"Tuvalu may serve as the prime example of the need for inter-generational climate justice. But what could it possibly mean to give each their due amid sea level rise? Drawing from the parable of the compassionate Samaritan, indigenous wisdom, and lyric poetry, Maina Talia maintains that being good neighbours may well provide the key." Ernst M. Conradie, University of the Western Cape
The low-lying islands of Tuvalu represent a microcosm of how dangerous climate change is threatening lands, peoples, cultures and humanitys common history on earth our home. Suffering from threats of cultural extinction due to anthropogenic change caused by others, Oceanic islanders live not in the margins but in the midst of our common struggle for climate justice. Talias contextually and analytically gripping work offers a painfully demanding, highly relevant reflection on the ethical, political, and climatological depth of what it means to encounter the deadly power of global climate change. Will we stay in denial or open our eyes as neighbors? Sigurd Bergmann, Norwegian University of Science and Technology
"Theologically accomplished and scientifically informed, Maina Talia writes of the imminent existential threat from rising sea levels to his people's way of life in Tuvalu. With its ethical plea, his moving response represents a major contribution to recent work in eco-theology. He deserves a wide audience." - David Fergusson, University of Cambridge
"This work by Maina Talia has, at its heart, the lived realities of Pacific people, who have a deep indigenous spirituality and strong Christian faith. In the work of Climate Justice, Science and Spirituality (Theology) are two sides of the same coin. Talia has woven this as his contribution to an important discourse that is founded on his own advocacy for climate justice based on the question to polluting countries: 'Are You My Neighbour?'" - James Shri Bhagwan, Pacific Conference of Churches