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‘Islands’ author spotlights global warming

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Friday, 10 October 2008 03:00
When human beings are part of the problem, where do you turn for the solution? With global warming, you start with education — of young adults. Problems of this magnitude did not occur overnight, and neither will solutions. So you teach young people things they can do to save our planet. That’s what 32-year-old Jacob Sackin does. A Jewish native of the Kansas City area who now lives in Boulder Creek, Calif., Sackin is a teacher by trade, having been an outdoor educator for nine years. He has also written and illustrated several children’s stories and is nearly finished with his second novel. His first novel, “Islands,” is a book for teens that is part futuristic, part archaeological and part mystery with the goal in mind of educating them on global warming and its effects. It is meant to show what could happen if we continue our current levels of fossil-fuel consumption in addition to wasting water and other natural resources. “I kind of see this as a worst-case-scenario type of book so young people will start thinking about these possibilities,” Sackin said in a telephone interview. “Even if they question it and challenge it, they get to research these things and decide for themselves if they believe it or not. … I taught reasoning and critical-thinking (college) courses, so I really liked using this book as a way of making people think about it and make up their own minds.” Sackin also created a study guide for the book, which teachers are using in classrooms. English teachers have students read the book at the same time science teachers are teaching climate change, invasive species and needed species — and then tying it all together. Outside looking in The novel is not preachy or heavy in any way. The basic premise is that some 100 to 150 years from now, global warming has nearly destroyed our planet, along with many of its species. Hundreds of thousands of people are living in a self-contained giant pyramid, never venturing outside because of the heat and destruction. They are unaware that others who survived are  living outside out of necessity — the poor who could not afford the luxury of the pyramid. Sackin said the pyramid is based on the Luxor Casino in Las Vegas, taken to the absolute max, but is the one thing in the book not meant to be taken too seriously. The book takes place in the Southwestern United States because, while spending time in Las Vegas and Phoenix, Sackin perceived a lot of waste in terms of water consumption and overdevelopment. Although both cities are experiencing a huge drought, they continue to develop golf courses and housing with lawns that must be watered. These green spaces are being irrigated by the Colorado River, which is draining at an alarming rate due to this usage and the drought. Promoting conservation Sackin is director of an outdoor school in California. Fifth- and sixth-graders come every week from various area schools and get to explore the Redwoods, organic gardens and little creatures that live under rocks, collect eggs from the school’s chickens, have campfires, etc. Many kids are from the inner city, where they rarely see any green space or animals other than domesticated ones. One of Sackin’s favorite activities is to get students to write about everything they have used in one day and trace it back to its source. For example, 60 students throwing away 10 pounds of food after a meal gets them to thinking that some of that food was grown in other countries and shipped here to the States. Now, it’s just waste. Thus they learn the principle of conservation. “Clearly, to me, the number one thing to do is conservation,” Sackin said. “My favorite statistic is that if you look at the resources we use in the U.S. and (if) everyone in the world was using the same amount of everything, we’d need three planet Earths in order to supply all the resources.” Conservation won’t be that hard, and can even be fun, Sackin contents. For example, his parents, Steve and Linda Sackin of Kansas City, Mo., teach Sunday school at Congregation Kol Ami. With the permission of the synagogue, her class pulled up a section of pavement in the parking lot, where they started a garden. “My parents didn’t know much about gardening. And when I started a garden at my school a couple of years ago, I didn’t know much about gardening, either. But just through trial and error with these students, they were able to produce dozens of tomatoes and dozens of basil plants from very little effort,” Sackin said. “They’re spending less than $100. Now people are coming out to harvest tomatoes on Sunday, and it was so easy for them to do this — 10 sixth-graders just on Sundays. So that just shows, if you think of all the grassland in Kansas City, where you could have urban gardens or just places where people are sharing little plots.” He said many people become so separated from these processes, they don’t even think about an apple coming from a tree, or lettuce coming from a seed. Children assume there’s an endless supply at the grocery store.’ Wrestling with issues Making these connections, learning from them and passing them on to others stems from Sackin’s Jewish background, he said. It instilled in him a sense of being culturally and religiously connected. In “Islands,” both of the main characters, one inside the pyramid and one on the outside, wrestle with the idea of God. “I created it so that in both families, there’s one character who really believes deeply and another who just doesn’t buy it and is struggling with it and they kind of argue a little bit about those things. “There’s that dialog that I had thought about from an early age that always gets through, everything about being Jewish — Sunday school, Passover and all the services — it always comes out in my writing, just that kind of conversation about belief and trying to understand it more.”|"By Marcia L. Horn

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