Greenpeace’s global project, Roots, carried out a collective artistic composition project in Chile against the privatisation of water together with the local community.

Being told that in Chile, water is not guaranteed as a human right for people at the constitutional level, may sound alarming, very distant and could make you feel alienated from (depending on where in the world you are). Knowing that Chile has the greatest water crisis in the entire Western Hemisphere and 76% of its territory is affected by lack of water is something that as part of the climate movement we cannot ignore; it is urgent to support the communities that ask for its deprivatisation. The problem is that the water crisis is more than just drought, it is a problem of water distribution. 

“On the World Day of Drought and Desertification, in a context in which a large part of the country’s territory is becoming desertified due to how the land is used – intensive activities such as agribusiness and forestry – we must relate differently to water, guaranteeing it as a right for people and taking care of ecosystem balances. Protecting water ecosystems, native forests, wetlands, among others, is caring for water and curbing desertification”, a Greenpeace Chile coordinator, Estefanía González emphasises.  

© Bruno Giambelluca / Greenpeace
© Bruno Giambelluca / Greenpeace” alt=”” class=”wp-image-54404″/>
Artists and activist practice a collective musical composition in Chile.
© Bruno Giambelluca / Greenpeace

This is why, as part of the World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought, from the Greenpeace Roots project, together with MODATIMA Women, belonging to the central community of La Ligua, (one of the most affected areas of the country in terms of water crisis), and the Sibelius Music Academy of Finland, we brought Canto del Agua to life. A workshop, a collective cry, which set out to give life to a writing collaboration, resulting in a song. Its objective? To reflect the serious situation that exists throughout the region and amplify the voices of the movement for the de-privatisation of water.

After arriving in Chile, the Finnish delegation and the Roots team began a workshop together with people from the community; musicians, activists, defenders of water who day by day live firsthand the consequences of the water crisis. The base of all the meetings was the CECREA, a space whose facilities promote “creative citizenship”, the development of experiences that promote creativity from the promotion and exercise of the rights of boys, girls and young people.

On Monday the 13th we were ready to start! Together with the participants, one of the main components of the project was to work along the lines of their experiences, honor the local culture and be able to combine it into a powerful message that added their support to this fight.

© Bruno Giambelluca / Greenpeace
© Bruno Giambelluca / Greenpeace” alt=”” class=”wp-image-54436″/>
An activist records a musician playing the guitar.
© Bruno Giambelluca / Greenpeace