Top

Planting trees for peace? The Fins did It, maybe we should too

On Sunday afternoon, May 8, the Finnish embassy and Finnish Lithuanian Chamber of Commerce planted three cherry blossom trees in front of the embassy, thus taking part in the ‘Plant And Care For Peace’ initiative. 

Planting Finnish flags under the cherry blossoms which were freshly planted © Lukas BARBIER

The Ambassador of Finland Arja Makkonen (left) and the Ambassador of Japan Shiro Yamasaki (right) © Lukas BARBIER

As war in Ukraine rages on and the climate crisis thickens, the Finnish embassy and Finnish Lithuanian Chamber of Commerce took part in planting three cherry blossoms joining more than 50 other countries in the project — planting trees for peace. The Ambassador of Japan, Shiro Yamasaki, attended as well.

This action starts on the 22nd of April on Earth Day and ends on the 5th of June on the UN’s World Environment Day.

Rubina Haapamäki, the Executive Director of the Finnish Lithuanian Chamber of Commerce © Lukas BARBIER

The ‘Plant And Care For Peace’ project was created by the Finnish non-profit ‘Treebuddy.earth Education’ in collaboration with Environment Online (ENO) and Act Now India.  

Volunteers help planting the trees © Lukas BARBIER

Related Post

As their www.pacfpeace.net website reads: “The founder of ENO school network (Environment Online) Mika Vanhanen initiated a tree planting day for peace in 2004, on an international day for peace 21 September. Every year since then, schools in over 150 countries have planted trees for peace. Now Mika volunteers in Treebuddy Earth Education and together with ENO School Network and Act Now India they are uniting their forces and call others to join the mission. Plant and care for peace is for groups, communities and organisations, in addition to schools.”

The winners who planted the “straightest tree” © Lukas BARBIER

The cherry blossoms in front of the Embassy of Finland © Lukas BARBIER

Arja Makkonen, the Finnish Ambassador, planting the last cherry blossom © Lukas BARBIER

Small Finnish lunch after the hard work © Lukas BARBIER

— by Lukas BARBIER (lukas@lukasbarbier.com)

Share

Recent Posts

  • Foreign affairs

“No need to mince words”: an assessment of what Trump’s victory means for Lithuania

"We can shout very loudly, but it won't change the position of the American people,"…

2 days ago
  • Latest

Lies, disrespect and mockery: experts assess Blinkevičiūtė’s “gift” to voters without scruples

From mocking messages flooding social networks to harsh criticism from political experts, the decision of…

1 week ago
  • Foreign affairs

Another year in the sovereign history of Kazakhstan

Republic Day has been celebrated in Kazakhstan as the main national date since 2022, giving…

2 weeks ago
  • Defence

In the assessment of NATO’s readiness for war with Russia, there is also a warning about the Baltic states: what is the Kremlin’s wild card?

According to Lrytas.lt, the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) faces a new geopolitical reality with…

2 weeks ago
  • Tribune

The Citus projects: The Kaip Niujorke by CITUS project continues – the spirit of New York unfolds in Vilnius, and the second phase is launching

In September, Citus – a creative real estate projects’ development and placemaking company – began…

2 weeks ago
  • Latest

These parties will enter the Seimas for the third time in a row. How many votes did they lose, and how many did they gain?

As various parties emerge, disappear or reorganize themselves in the political space, the Lithuanian Social…

3 weeks ago