2 striking photos taken just over a year apart
show how
Greta Thunberg's Climate Strike Inspired Millions
by Morgan McFall-Johnsen
by Morgan McFall-Johnsen
🌍 🌎 🌏
Left: Greta Thunberg sits outside the Swedish parliament building in order to raises awareness for climate change on August 28, 2018 in Stockholm, Sweden.
Right: People protest during a Climate Strike march in San Francisco, California, September 20, 2019.
But
those first Fridays were lonely affairs. She stationed herself outside
Swedish parliament with her handwritten sign and, sometimes, a few
friends.
- Greta Thunberg, a 16-year-old from Sweden, started striking every Friday in August 2018 to demand climate action from world leaders.
- On Friday, millions joined her in cities worldwide in a Global Climate Strike, mostly led by other young people.
- The photos of Thunberg's lonely demonstrations last year and the millions-strong climate marches on Friday show how she's inspired young people across the globe.
In August 2018, Greta Thunberg sat outside Swedish parliament with a sign reading "school strike for climate." It was her first Friday walking out of school for climate action, and she made a weekly routine out of it.
Today her efforts inspired millions to march in the streets of cities across the world.
Today her efforts inspired millions to march in the streets of cities across the world.
Thunberg will speak on Saturday at the United Nations Youth Climate Summit in New York City, then at the UN Climate Action Summit on Monday.
On Friday, she joined the protesters she'd inspired in New York City.
"I would never have predicted or believed that this was going to happen someday. And so fast, only in 15 months," Thunberg told the AP. "I can't wait to see the official numbers come in. It will be magnificent."
Thunberg will make her voice heard again on Saturday at the United Nations Youth Climate Summit in New York City, then speak at the UN Climate Action Summit on Monday.REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
New York City mayor Bill de Blasio estimated 60,000 people marching through the streets of Lower Manhattan. Other estimates were as high as 250,000 people.
"We have only been born into this world, we are going to have to live with this crisis our whole lives. So will our children and grandchildren and coming generations," Thunberg told Reuters. "We are not going to accept this. We are striking because we want a future and we are going to carry on."
"I think if enough people get together and stand up for this then that can have a huge difference, to put pressure on the people in power, to actually hold them accountable and to say you need to do something now," Thunberg said.
- Read more:
- 12 Gen Zers who skipped school to march across New York for the Global Climate Strike share why this is the most urgent issue of their generation
- Photos show huge climate-change protests around the world, which have spread across continents as millions strike to demand action
- How 16-year-old Greta Thunberg became the face of climate-change activism
- 16-year-old Greta Thunberg is sailing 13 days across the Atlantic to speak at a climate conference in New York. Here's why she won't just dial in.
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