigns to save small parts of the rest of Creation.

 

 

Photo by Kevin Weinstein

 

 

 
Editor's Note

Spring 2002

Debra Shore, Editor

Everyday Heroes

These days the people universally venerated as heroes are the firefighters and policemen who, by dint of character and training, throw themselves into mortal danger to care for others. Their altruism, duty, and courage are inarguably heroic.

But I find I don’t have to look as far as that for heroes. In this issue we present people who, by dint of character and spirit, undertook campaigns to save small parts of the rest of Creation. In doing so, perhaps they too are saving the world.

 

I speak, for instance, of a Kane County fellow known to his friends as Jim Phillips and to thousands more as "The Fox." (See our tribute.) When he witnessed the other creatures of this world being harmed by the thoughtless acts of men, he took it upon himself to speak out and act up.

Before the Clean Water Act, before the Clean Air Act, Jim Phillips captured the attention of polluters (and the public) by turning his ire into satire and skewering selfishness with wit. His deeds were legendary but, until his death last October at age 70, few knew his name.

Martha Carver is another local hero moved to act from indignation. Campaigning from her keyboard, Martha took on the online auction house eBay and won. Martha hadn’t planned to start a campaign, but she was alarmed at what she saw and cared enough to do something about it.

Young Jean-Luc Mosley and Cora Thiele (shown above) are heroes in my eyes, along with their compatriots (see our feature) and hundreds more like them throughout Chicago Wilderness. I say heroic because these kids are cultivating the capacity to love other creatures, converting natural wonder to advocacy and care. A generosity of the heart is a heroism that is accessible to every one of us.

Edward O. Wilson, the renowned entomologist, writes in The Future of Life: "A conservation ethic is that which aims to pass on to future generations the best part of the nonhuman world. To know this world is to gain a proprietary attachment to it. To know it well is to love and take responsibility for it."

Let us celebrate joy and wonder. Let us remember that they lead to passion and love. Without them, we are lost. With them, we are whole. We are human. Happy Earth Day, Mother Nature. May our lives deserve you!

Debra Shore may be reached at editor@chicagowildernessmag.org.

 


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