| |
|
O Lord, You have examined
me and know me...
I praise You,
for I am awesomely, wondrously made;
Your work is wonderful;
I know it very well.
My frame was not concealed from You
When I was shaped in a hidden place,
knit together in the recesses of the earth.
Your eyes saw my unformed limbs;
they were all recorded in Your book;
in due time they were formed,
to the very last one of them.
(Psalm 139:1, 14-16, Jewish Publication Society
Tanakh translation)
Our lives are a constant interchange of matter
and energy between our bodies and our environment.
How, then, can we hope to live healthy lives in
unhealthy surroundings? How can we expect that
what we do to the creation around us will not,
sooner or later, find its way into the creation
we carry within us?
Beyond self-interest, care for our neighbors
and our offspring also requires that we attend
to what we are putting into the air and water.
Environmental health is a matter of environmental
justice. Concentrated environmental hazards,
such as polluting factories, waste incinerators,
or toxic waste dumps are often sited near poor
and minority communities. Children are especially
vulnerable, because their bodies are rapidly developing
and because their play often brings them into
closer contact with environmental hazards.
Many environmental problems are of concern largely
because of their impact on human health
such as water pollution, air pollution and climate change, improper use of agricultural
chemicals, hazardous byproducts of economic
activity and degraded urban environments. Even wilderness areas and endangered
species are relevant to human health as
potential sources of life-saving medicines.
|