Every day people around the world are looking for innovative solutions to the great issue that impacts us all—climate change. One of the more innovative solutions that we have seen is that of Uganda’s Little Hands Go Green, an organization started by Ugandan native Joseph Masembe that emphasizes green education in children in order to create positive change for the future. In an interview with Mr. Masembe, he said that his intentions when creating Little Hands Go Green was to teach children stewardship and ownership of their environment through giving them the opportunity to participate in small acts of green such as tree planting. Since the organization’s launch in May 2012, over 105,000 fruit tree have been planted in schools and homes around Uganda by children who receive their seedlings from Little Hands Go Green.
The reason that Little Hands Go Green uses fruit trees is so that young children may plant the tree and when they are older benefit from its fruits, therefore establishing a strong bond between the child and the act of green they performed and consequently a stronger bond with nature and our planet. With each tree successfully planted that survives to see its first fruits, the child who planted that tree will receive a certificate for their achievement—an effective way of using positive reinforcement to keep these children engaged and excited about past and future acts of green.
Uganda’s Little Green Hands puts on several different events each year including a Green Christmas festival this past December where the president of Uganda came and planted a tree with children in the capitol city of Kampala, the first time a Ugandan president has ever participated in such an event.