Down to Earth

"Nothing can be Wealthier than Saving the Humanity," by Rohullah Hassani, 16, Quetta, Pakistan


Every year, Earth Day is celebrated on April 22 and citizens are called upon to do their part in protecting the environment, to promote and participate in “green living” and to celebrate our natural resources.


Conducted in affiliation with the Library of Congress Center for the Book and the Center for Environmental Literacy at Saint Mary’s College of California, the annual River of Words contest – which celebrates both National Poetry Month and Earth Day – is the largest youth poetry and art competition in the world, recognizing educational leadership in environmental literacy. Ten remarkable young poets and artists – ranging in age from 7 to 16 – and more than a dozen national finalists will be honored at the 17th annual awards on Monday, April 23, at 7 p.m. in the Library’s Montpelier Room.


Co-founded by former U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Hass and Pamela Michael, who now directs the Center for Environmental Literacy at Saint Mary’s, the goal of the contest is to “help children fall in love with the earth.”


Category I (Kindergarten – second grade) Grand Prize winner Blakely Berryhill, 7, from Vestavia Hills, Ala., writes in her poem, “The Guards”:


The sun guards the daytime treasure,

while the moon stands watch

over heaven’s darkness.

The stars help the moon

until the puffy white

clouds come back.


"Relaxing on Water," by Kristina Yu, 6, Suwanee, Ga.


11-year-old Julia Dixon of Washington, D.C., winner of the Anacostia Watershed Prize, laments urban sprawl in her poem, “A Birdseye View”:


As we feast upon dying species

And blame sharks for it all

The taxes we pay

Going into nuclear plants

Instead of schools


The artwork and poems of all the winners are available for viewing and reading at the River of Words website. May they inspire you to “Mobilize the Earth.”


 

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Published on April 19, 2012 06:16
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