For more information about this project, contact Dr. Hope Elizabeth May, here.
December 1, 2023: Ginkgo saplings that sprouted from seeds of trees that have survived the bombing of Hiroshima are put under the care of Karin Johnson, Director of the Greenhouse at Central Michigan University.
July 22, 2024: The saplings replanted and being cared for by the Cora di Brazzà Foundation.
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In 2013, an important year for peace and justice history, Dr. Hope Elizabeth May, a professor in the Department of Philosophy, Religion and Anthropology at Central Michigan University, traveled to Hiroshima, Japan, and began learning about its peace culture, thanks to former Hiroshima Mayor Akiba Tadatoshi and Steve Leeper. Dr. May wrote a short post on Hiroshima's peace culture for the Peace Palace Library in December 2013 which can be read here.
Dr. May's encounter with the aforementioned ambassadors of Hiroshima's Peace Culture inspired her to organize the Hiroshima-Nagasaki poster exhibition and accompanying testimony of Hibakusha (A-Bomb survivors) first in 2014, and then in 2020-2021, when she directed the Center for International Ethics (CIE) at Central Michigan Univeristy. Dr. May's work in the space of "Hiroshima Peace Culture" caused her to learn about Green Legacy Hiroshima (GLH), a beautiful initiative spearheaded by the creative and nurturing soul of Dr. Nassrine Azimi and her international team. GLH works with international partners by sending them seeds from trees that survived the bombing of Hiroshima. The international partners then nurture and grow these seeds. This living project is a moving and powerful way of educating people about the peace culture of Hiroshima.
Dr. May began the process of acquiring the seeds from GLH in 2020. Sadly, the CIE was unexpectedly eliminated in 2021. In the midst of several growing projects, including the one with GLH, Dr. May created the Cora di Brazzà Foundation as a vehicle to continue these projects. As we know, Covid hit in March 2020, and this halted the seed dispatches of GLH.
Finally, with the lifting of Covid-era restrictions, GLH sent its first batch of Ginkgo seeds to Dr. May in late fall of 2022. Dr. May reached out to Central Michigan University student Eric Urbaniak of Central Michigan University's Central Sustainability to partner with the Cora di Brazzà Foundation in the GLH project. Eric (currently a graduate student at the University of Vermont as of this writing in August 2024) worked with the City of Mt. Pleasant who agreed to plant the seeds at Nelson Park in Mt. Pleasant, Michigan. The original plan was for planting to occur on Earth Day in 2024. However, the seeds sent in 2022 failed to germinate. Determined, Dr. May acquired a second batch of seeds from GLH in late November 2023. This second batch of Ginkgo seeds was planted in December 2023 and, thanks to the care provided by Karin Johnson at the Central Michigan University Greenhouse, these seeds have germinated. A small team is devoted to making sure that they grow large enough to hopefully be planted on/near Earth Day (April 22) in 2025. In late June 2024, the second batch of Gingko seeds were removed from the CMU Greenhouse so that they can developed heartiness needed for the Michigan climate. They are now being cared for by the Cora di Brazzà Foundation
The photos that you see on this page are of this second batch of seeds. You can also watch the videos below filmed in 2023 and 2024. The 2023 video shows Eric Urbaniak with the first batch of seeds. By the time the second batch arrived and was planted, Eric was beginning graduate studies at the University of Vermont.
This project teaches many lessons including one about time, care and nurture. One lesson learned is that it takes a long time and persistent care from a network of committed people to grow value in the world.
Listen to a radio piece by CMU alum Teresa Homsi from April 2024. BTW, Teresa co-created Central Sustainability with Eric Urbaniak.
Video #1:
May 5, 2023: Initial unboxing and planting of Gingko seeds. Eric Urbaniak (now a Central Michigan University alum) explains the project. This batch of seeds did not germinate, as explained in video #2 to the rlgith. Filmed and edited by Ava Brewer (also a Central Michigan University alum now)
Video #2:
December 1, 2023: With a new batch of seeds, and Eric now graduated, the torch is passed to the next generation of Central Sustainability students. Here, Clare LeBlanc unboxes the second batch of seeds sent by GLH. These saplings are then brought to Karin Johnson at the CMU Greenhouse shortly thereafter.