Day Zero - Episode 3: Austria and Bhutan - A Glimpse Into the Future
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
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Day Zero is portraying climate change in a different way - by immersing the viewer in nature’s bounty and by listening to stories told by local people. Filmmaker Nils Bökamp has identified unique spots around the world where nature’s pristine wilderness and beauty are threatened to be lost by the effects of climate change.
Episode 3: Austria and Bhutan - A Glimpse Into the Future
This episode stands for reflection. What can each individual do to perserve nature and our planet? Does our consumerist behaviour have a future? How can we learn to look differently at what we buy and at what we really need?
These questions lead Nils to Bhutan, a small country with the Himalaya in the north and India to its south. Whereas Europe has already faced the limits of growth in the 70's, Bhutan has nearly been left untouched by any industrial revolution. People have been living as farmers and in balance with nature. Bhutan has been brave in turning their agriculture to purly organic by 2020. They have exchanged the GDP for GNH – Gross National Happiness. Nils meets Dr. Julia Kim, Head of the GNH Centre, in Thimphu. What can we learn from the Bhutanese philosphy and how can we transport their ideas into our daily lives?
Back in Europe, Nils hikes to Pasterze Glacier in Austria. Also in the Alps, the retreat of these icy giants is enormous. The art installation For Forest in the football stadium in Klagenfurt, Austria, asks what is around the corner if we don't change our behaviour. What if this is what our future would look like?
Citation
Main credits
Bökamp, Nils (film director)
Bökamp, Nils (screenwriter)
Bökamp, Nils (on-screen participant)
Schröder, Vivian (film producer)
Other credits
Camera, Felix Kreigsheim, Milan Tkáčik; editor, Andrea Pek; music, Ilja Köster.
Distributor subjects
No distributor subjects provided.Keywords
00:00:04.746 --> 00:00:08.079
(footsteps approaching)
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- [Nils] My name is Nils Bokamp,
00:00:21.410 --> 00:00:24.550
as a filmmaker I'm often out and about,
00:00:24.550 --> 00:00:27.990
a while ago I decided to move
from Berlin to Pottstown,
00:00:27.990 --> 00:00:30.300
here I live closer to
the forests and lakes,
00:00:30.300 --> 00:00:32.173
which give me peace and quiet.
00:00:36.150 --> 00:00:38.710
In the summers of 2018 and 19,
00:00:38.710 --> 00:00:40.840
parts of Germany struggled
with water shortage,
00:00:40.840 --> 00:00:42.330
due to extreme dryness,
00:00:42.330 --> 00:00:44.330
even though we were surrounded by water,
00:00:46.110 --> 00:00:49.120
climate change doesn't feel
like an abstract thing anymore
00:00:49.120 --> 00:00:50.900
and I'm wondering how I as a human,
00:00:50.900 --> 00:00:52.940
can live in balance with nature,
00:00:52.940 --> 00:00:54.973
while not harming it any further.
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(gentle music)
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I look into places where people
treat nature differently,
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I'm aware of the fact,
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that we live in a globally linked world
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but I want to become more
conscious of my values and actions
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for quite some time now,
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I've been excited about going
to the kingdom of Bhutan,
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it's the only country in the world,
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that's 100% climate neutral,
how do they achieve it
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and what lies behind the idea
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of Bhutan's most important goal,
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to build their economy on
gross national happiness?
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6,700 kilometers of air
travel lie ahead of me,
00:02:01.800 --> 00:02:04.930
it would take me months to
get to Bhutan by car or train,
00:02:04.930 --> 00:02:07.300
I know it's not a solution
but I pay a little more,
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to make up for the 1.1 tons of CO2,
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that I'm causing with these flights.
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Bhutan, the Buddhist kingdom,
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lies between the giants China and India
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and is about the size of Switzerland,
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around 730,000 people live here,
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I arrive in the capital city of Thimphu
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in 2,320 meter altitude.
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Everything I read about
this independent country,
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fascinates me according
to their constitution,
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60% of the land has to
be covered with forest,
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by its own account Bhutan
is even CO2 negative,
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as the forests absorb three
times as much carbon dioxide,
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than the country emits.
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The spiritual mantras that are
printed onto the prayer flags
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are meant to be carried out
into the world by the wind,
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Bhutan is like no other country,
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constitutionally bound to the
wellbeing of its citizens.
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In Thimphu I visit the center
for gross national happiness,
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here the traditional view is held,
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that prosperity can't be
measured in economic growth
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but only in people's happiness.
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Dr. Julia Kim runs the center
on behalf of the Royal house,
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she worked as a UN consultant
in the fields of health
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and sustainability in Africa and New York,
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before returning to Bhutan.
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Hey Julia.
- Hello, Nils.
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- Good to see you, hi.
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- Lovely to meet you, welcome to Bhutan.
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- Thank you so much.
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- How was your trip over here?
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- Very long and exhausting but good.
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- Okay, well, you've
landed in a good place now
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and it's a perfect day,
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so, I hope you're feeling
a little bit happier.
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- What does happiness mean
in the context of GNH?
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- Well, it's a very good question,
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a lot of people ask what
do you mean by happiness?
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- Exactly because I feel totally happy now
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but is that happiness?
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- Yeah as soon as you start to get hungry,
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your happiness is gonna start to go down.
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- Probably.
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- So, how on earth do
you govern a country,
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based on people's moods going up and down?
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When we talk about happiness in GNH,
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I like to refer to the definition,
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from the first prime minister of Bhutan
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and he'd said something quite profound,
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he said, "true biding happiness,
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"cannot exist while others suffer
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"and comes only from serving others,
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"living in harmony with
nature and coming to know,
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"our true and brilliant
nature of our own minds."
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- It's huge.
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- It's big and I love it
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because it shows that
happiness is relational,
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so, when all those three
different levels come together,
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then you can talk about
happiness in the context of GNH.
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- [Nils] Inter human
relations, self-reflection
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and a connection to nature,
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are these the fundaments for
happier life for all of us?
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I want to get to know the
country and its people better,
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what does happiness look like in Bhutan?
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I continue my travels by
foot to get 70 kilometers,
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further East to the
Nalanda Buddhist Institute,
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it will take me two and a half days
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with the help of a local
guide we set off at dawn.
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(ominous music)
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While hiking I feel
most connected to myself
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in these moments I am
conscious of the beauty,
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that lies within living life
hand-in-hand with nature
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with every step I take I doubt
my Western values a bit more,
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why do we make our
happiness depend on wealth
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and economic growth?
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Isn't there another path,
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than the one that we're currently on?
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I arrive at the monastery
in the middle of the night,
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besides their spiritual education,
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they teach English as a foreign language.
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The novices are supposed to
practice their English skills
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with the foreigners and
therefore learn about,
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different countries and cultures.
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(bell rings)
(dogs barking)
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The days here start in the early morning,
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I have to admit that I'm far away
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from connecting my body and mind
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but I feel touched by
the warmth and sincerity,
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I'm experiencing here.
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I found this place on Facebook,
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Bhutan's monks are
anything but disconnected,
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from the rest of the world.
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(bell ringing)
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Around 100 novices learn from
the monks that live here,
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many come from humble
origins, some are orphans,
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the school pays for all their expenses.
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(footsteps approaching)
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Good morning.
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(speaks foreign language)
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- [Nils] Once a month alternating
Puja rituals are performed
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Pujas are held to remove resistances,
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that hold the monks back
from pursuing their worldly
00:09:18.160 --> 00:09:19.423
and spiritual goals,
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prayers are said and
sung during ceremonies,
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to receive Buddha's blessing for happiness
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in all areas of life.
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The musical support of old Tibetan chants,
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plays an important role
during the ceremony.
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(novices chanting)
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(gentle music)
00:11:13.267 --> 00:11:15.510
After the Puja the youngest novices,
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spend their days with handcrafting,
00:11:18.940 --> 00:11:20.460
many of them come from families,
00:11:20.460 --> 00:11:23.160
that can't afford higher
education for their children,
00:11:25.050 --> 00:11:26.740
the crafting of musical instruments
00:11:26.740 --> 00:11:28.670
is as much part of their daily schedule
00:11:28.670 --> 00:11:31.920
as Buddhist teachings
and operating computers,
00:11:31.920 --> 00:11:35.413
the young monks are meant to
be part of modern society.
00:11:35.413 --> 00:11:39.080
(speaking foreign language)
00:11:44.950 --> 00:11:48.283
(Chinese flute honking)
00:11:52.017 --> 00:11:54.140
Before the novices can
start the practical part
00:11:54.140 --> 00:11:56.740
of their training outside
the monastery walls,
00:11:56.740 --> 00:11:58.937
they have to pass their final exams.
00:11:58.937 --> 00:12:02.104
(monks reading aloud)
00:12:12.950 --> 00:12:14.044
- [Nils] He's getting close?
00:12:14.044 --> 00:12:15.324
- [Man] Only one month left.
00:12:15.324 --> 00:12:16.662
- [Nils] One month from today?
00:12:16.662 --> 00:12:19.520
- Yeah, it's only one month.
- 15 days.
00:12:19.520 --> 00:12:24.520
- Okay, wow is it hard
to study all the time?
00:12:24.910 --> 00:12:26.303
- Yeah, this is so hard.
00:12:30.400 --> 00:12:35.400
We staying here and always
learning and it's difficult.
00:12:35.520 --> 00:12:38.403
- [Nils] And why did you
make the choice to come here?
00:12:39.450 --> 00:12:42.483
- Because I really like to be a monk.
00:12:48.240 --> 00:12:49.560
- [Nils] The last two days taught me,
00:12:49.560 --> 00:12:52.940
how the people here respond
to a life in silence,
00:12:52.940 --> 00:12:55.890
the monks never talk just
for the sake of talking,
00:12:55.890 --> 00:12:58.250
their humor is subtle and
they are genuinely happy,
00:12:58.250 --> 00:13:00.173
about my interest in their culture.
00:13:03.290 --> 00:13:05.360
Around 10% of Bhutan citizens,
00:13:05.360 --> 00:13:07.663
live as monks or nuns in monasteries,
00:13:08.610 --> 00:13:09.770
they play an important part
00:13:09.770 --> 00:13:12.290
in preserving the traditional way of life,
00:13:12.290 --> 00:13:13.813
when in harmony with nature.
00:13:23.040 --> 00:13:24.970
The headmaster Lama Khenpo,
00:13:24.970 --> 00:13:27.423
leads me up to the
monasteries highest trine,
00:13:28.380 --> 00:13:30.600
I tell him that I started
meditating in Germany,
00:13:30.600 --> 00:13:32.593
to find inner peace and happiness.
00:13:34.880 --> 00:13:39.870
- We don't believe in a God
as a creator control over you,
00:13:39.870 --> 00:13:43.740
your happiness and your
suffering is dependent on you
00:13:43.740 --> 00:13:48.100
if you want to be a happy
person it's not good to wait,
00:13:48.100 --> 00:13:50.250
someone will give you the chances,
00:13:50.250 --> 00:13:53.140
you have to create the
condition to be happy,
00:13:53.140 --> 00:13:57.343
that's important in Buddhism.
00:14:11.440 --> 00:14:13.000
- [Nils] The goal is to be in the moment
00:14:13.000 --> 00:14:16.053
and let go of all thoughts
about the future and the past,
00:14:17.780 --> 00:14:19.160
you can even achieve this state,
00:14:19.160 --> 00:14:21.446
through meditative dance or hiking.
00:14:21.446 --> 00:14:24.279
(novices singing)
00:14:31.930 --> 00:14:34.663
The novices have to learn
entire books by heart,
00:14:35.780 --> 00:14:38.120
memorizing becomes easier
by reading out loud
00:14:38.120 --> 00:14:39.570
in a certain rhythm together,
00:14:40.690 --> 00:14:43.290
they have to make sure to
preserve their traditions,
00:14:44.350 --> 00:14:47.830
keep one eye on the passage of
time and one eye on tradition
00:14:47.830 --> 00:14:49.483
as a Bhutanese saying goes,
00:14:50.410 --> 00:14:53.180
nowadays, Bhutan's monks are
even allowed to own money
00:14:53.180 --> 00:14:54.283
and mobile phones,
00:14:55.770 --> 00:14:57.904
the novices still have a long way to go.
00:14:57.904 --> 00:15:01.821
(novices clapping and singing)
00:15:09.960 --> 00:15:12.310
My time in the monastery comes to an end,
00:15:12.310 --> 00:15:14.560
I'm heading back to the
capital city Thimphu.
00:15:17.600 --> 00:15:18.810
Now, I went to find out,
00:15:18.810 --> 00:15:21.510
how the Buddhist values are
applicable to modern life.
00:15:37.061 --> 00:15:40.170
(indistinct) is something
you have to learn actually
00:15:40.170 --> 00:15:43.330
and it's not an easy thing to learn,
00:15:43.330 --> 00:15:46.060
I think it can be also
scary in the beginning
00:15:46.060 --> 00:15:48.860
if you stopped for example, meditation,
00:15:48.860 --> 00:15:52.650
what would you advise people
who start this process?
00:15:52.650 --> 00:15:55.560
- In fact, even really
experienced meditators will say,
00:15:55.560 --> 00:15:58.520
their experience goes
up and down constantly
00:15:58.520 --> 00:16:02.050
and it's that up and down
that is the meditation
00:16:02.050 --> 00:16:07.050
and it can be playful, it can
be fun and it can be funny
00:16:09.300 --> 00:16:11.950
and as you get to know your own mind more,
00:16:11.950 --> 00:16:14.350
then when difficult things come up
00:16:14.350 --> 00:16:18.120
and you find yourself getting
angry or disappointed,
00:16:18.120 --> 00:16:20.450
you don't identify with it so much,
00:16:20.450 --> 00:16:23.390
you don't see it as something so solid
00:16:23.390 --> 00:16:25.170
because you've seen it come and go,
00:16:25.170 --> 00:16:27.930
so, I think these are
skills that can be learned,
00:16:27.930 --> 00:16:30.430
I had to go looking for it and sometimes,
00:16:30.430 --> 00:16:33.470
you know, jump off the path
a little bit to find it
00:16:33.470 --> 00:16:34.990
but I think these days,
00:16:34.990 --> 00:16:36.650
schools are doing some interesting things,
00:16:36.650 --> 00:16:40.800
you know, teaching kids basic
meditation and mindfulness,
00:16:40.800 --> 00:16:44.650
emotional intelligence and
curiosity and I think this idea
00:16:44.650 --> 00:16:47.910
of having an open mind and an open heart
00:16:47.910 --> 00:16:50.700
is something that we should
be cultivating in education,
00:16:50.700 --> 00:16:53.853
rather than just being smart
and getting good grades.
00:16:58.230 --> 00:17:00.720
- [Nils] To get an idea of
it Julia recommends to me,
00:17:00.720 --> 00:17:02.620
that I visit a typical primary school.
00:17:08.096 --> 00:17:09.376
Okay, let's go.
00:17:09.376 --> 00:17:12.459
(car engine revving)
00:17:22.060 --> 00:17:26.060
(children giggling and talking)
00:17:28.620 --> 00:17:30.400
At the early learning center Thimphu,
00:17:30.400 --> 00:17:32.240
every morning the students sing together
00:17:32.240 --> 00:17:34.940
in front of the national
flag with the thunder dragon.
00:17:37.157 --> 00:17:39.950
(children singing)
00:17:39.950 --> 00:17:42.470
The school's goal is to
spread universal happiness
00:17:42.470 --> 00:17:44.313
into the world through its students,
00:17:45.560 --> 00:17:48.383
teaching empathy and respect
is the biggest priority.
00:17:55.260 --> 00:17:58.323
All children meditate for a
moment before classes start.
00:18:25.760 --> 00:18:27.700
By going on special field trips,
00:18:27.700 --> 00:18:29.950
the children learn how
to independently tackle,
00:18:29.950 --> 00:18:31.433
real life's challenges.
00:18:33.080 --> 00:18:35.090
You guys spoke about the field trips,
00:18:35.090 --> 00:18:37.090
what else did you do in the field trips?
00:18:37.940 --> 00:18:42.940
- We go to the kidney foundations
and we ask the patients,
00:18:43.600 --> 00:18:48.100
do you have any relatives
who are visiting you and all?
00:18:48.100 --> 00:18:50.810
Sometimes it makes me emotional
00:18:50.810 --> 00:18:54.350
because the patients they were also crying
00:18:54.350 --> 00:18:59.350
and I felt so guilty for
like keeping them sick
00:19:02.270 --> 00:19:05.770
and as a citizen of
Bhutan not doing anything,
00:19:05.770 --> 00:19:09.973
just donating money at
school then I realized that,
00:19:11.170 --> 00:19:15.680
you can't just look and
say hi and give money,
00:19:15.680 --> 00:19:17.830
you have to feel the problem
00:19:17.830 --> 00:19:20.670
and you have to do something about it,
00:19:20.670 --> 00:19:22.917
not to leave it at that point.
00:19:22.917 --> 00:19:25.500
(gentle music)
00:19:32.180 --> 00:19:34.230
- [Nils] The children's pride
of their Bhutanese tradition
00:19:34.230 --> 00:19:36.763
and connection to it can
be found in all areas,
00:19:38.520 --> 00:19:40.520
I've rarely seen a school before,
00:19:40.520 --> 00:19:43.343
that engages in as many
social projects as this one,
00:19:44.690 --> 00:19:47.140
it is easy to see their
will to change the world.
00:19:48.521 --> 00:19:51.604
(indistinct chatter)
00:20:01.510 --> 00:20:05.070
- I think it's part of the mindset
00:20:05.070 --> 00:20:07.973
and the closest to nature
that people feel here,
00:20:08.890 --> 00:20:13.440
there is a sense that nature
is not outside of ourselves
00:20:13.440 --> 00:20:17.240
and is not something that
you go to a park to visit
00:20:17.240 --> 00:20:22.240
or that you go on holiday to
see as you move through Bhutan
00:20:22.630 --> 00:20:27.090
because it's still largely
rural and agricultural,
00:20:27.090 --> 00:20:28.383
nature is everywhere.
00:20:36.490 --> 00:20:39.520
- [Nils] My journey continues
West to the Paro Valley,
00:20:39.520 --> 00:20:41.853
one of the kingdom's most fertile areas.
00:20:44.470 --> 00:20:47.620
Two thirds of Bhutan citizens are farmers,
00:20:47.620 --> 00:20:50.623
most of them grow food for their own use.
00:20:50.623 --> 00:20:53.206
(dogs barking)
00:20:55.730 --> 00:20:59.130
The people here surely live
a very simple and hard life
00:20:59.130 --> 00:21:01.293
but they all spread kindness and warmth.
00:21:05.880 --> 00:21:08.113
Prayer wheels can be
found at every stream,
00:21:10.300 --> 00:21:13.060
thousands of mantras are meant
to be carried into the world
00:21:13.060 --> 00:21:14.093
with every spin.
00:21:17.800 --> 00:21:19.640
I don't have to be a
Buddhist to understand,
00:21:19.640 --> 00:21:21.343
the longing for inner peace.
00:21:28.290 --> 00:21:30.223
I spend the night with the Lam family,
00:21:31.300 --> 00:21:33.660
as a hiker I get an
especially warm welcome
00:21:33.660 --> 00:21:36.051
from the 20 family members that live here.
00:21:36.051 --> 00:21:39.551
(speaks foreign language)
00:21:40.920 --> 00:21:43.760
I still have to get used
to the constant cold
00:21:43.760 --> 00:21:45.743
but their traditional butter tea helps.
00:21:53.010 --> 00:21:55.520
The family eats the
produce that they grow,
00:21:55.520 --> 00:21:58.970
a lot of grain and vegetables rarely meat.
00:21:58.970 --> 00:22:00.520
Do you think it's too hot then?
00:22:05.410 --> 00:22:06.350
What kind of beef is it,
00:22:06.350 --> 00:22:08.100
it's dry beef right?
- Dried beef.
00:22:12.208 --> 00:22:15.645
(speaks foreign language)
00:22:15.645 --> 00:22:18.312
(phone ringing)
00:22:57.560 --> 00:23:00.160
- [Nils] What might seem
like an era of forgone times,
00:23:00.160 --> 00:23:03.363
could present itself as an
advantage for Bhutan's future,
00:23:04.210 --> 00:23:06.450
due to the fact that not
many farmers can afford,
00:23:06.450 --> 00:23:09.070
artificial fertilizers
and chemical pesticides,
00:23:09.070 --> 00:23:11.380
the step towards environmentally
friendly farming,
00:23:11.380 --> 00:23:12.233
isn't big.
00:23:15.670 --> 00:23:17.210
The kingdom learnt from the mistakes,
00:23:17.210 --> 00:23:19.050
that the industrial nations made
00:23:19.050 --> 00:23:21.400
and wants Bhutan to be
the first exclusively,
00:23:21.400 --> 00:23:23.353
organic farming country in the world.
00:23:30.321 --> 00:23:33.821
(speaks foreign language)
00:23:40.820 --> 00:23:43.890
- The UN will often talk
about developing countries
00:23:43.890 --> 00:23:45.920
and under development,
00:23:45.920 --> 00:23:48.720
I think it's time we start
talking about overdevelopment,
00:23:48.720 --> 00:23:52.230
we assume that a country
like Bhutan needs to grow up
00:23:52.230 --> 00:23:55.130
and become like America
that's the wrong model
00:23:55.130 --> 00:23:57.360
because it's not sustainable
00:23:57.360 --> 00:23:59.810
and I think there is no system in nature,
00:23:59.810 --> 00:24:03.750
that grows at infinitum
that doesn't stop growing
00:24:03.750 --> 00:24:07.050
if you look at a biological
system the best example we have
00:24:07.050 --> 00:24:10.320
is something that keeps
growing endlessly is a cancer
00:24:10.320 --> 00:24:11.790
and we know what happens to the body,
00:24:11.790 --> 00:24:14.010
when a cancer grows out of control,
00:24:14.010 --> 00:24:16.920
we became fascinated by the
fact that we can control nature,
00:24:16.920 --> 00:24:20.250
we can create good things like technology,
00:24:20.250 --> 00:24:23.410
that provides clean water
but at the same time,
00:24:23.410 --> 00:24:26.090
we started to really value
things like efficiency,
00:24:26.090 --> 00:24:28.240
quantity rather than quality
00:24:28.240 --> 00:24:30.910
and in that mindset time is money
00:24:30.910 --> 00:24:33.000
and I think here in Bhutan,
00:24:33.000 --> 00:24:35.460
when we talk about gross
national happiness,
00:24:35.460 --> 00:24:39.620
the purpose of all of that
activity, all of that resources,
00:24:39.620 --> 00:24:43.840
all the energy is towards
wellbeing and happiness
00:24:43.840 --> 00:24:46.523
and not just for us as
human beings but all life.
00:24:53.530 --> 00:24:56.350
- [Nils] At the foot of the
famous Punakha Dzong fortress,
00:24:56.350 --> 00:25:00.570
the rivers Fochu and Mochu the
male and female river meet,
00:25:00.570 --> 00:25:03.020
they are meant to bring
fertility to the country.
00:25:06.690 --> 00:25:10.690
I accompany Tashi Dorji, he
offers whitewater rafting here
00:25:10.690 --> 00:25:12.773
and knows the rivers like no other.
00:25:15.840 --> 00:25:17.010
Now, during the winter time,
00:25:17.010 --> 00:25:19.460
the river courses are fairly calm,
00:25:19.460 --> 00:25:21.410
though in summer during monsoon season,
00:25:21.410 --> 00:25:23.853
Mochu especially grows
into a massive stream.
00:25:32.162 --> 00:25:33.432
Thank you.
00:25:33.432 --> 00:25:36.015
(gentle music)
00:25:59.976 --> 00:26:01.722
So, guys which river is this
00:26:01.722 --> 00:26:03.696
is this a male or the female one?
00:26:03.696 --> 00:26:04.529
- This is the female river,
00:26:05.854 --> 00:26:10.854
so, right now the volume is
not that high it's winter,
00:26:11.580 --> 00:26:14.310
during summer you see the area that side,
00:26:14.310 --> 00:26:15.947
so, it's all under water.
00:26:15.947 --> 00:26:20.700
- Okay and the river did it
change over the last years?
00:26:20.700 --> 00:26:24.490
- Yeah, of course so last year
it has increased drastically,
00:26:24.490 --> 00:26:28.620
so, we had a very heavy
rain fall for a month.
00:26:28.620 --> 00:26:31.780
- Okay, so it's a combination of rainfall
00:26:31.780 --> 00:26:34.610
and the glaciers melting?
00:26:34.610 --> 00:26:37.600
- Yeah, of course, of course
so that's the main combination
00:26:39.110 --> 00:26:43.463
if it rains less so it
doesn't goes too high.
00:26:46.980 --> 00:26:49.563
(gentle music)
00:27:28.280 --> 00:27:29.113
- [Nils] For some time,
00:27:29.113 --> 00:27:32.460
Bhutans rivers have grown
more and more unpredictable,
00:27:32.460 --> 00:27:35.010
where snow and glaciers
once covered the mountains,
00:27:35.010 --> 00:27:37.713
rocks can be found today Tashi says.
00:27:37.713 --> 00:27:41.523
- We have lots of glacier
legs on top of the mountains,
00:27:44.846 --> 00:27:49.010
you know, we have a danger that
it might burst out any time,
00:27:49.010 --> 00:27:53.860
the flood which came in
1994 that was quite big
00:27:53.860 --> 00:27:56.550
and it has destroyed many things,
00:27:56.550 --> 00:27:59.610
even some you know, local house,
00:27:59.610 --> 00:28:02.140
so, every year it's changing now,
00:28:02.140 --> 00:28:06.150
so, every year we can see lots of places,
00:28:06.150 --> 00:28:09.040
where it has landslides and all,
00:28:09.040 --> 00:28:12.260
so, it's all because of the high volume
00:28:12.260 --> 00:28:13.503
and the climate change.
00:28:18.810 --> 00:28:20.650
- [Nils] I wouldn't have
thought that climate change
00:28:20.650 --> 00:28:22.620
is very tangible in Bhutan,
00:28:22.620 --> 00:28:25.140
both the unsteady monsoon and
the melting of the glaciers,
00:28:25.140 --> 00:28:28.273
have a significant impact on
the ecosystem and the economy,
00:28:29.320 --> 00:28:30.360
Bhutan's energy needs,
00:28:30.360 --> 00:28:33.090
are almost entirely
covered by hydro-power,
00:28:33.090 --> 00:28:34.950
which also fills the state treasury,
00:28:34.950 --> 00:28:36.900
as large parts of it are sold to India.
00:28:40.210 --> 00:28:43.943
I meet Bhutan's former environment
minister Thinley Namgyel.
00:28:46.670 --> 00:28:50.340
- Hydro dams is a huge
economic factor in Bhutan
00:28:50.340 --> 00:28:54.118
and so you also take the
disadvantages of climate change
00:28:54.118 --> 00:28:56.270
into an advantage, it's also disadvantage,
00:28:56.270 --> 00:28:57.610
now, we're finding under climate change,
00:28:57.610 --> 00:29:00.070
without climate change
it would have been fine
00:29:00.070 --> 00:29:03.710
but now as I said, the
winter floors are decreasing,
00:29:03.710 --> 00:29:05.230
it's getting critical,
00:29:05.230 --> 00:29:08.250
so, our generation in the winter
is getting much, much less,
00:29:08.250 --> 00:29:12.100
so, now the small dams are
actually not able to store water,
00:29:12.100 --> 00:29:14.730
that you'd need to really
generate so it's really low,
00:29:14.730 --> 00:29:17.300
so, if you look at a purely
engineering perspective
00:29:17.300 --> 00:29:18.500
of what you should do,
00:29:18.500 --> 00:29:20.080
you need bigger dams to store more water
00:29:20.080 --> 00:29:21.120
but we don't have that here,
00:29:21.120 --> 00:29:23.870
so, climate change is making
it much more difficult again.
00:29:23.870 --> 00:29:26.420
- You are attending all these
climate change conferences,
00:29:26.420 --> 00:29:28.330
so, you're a real expert on that?
00:29:28.330 --> 00:29:31.510
I feel related to all my research I did,
00:29:31.510 --> 00:29:33.130
that there's a lot of talking
00:29:33.130 --> 00:29:34.910
but nothing really happens in here.
00:29:34.910 --> 00:29:36.030
- As a small country,
00:29:36.030 --> 00:29:39.167
that is on the receiving
end of climate change,
00:29:39.167 --> 00:29:41.960
we've tried to put forward
what we would like do,
00:29:41.960 --> 00:29:43.060
so, when we see this,
00:29:43.060 --> 00:29:45.750
actually we see this as
a bit of frustration,
00:29:45.750 --> 00:29:48.700
so, we actually want to
see much more action,
00:29:48.700 --> 00:29:51.190
we don't contribute much
to causing climate change
00:29:51.190 --> 00:29:55.230
but we feel it and then
in terms of the action,
00:29:55.230 --> 00:29:59.510
the larger countries who
have the ability to influence
00:29:59.510 --> 00:30:01.523
and make an impact on the changes,
00:30:02.630 --> 00:30:03.700
unfortunately, we're not seeing that
00:30:03.700 --> 00:30:05.220
as much as it needs to be done,
00:30:05.220 --> 00:30:07.620
so, it's a little frustrating
and it worries me.
00:30:08.650 --> 00:30:10.870
- Do you feel like we
are running out of time?
00:30:10.870 --> 00:30:14.341
- Sometimes yes, so it's still
happening much, much faster.
00:30:14.341 --> 00:30:16.924
(gentle music)
00:30:28.680 --> 00:30:30.180
- [Nils] The country's
longest rope bridge,
00:30:30.180 --> 00:30:31.923
leads over the river Puna Tsang,
00:30:33.410 --> 00:30:35.100
besides the rivers unpredictability,
00:30:35.100 --> 00:30:36.453
there is a different issue.
00:30:37.830 --> 00:30:41.050
In many places water
resources are drying out
00:30:41.050 --> 00:30:43.403
in the winter time it rains less and less,
00:30:44.660 --> 00:30:46.360
to cover its demand for energy,
00:30:46.360 --> 00:30:49.030
Bhutan would actually need big reservoirs
00:30:49.030 --> 00:30:50.490
but this would inevitably lead,
00:30:50.490 --> 00:30:52.193
to new environmental problems,
00:30:53.540 --> 00:30:55.940
ironically, Bhutan of all countries,
00:30:55.940 --> 00:30:57.710
while doing so many things right
00:30:57.710 --> 00:31:00.210
is especially affected by climate change
00:31:00.210 --> 00:31:01.510
and it is the hard truth,
00:31:01.510 --> 00:31:03.410
that they can't even be blamed for it.
00:31:16.383 --> 00:31:19.840
On my return trip I have
spent a night in Bangkok,
00:31:19.840 --> 00:31:22.010
the contrast could not be bigger,
00:31:22.010 --> 00:31:24.810
8.2 million people live in this mega city,
00:31:24.810 --> 00:31:25.750
that's about 10 times,
00:31:25.750 --> 00:31:28.243
the amount of the entire
population of Bhutan,
00:31:29.750 --> 00:31:32.730
overall Thailand emits
about four tons of CO2,
00:31:32.730 --> 00:31:34.390
per capita per year,
00:31:34.390 --> 00:31:37.030
more than twice as much
as the people of Bhutan
00:31:37.030 --> 00:31:40.440
but then Germans emit more
than nine tons per capita,
00:31:40.440 --> 00:31:43.470
so what sense does it make to
produce less on a small scale,
00:31:43.470 --> 00:31:46.020
when the big players like
us don't change anything?
00:31:52.270 --> 00:31:55.390
Back home in Potsdam, I can't find peace,
00:31:55.390 --> 00:31:57.850
man-made climate change
jeopardizes the happiness
00:31:57.850 --> 00:32:01.730
and existence of all living
beings not only in Bhutan
00:32:01.730 --> 00:32:03.673
but also directly at our doorstep,
00:32:05.030 --> 00:32:07.540
I come across old pictures
of the batsteta glacier
00:32:07.540 --> 00:32:09.023
at Grossglockner mountain,
00:32:10.200 --> 00:32:11.910
when I was a kid I learned how to ski
00:32:11.910 --> 00:32:13.143
in the Alps of Austria,
00:32:14.650 --> 00:32:16.560
I feel drawn back to
nature and want to see,
00:32:16.560 --> 00:32:18.410
what the glacier looks like nowadays.
00:32:24.789 --> 00:32:27.372
(gentle music)
00:32:28.350 --> 00:32:32.870
- The batsteta glacier it runs
almost seven kilometers long
00:32:32.870 --> 00:32:34.850
at the foot of the Grossglockner mountain
00:32:34.850 --> 00:32:37.093
and it's still Austria's biggest glacier,
00:32:38.300 --> 00:32:41.490
already in the 19th century
it attracted tourists
00:32:41.490 --> 00:32:44.520
and even lured Emperor Franz
Joseph the first up here
00:32:46.430 --> 00:32:48.240
but back then the volume of the ice
00:32:48.240 --> 00:32:50.363
was three times bigger than it is today,
00:32:52.600 --> 00:32:55.440
I meet Lizzie Stoiber,
original mountain guide,
00:32:55.440 --> 00:32:56.553
who will accompany me.
00:33:11.890 --> 00:33:13.520
- [Lizzie] Guess until how many years ago,
00:33:13.520 --> 00:33:15.270
there still was ice where we stand?
00:33:17.220 --> 00:33:18.740
- [Nils] I would say 10 years.
00:33:18.740 --> 00:33:21.910
- [Lizzie] Not even it's hard to imagine,
00:33:21.910 --> 00:33:24.963
that all of this was full
of ice not so long ago.
00:33:31.010 --> 00:33:33.910
The glaciers declining
by 50 meters each year
00:33:36.425 --> 00:33:38.883
and this glacial Lake is what's left.
00:33:40.791 --> 00:33:43.541
(water dripping)
00:33:47.490 --> 00:33:50.020
By now many of our tours
to the Northern edge
00:33:50.020 --> 00:33:52.070
are only feasible in winter
00:33:52.070 --> 00:33:54.273
or early spring when it's cold enough.
00:33:56.989 --> 00:33:59.340
In the summer it's just too-
- Too dangerous?
00:33:59.340 --> 00:34:01.050
- Yes because of the many rockfalls,
00:34:01.050 --> 00:34:03.300
which you don't really
want to be exposed to.
00:34:04.340 --> 00:34:06.770
- [Nils] The Zanda Lake
which lies in front of us,
00:34:06.770 --> 00:34:09.203
exists only since the 1960s,
00:34:10.050 --> 00:34:12.603
the glaciers meltwater
makes it expand every year.
00:34:39.740 --> 00:34:42.120
The rapid glacier melt
can not be explained,
00:34:42.120 --> 00:34:44.363
through natural climate
fluctuations alone,
00:34:45.410 --> 00:34:47.660
scientists told the influence of mankind
00:34:47.660 --> 00:34:49.523
on the climate responsible for it.
00:35:01.550 --> 00:35:03.450
- [Lizzie] Is it your first time here?
00:35:05.000 --> 00:35:07.683
- No I've been here once 15 years ago.
00:35:09.160 --> 00:35:09.993
- I see.
00:35:10.850 --> 00:35:12.420
- Back then there was no Lake down here,
00:35:12.420 --> 00:35:14.947
it looked completely different.
00:35:16.400 --> 00:35:17.670
- The problem is the many days
00:35:17.670 --> 00:35:21.263
in which the zero degree level
climbs to this high altitude,
00:35:22.110 --> 00:35:24.110
like this summer we had many days
00:35:24.110 --> 00:35:26.173
on which it was at 4,000 meters,
00:35:27.900 --> 00:35:31.760
the Grossglockner is
about 3,800 meters high,
00:35:31.760 --> 00:35:36.410
so, the glacier melts also
the permafrost opens up
00:35:36.410 --> 00:35:38.860
and the whole thing is
set in motion and rumbles.
00:35:42.130 --> 00:35:45.500
- Whenever I do a ski tour
I become a different person,
00:35:45.500 --> 00:35:46.690
after the second day,
00:35:46.690 --> 00:35:48.690
I've gotten rid of all my tension inside
00:35:48.690 --> 00:35:52.250
and feel completely different
it's hard to describe,
00:35:52.250 --> 00:35:54.400
like an inner peace
that makes me addicted.
00:35:55.680 --> 00:35:57.080
- And that's why it is so important,
00:35:57.080 --> 00:35:58.523
to preserve these regions,
00:35:59.880 --> 00:36:01.330
unfortunately, many people are looking
00:36:01.330 --> 00:36:04.303
for the thrill in the mountains
without taking a risk,
00:36:05.520 --> 00:36:06.920
that's a double edged sword,
00:36:07.860 --> 00:36:11.193
we as Alpine guides can't carry
the people up on our backs,
00:36:12.310 --> 00:36:15.460
and on the other hand we don't
want to secure the mountains
00:36:15.460 --> 00:36:20.460
and make highways out of them,
00:36:20.580 --> 00:36:22.620
actually, it should be
the other way around
00:36:22.620 --> 00:36:25.400
and everybody should learn
the skills and how to prepare,
00:36:25.400 --> 00:36:27.050
when going up into the mountains.
00:36:34.970 --> 00:36:36.700
To move about freely in nature,
00:36:36.700 --> 00:36:38.793
sometimes looks easier than it is,
00:36:39.730 --> 00:36:43.123
especially when you expose
yourself to untamed nature,
00:36:44.070 --> 00:36:47.233
without sightseeing
platforms and secured stairs,
00:36:48.930 --> 00:36:50.050
you can pick up on these skills
00:36:50.050 --> 00:36:51.980
if you cross a glacier for instance,
00:36:51.980 --> 00:36:54.160
even when it's a bit shaky and lopsided
00:36:55.640 --> 00:36:57.480
in the beginning you might be a bit clumsy
00:36:57.480 --> 00:36:58.540
but that doesn't matter,
00:36:58.540 --> 00:37:02.713
what counts is to experience
one of those elemental moments,
00:37:03.730 --> 00:37:06.360
we have to understand that
even the easiest task,
00:37:06.360 --> 00:37:08.060
can be challenging for some people
00:37:09.050 --> 00:37:11.910
because they became alienated from nature
00:37:13.270 --> 00:37:15.340
but if they get themselves into it,
00:37:15.340 --> 00:37:18.330
many people would see nature differently,
00:37:18.330 --> 00:37:19.853
as something worth protecting,
00:37:20.840 --> 00:37:24.373
nature will only remain nature
if we stop manipulating it.
00:37:29.900 --> 00:37:32.900
- [Nils] We hike further
towards the glacier tongue,
00:37:32.900 --> 00:37:35.300
it is a particularly
long and painstaking way
00:37:35.300 --> 00:37:37.540
on the rubble before
the first ice shows up
00:37:39.330 --> 00:37:42.193
but then the view is
still just breathtaking.
00:37:54.560 --> 00:37:56.550
- If you consider that a few years ago,
00:37:56.550 --> 00:37:59.720
all of this was ice up to this level,
00:37:59.720 --> 00:38:01.280
there's not much left anymore
00:38:02.330 --> 00:38:04.500
and we've been walking
for an hour and a half,
00:38:04.500 --> 00:38:08.083
until we reach the glaciers
icy surface without rocks.
00:38:17.640 --> 00:38:18.903
Careful at the edge.
00:38:25.960 --> 00:38:29.280
- [Nils] When first measured
in 1852 the batsteta glacier,
00:38:29.280 --> 00:38:33.910
spread out over a total area
of 27 square kilometers,
00:38:33.910 --> 00:38:35.593
nowadays it's only 16.
00:38:39.800 --> 00:38:41.300
- How deep do you think it is?
00:38:43.020 --> 00:38:44.093
- Hard to say 20?
00:38:45.180 --> 00:38:46.700
- I think so too.
00:38:46.700 --> 00:38:48.890
- This gives me a strange feeling,
00:38:48.890 --> 00:38:51.220
I never want to fall into
one of these crevices,
00:38:51.220 --> 00:38:54.003
it's really unnerving.
- Yes, it is.
00:38:59.400 --> 00:39:01.650
- [Nils] Meters deep
crevices break the ice down
00:39:01.650 --> 00:39:03.510
and reveal the glaciers fragility
00:39:05.970 --> 00:39:09.890
for how much longer will
glaciers in the Alps even exist?
00:39:09.890 --> 00:39:13.090
What will I see if I
return in another 15 years,
00:39:13.090 --> 00:39:14.713
only rubble and boulders?
00:39:16.020 --> 00:39:18.463
The notion seems within arms reach.
00:39:21.819 --> 00:39:24.402
(gentle music)
00:39:30.310 --> 00:39:33.060
One day will we look
at nature the same way,
00:39:33.060 --> 00:39:34.963
we look at rare animals in a zoo?
00:39:37.050 --> 00:39:40.400
In 2019, 299 trees were planted
00:39:40.400 --> 00:39:42.253
in the Wörthersee football stadium,
00:39:43.540 --> 00:39:46.120
an installation by the
artist Klaus Littmann,
00:39:46.120 --> 00:39:50.093
called For Forest The
Unending Attraction of Nature.
00:39:52.050 --> 00:39:54.673
It took six weeks until the
trees were standing right?
00:39:57.095 --> 00:39:58.410
- The set up went pretty fast,
00:39:58.410 --> 00:40:00.520
we were done sooner than we expected,
00:40:00.520 --> 00:40:01.963
within four weeks actually,
00:40:03.450 --> 00:40:05.450
I learned quite a lot from this project,
00:40:06.410 --> 00:40:07.850
for instance that we needed trees,
00:40:07.850 --> 00:40:09.557
which roots were clustered.
00:40:14.430 --> 00:40:17.620
These trees were
replanted every four years
00:40:17.620 --> 00:40:19.500
but they were not exposed to stress
00:40:19.500 --> 00:40:21.550
because their fine roots were not harmed,
00:40:23.760 --> 00:40:24.623
that is crucial,
00:40:26.010 --> 00:40:28.773
you can't find such trees
in ordinary tree nurseries,
00:40:30.740 --> 00:40:33.163
these ones are more
than 30 to 50 years old,
00:40:38.340 --> 00:40:40.070
we found them in Italy, Belgium,
00:40:40.070 --> 00:40:41.920
the Netherlands and Northern Germany,
00:40:43.380 --> 00:40:45.630
we brought them here
from all over the place.
00:40:48.690 --> 00:40:50.800
- [Nils] A European
mixed forest was created,
00:40:50.800 --> 00:40:53.033
that rarely can be
found in nature anymore,
00:40:54.640 --> 00:40:57.430
after a few months these trees
are permanently transplanted,
00:40:57.430 --> 00:40:59.213
to nearby public spaces.
00:41:16.530 --> 00:41:18.320
- I would like the visitors who come here,
00:41:18.320 --> 00:41:21.360
to move around freely, take
in different perspectives,
00:41:21.360 --> 00:41:23.037
from above and below.
00:41:30.670 --> 00:41:33.063
And also just sit here
for a while and reflect,
00:41:34.730 --> 00:41:37.973
what am I seeing here actually,
what does it mean to me?
00:41:38.888 --> 00:41:42.420
What do I have to do with this
and how do I treat nature?
00:41:42.420 --> 00:41:44.323
Is my approach to it not dated?
00:41:46.170 --> 00:41:48.130
I think this installation succeeds,
00:41:48.130 --> 00:41:49.623
to trigger these questions.
00:41:52.310 --> 00:41:55.833
This picture is going around
the world it speaks for itself.
00:42:01.040 --> 00:42:03.160
In times of Australian bushfires,
00:42:03.160 --> 00:42:05.350
climate change and species extinction,
00:42:05.350 --> 00:42:08.053
the forest evokes an
emotional response in us,
00:42:09.610 --> 00:42:12.690
the artist presents it
as a place of longing,
00:42:12.690 --> 00:42:14.513
one that we can't enter anymore.
00:42:23.394 --> 00:42:26.394
(audience clapping)
00:42:28.740 --> 00:42:29.930
My journey ends here
00:42:30.770 --> 00:42:32.720
for nature not to become a museum piece,
00:42:32.720 --> 00:42:34.833
we have to try and live a simpler life,
00:42:35.940 --> 00:42:38.290
this knowledge I took
away with me from Bhutan,
00:42:39.380 --> 00:42:42.250
there I have discovered that
our happiness is dependent
00:42:42.250 --> 00:42:45.833
on our respect for nature
it's a question of survival.
00:42:46.678 --> 00:42:49.261
(gentle music)