Earth Day was celebrated in Shanghai over the weekend at
Shanghai Zoo. The annual international celebration raises public
awareness about the environment.
Participants from both home and abroad set up 12 ethnic booths,
do-it-yourself areas and a stage.
The ethnic booths were set up as villages representing different
countries. China, Japan, South Korea, Canada, France, the
Philippines, Scandinavian nations and the United States were among
those represented. Each village represented its culture and what
each country was doing to stop pollution.
Inside China's booth, students from the Shanghai Rainbow Bridge
International School built a three-story monastery with more than
100 empty milk cartons and named it Jing'an Temple.
Within the DIY areas, children and their parents were taught to
make bracelets, earrings, and shuttlecocks with used paper and
plastics.
"The Earth is everything, we need to protect our natural
resources for our children," said Janice Sigrist, the event
organizer, also the principle of Rainbow Bridge International
School.
Earth Day was launched in the United States in the 1970s. So far
Earth Day is celebrated in more than 141 countries and regions in
the world. The Chinese government has organized public activities
since the 1990s.
(Shanghai Daily April 24, 2006)