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What do the following people
have in common: author James Michner, former President Jimmy
Carter, actress Whoopi Goldberg, and food company executive
John Tyson?
The answer is that they, along with dozens of other celebrities,
have joined with singer Don Henley from the Eagles to save
Walden Woods. "But what," you may be wondering, "is so special
about Walden Woods?"
Walden Pond is where Henry David Thoreau, 151 years ago
in the woods near Concord, Massachusetts, began working on
a book that was destined to change the world. WALDEN chronicles
the two years and two months that Thoreau lived there in near
isolation while pondering man's relationship to nature. The
book has since been translated into every major language and
many people describe it as one of America's greatest literary
achievements.
The conservation part of the book is so powerful that, as
Don Henley puts it, "Thoreau is considered the guiding hand
behind the modern conservation movement." The pond that inspired
the book recently faced a serious problem. The same pristine
beauty that made Walden Woods so attractive to Thoreau also
made it attractive to developers. In the 1980s, a New York
developer proposed building a three-story office building
there, accompanied by a parking lot for more than 500 cars.
Other developers followed with plans for condominiums. To
those who valued Thoreau and his work, it seemed that a living
symbol of the American conservation movement was about to
be lost forever.
In 1989, however, a happy coincidence occurred. Don Henley
happened to have CNN turned on and caught a story about the
plight of Walden Woods. The story moved him so much that he
traveled to Concord to learn more. What he learned there was
that to save Walden
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Woods, people would need to raise money to buy the land from
the developers.
Henley formed a non profit organization and began recruiting
people to help raise the money. "The response was wonderful,"
Henley says. "Since 1990, we've raised in excess of $15 million."
He and his entertainer friends raised much of the money through
concerts, and additional money came from foundations and the
government.
The Walden Woods Project was able to buy the threatened
land from the developers and today Walden Woods houses the
new Thoreau Institute. "We want to take Thoreau's teachings
as the foundation of our work," explains Henley, "but we intend
to go much further than that. We want to teach environmental
science and environmental philosophy."
One of the institute's principal efforts will be teaching
the educators who will be teaching conservation in America's
classrooms. Henley worries that without such education, the
future of life on this planet could be in doubt. Even with
our present consumption and population levels, every life
sustaining system, whether oceans or atmosphere or soil, is
in decline. We haven't succeeded in accommodating our current
levels of population yet, as he says, "The world's population
is growing by about 100 million people a year. That's the
equivalent of a New York City each month, or an entire Mexico
each year."
Henley pins his hopes for the future on education and expects
that the Thoreau Institute will play a role. If you'd like
to know more, send $21.95 for the book HEAVEN IS UNDER OUR
FEET, an anthology of conservation essays. The address is:
Walden Woods Project,, 18 Tremont Street, Suite 522, Boston,
MA 02108. All profits will go to the Walden Woods Project.
Or call 1 800 554-3569.
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