Article 6CH41 Saved by seaweed: nuns and Native women heal polluted New York waters using kelp

Saved by seaweed: nuns and Native women heal polluted New York waters using kelp

by
Casey Kleczek with photographs by Cameron Judith P
from Environment | The Guardian on (#6CH41)

The sisters and a group of women from a local Indigenous tribe started a kelp farm in the hopes of cleaning up the pollution in their shared backyard

Early on a January morning, a dozen nuns hopped on a Zoom call and waited patiently for their turn to speak softly, sweetly to plants.

One of the sisters sang a song; another played the flute; several recited poetry and prayers. The intended audience of their kind words were dozens of kelp seedlings, which had a big task: grow big and healthy enough to be planted in the waters off the shores of Long Island, New York.

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