This post is a call to action for Honolulu's museums to work together on community resilience to climate impacts, and to provide an example for peers in other cities, especially in the 100 Resilient Cities.
When the
world around us changes profoundly, culture and community are our best
resources as we work to adapt and thrive. The recent flooding in the islands has brought as
many stories of generous assistance and sacrifice as they have of tragedy. This
is common in a disaster: the most prevalent summary of the disaster experience is how
community came together in unanticipated ways.
We need not
wait for a crisis to connect more deeply with community; there are ways to prepare
our communities so that they experience less damage, and the people feel their
common strength and more agency in creating the safe future they deserve. Resilience
planning, particularly with the support of cultural institutions, is a valuable
way to do that. If we leave it to government alone, then we will not be able to
shape the result as much as we desire. Certainly, the work is too wide-ranging,
too detailed, too important to leave to one authority. We must share the
authority and responsibility.
I urge
Hawaii’s charitable institutions, particularly those with an emphasis on arts
and humanities, and science and technology, to take the lead in hosting resilience
discussions around the state. Our institutions are more trusted than government,
other nonprofits, and even credible news outlets (Dillenschneider, 2017). Our
sites are familiar and welcoming locations for important, potentially challenging
discussions. Our staff and collections have many of the intellectual resources and
professional connections to inform these discussions and to educate
participants on the science and history that can guide us in finding new
solutions. Museums and similar institutions can take the lead in bringing
together emergency and public office planners, and residents so we can
co-create a stronger, thriving future.
(c) Sarah Sutton 2018 |
We find culture
in our family and neighborly traditions and habits, in our community history
and present-day efforts, and in the histories and stories of the land, sea, and
people. We find community wherever we look on our islands. I commend the Bishop Museum for its resilience planning session during March, and the Resilient Oahu
staff for its willingness to work with cultural institutions to contribute to the
island’s resilience plan. Let’s expand that work.
Strawbery Banke Museum is facilitating community discussion on response to nuisance tides
and sea level rise in Portsmouth, NH, where its neighbors also own and worry
about historic structures. The Annapolis Historical Commission, MD, is leading
the country in addressing nuisance tides and sea level rise in historic
economic districts.
What
conversations does your community
need around resilience? How can your institution make these happen? Use the
materials provided, for free, on the websites of the National Institution
Standards and Technology (complex), and the National Park Service (much more
accessible) to plan your resilience study and response. Ask your local cultural
institution to host and help design those talks with government and emergency
planners, college and university staff, business owners, architects and
landscape designers, scientists and heritage practitioners. Work with the City
& County of Honolulu Office on Climate Change, Resilience and
Sustainability.
This is our
home; if we wish it to shelter and nurture us, we must help it to do so.
Sarah Sutton is principal of Sustainable
Museums, a Waialua-based consultancy helping museums, zoos, aquariums, gardens,
and historic sites become more environmentally sustainable and work with their
communities to become more resilient to the changing climate. She spoke at the Hawaii Museums Association’s conference May 4th and will be speaking on July 11th in ‘Iolani Palace’s Nā Mo'olelo
Lecture Series , both in Honolulu.
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