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On International Youth Day, Salesian Cleric Encourages Innovation, Productivity

Fr. George Tharaniyil. Credit: Salesian Missions

On the occasion of the International Youth Day (IYD) marked Thursday, August 12, a member of the Religious Institute of the Salesians of Don Bosco (SDB) has called upon the young people in Africa to be innovative and productive.

In a Thursday, August 12 video message, the Executive Director of  Don Bosco Tech Africa, the entity that coordinates all Don Bosco Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) centres in Sub-Saharan Africa, highlights the value of innovation and productivity. 

“Dear young people of Africa, be innovative and productive so that you can be masters of your own destinies when it comes to sustainable, ethical food production and environmental preservation,” Fr. George Tharaniyil says.

Fr. Tharaniyil adds in reference to the commemoration that was first observed in 1999, “Both human and planetary health are important and they go hand in hand. There can be no human health without planetary health and planetary health enhances human health.”

This year’s commemoration is marked under the theme, “Transforming Food Systems: Youth Innovation for Human and Planetary Health.”

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“As the theme of this year’s International Youth Day suggests, it is not just a matter of food production only, it is a matter of wholeness and wellness of the human race as well as for the whole universe,” Fr. Tharaniyil says in his August 12 video message. 

The Salesian Priest adds that the theme entails “many other things including biodiversity, conservation, climate change mitigation, decent health care, social inclusion, poverty reduction, clean and healthy environment, education, and equity.”

He further notes that the aspects covered by the IYD 2021 theme “are also integral elements of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the young people of today should move more and more into this world view.”

The Executive Director of Don Bosco Tech Africa says that it is “important and encouraging to note that in recent times many of the climate action initiatives are being led by young people.”

“This is because they are the future,” Fr. Tharaniyil continues, and adds, “In the next 20 to 30 years the world will have to feed another two billion people and these young people will be in their 40s and 50s in the next 30 years and so it is their concern.”

More in Africa

The Priest further says that the reality of the world feeding more people in the future is also an issue of concern to SDB members because the youth “are close to our heart and your problems, your issues are issues as well.”

For this reason, the SDB member has partnered with various organizations to train and empower the youth.

He adds that “the Don Bosco Tech Africa has also taken on Green TVETs (as) one of its priority areas and this involves sustainable sources of energy.”

“In our training centres we offer entrepreneurial skills for the young people so that they can have a quality of life,” Fr. Tharaniyil says in his August 12 video message.

Magdalene Kahiu is a Kenyan journalist with passion in Church communication. She holds a Degree in Social Communications from the Catholic University of Eastern Africa (CUEA). Currently, she works as a journalist for ACI Africa.