
Merry Lea Phone: (260) 799-5869
E-mail: lukeag@goshen.edu
My road to becoming an environmental educator was fraught with opportunities both taken and forgone, roads less traveled, and rewards measured by the quality of relationships and the richness of memories. I grew up in the suburbs of Minneapolis but matured in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area and working at YMCA Camp DuNord.
In the 1980s I worked at a camp in northern Minnesota and realized the power of nature to transform individuals. Many kids in that camp had learning challenges that they carried within themselves, and some had challenges at home or school. In the quiet of the woods (deserts, swamps, mountains, prairies) we can hear ourselves think. In the woods we leave behind what Sigurd Olson called the steel, and I call the big noise. The northwoods was quiet enough so that those young children could concentrate on themselves, and often make progress on controlling their own lives. The camp in the northwoods was a rich, stimulating environment --- a place of personal growth in part because it is where nature runs a bit wild.
I have learned that nearly all children, and any adults who stop to listen, will find life and wonderful secrets in the wild places. The place can be as divers as the Malaysian sub-tropics or summertime Indiana where life explodes, to the deserts of the Grand Canyon and winter landscape of Minnesota where life is subtle and surprising.
I have a BS in Biology (1982) and M.Ed. in Outdoor Education (1991) that are rooted in the Minnesota north. From 1985-1993 I directed two university outdoor programs and dedicated myself to blending adventure with an awe and knowledge of nature. I pursued my PhD. in Forest Policy in Morgantown, West Virginia where I worked on Russian protected areas and the repercussions of the fall of the USSR. I met and married Janine in 1995 and we moved to Flagstaff, AZ to grow our family (Charlie 1998 and Sam 2002). There I doggedly achieved tenure as a professor in Environmental Sciences, Forestry and Political Science.
Now (2008) I am at Merry Lea ELC to work with graduate students on their own journeys. But our goals are the same. To change the world so that nature is respected, cherished and valued as a gift. This chapter in my journey holds great promise. My research interests are to blend peace and justice into environmental education. Merry Lea and Goshen College are excellent sources of inspiration and support for my long term goals.
I measure much of my life in breathtaking experiences; bubbling creeks in rhododendron thickets with my wife in West Virginia, standing in the stark landscapes of Antarctica or Mt. McKinley, and the fantastic power of friendships. I marvel at the miracle of my sons discovering frogs, fish, fowl, the wonder of water, or the adventure of reading. But in the end, wherever I may be, I find that our spiritual energy fuels our connection with the natural world and the natural world in turn fuels our spirit. This connection between spirit and nature can be nurtured with just a few moments a week --- the more the merrier. My goal is to help as many people as possible to make those connections.
I am available for lectures in American Wilderness, Russian Protected Area Policy, Energy and the Environment, Environmental Policy.
“In
some [people], the need of unbroken country, primitive conditions and
intimate contact with the earth is a deeply rooted cancer gnawing forever
at the illusion of contentment with the things as they are.”
---
Why Wilderness? Sigurd Olson 1938
“We must use time creatively,
in the knowledge that the time is always ripe to do right. Now is the
time to make real the promise of democracy and transform our pending
national elegy into a creative psalm of brotherhood. Now is the time
to lift our national policy from the quicksand of racial injustice
to the solid rock of human dignity.”
Letter from a Birmingham
Jail Martin Luther King, Jr. 1963
“When faith is completely replaced
by creed, worship by discipline, love by habit; when the crisis of
today is ignored by the splendor of the past; when faith becomes an
heirloom rather than a living fountain; when religion only speaks in
the name of authority rather than with the voice of compassion--- its
message becomes meaningless.”
--- God in Search of Man Abraham
Joshua Heschel 1955
Link to CV (pdf)