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This article appeared in the November 16, 2020 edition of the Monitor Daily.

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A tree (still) grows in Kenya

Thomas Mukoya/Reuters
Parklands area chief Evans Omulubi stands with environmental activists Elizabeth Wathuti, Phyllis Wamaitha, and Caroline Wambui as they hold placards to save a century-old fig tree from being cut down to pave way for a highway in Nairobi, Kenya, on Nov. 11, 2020.
Amelia Newcomb
Senior editor

In the perennial contest between trees and the built environment, . But in Nairobi, Kenya, last week, a century-old fig tree held its ground in a face-off with a massive new highway project. After a vocal campaign by environmentalists, President Uhuru Kenyatta decreed that the tree鈥檚 graceful canopy, some four stories tall, will continue to offer local balm while the highway is redirected toward a new route.

The outcome recognizes the practical impact of trees, particularly mature ones. Those include cooling overheated neighborhoods and mitigating pollution. Beyond that, as the Monitor noted in a report on urban forestry last year, crime can decline and property values rise in areas where tree cover expands, as happened in Baltimore, Maryland. Or residents turn far less frequently to prescription antidepressants, as happened in London.聽

That speaks to the building blocks of community, to 鈥渢he sense of rest鈥 that one Boston leader referenced after progress this summer in rethinking a road that in an underserved area. Indeed, pop culture and literature, secular and religious, are replete with reminders of what trees teach humans about resilience and stewardship. In Nairobi, President Kenyatta called the fig tree a 鈥渂eacon of Kenya鈥檚 cultural and ecological heritage.鈥 Kenyan environmentalist Elizabeth Wathuti it was a symbol of the city鈥檚 aspirations 鈥 a beacon of hope.


This article appeared in the November 16, 2020 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 11/16 edition
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