Support UM News on World Press Freedom Day: Give to help sustain and expand the storytelling capacity of UM News. Your donation today will transform information into inspiration and ensure we can continue sharing stories of God’s work in the world through The UMC. Help us reach our $10,000 goal and keep this vital ministry fair, faithful, trusted and free for all!

United Methodist Church in Liberia targets planting 250,000 trees

United Methodists living in Liberia have been challenged to plant over 250,000 trees as part of a campaign to save the earth from the effects of climate change. The call to action was made by Jefferson Knight, the head of the Human Rights Monitor office of the Libera Conference, during the May 26 observance of Peace with Justice Week in Buchanan City, Grand Bassa County, Liberia.

Addressing students from various schools in Buchanan, Knight said climate change and environmental issues should be the concerns of all, adding: “Our efforts in addressing these issues will make the world a better place for us, our children and the next generation to come.” He said the theme “Addressing Climate Change to Save the Earth” for this year’s Peace with Justice celebration demonstrates the United Methodist Church commitment, dedication and readiness to address climate change challenges in Liberia and the world.

He pointed out that the Liberia Conference, through its Human Rights Monitor, took the initial step of planting more than 1,500 trees of various species in Buchanan City, Grand Bassa County, in response to addressing the danger that deforestation, sea erosion and flooding posed to the city and the earth in general.

 

Students parade through the streets holding trees as part of a Liberia Conference tree planting and awareness program in Buchanan City. Conference leaders consider tree planning one step in efforts to combat the effects of climate change in Liberia. Photo by E Julu Swen, UMNS. 
Students parade through the streets holding trees as part of a Liberia Conference tree planting and awareness program in Buchanan City. Conference leaders consider tree planning one step in efforts to combat the effects of climate change in Liberia. Photo by E Julu Swen, UMNS.

“We will encourage young people, traditional leaders, clergy, marketers, motorcyclists, farmers, the police and the military to get involved in the tree-planting initiatives,” Knight emphasized. He further indicated that Liberia and other underdeveloped countries were facing significant risks of climate-sensitive activities such as heavy rainfall, damaging winds and rising sea levels.

“As we celebrate Peace with Justice Sunday in Liberia and across our United Methodist connections, let us understand that we have a responsibility as people of faith to champion and lead the campaign for the protection and sustainability of God’s peace within our communities by properly caring for His creation: the earth,” Knight concluded.

 

United Methodists living in Liberia have been challenged to plant over 250,000 trees as part of a campaign to combat the effects of climate change. The call to action was made by the head of the United Methodist Church Human Rights Office during a May 26 observance of Peace with Justice Week in Buchanan City, Grand Bassa County. Photo by E Julu Swen, UMNS. 

United Methodists in Liberia accepted the challenge to plant over 250,000 trees to combat the effects of climate change. See video of the event during the May 26 observance of Peace with Justice Week in Buchanan City, Grand Bassa County.

Francis L. Koon, one of the instructors who accompanied his students to the parade, said planting the trees was a good step taken by the United Methodist Church in Liberia.

“My father had houses in KorKor Wein and those houses and the entire community are now buried under the Atlantic Ocean,” he stressed. Koon said the fight against the rising sea level is huge for the church alone to undertake, but planting trees was a significant contribution that would save the roofs of the houses from the stormy winds that frequent Buchanan City. “Twenty years ago, you would walk a distance to go on the beach but now, the beach and the city are becoming a community,” he lamented.

Commenting on Knight’s statement, Liberian Bishop Samuel J. Quire Jr. said the United Methodist Church needs to do more than planting trees to help the government combat climate change.

“We need to launch a special awareness-building campaign that will teach Liberians the importance of planting trees as a way of protecting the environment,” Quire said.

Quire noted that the conference’s Human Rights Monitor needs to track logging companies’ activities and call government attention to the companies’ failure to honor their reforestation agreement. He also said the conference needs to be intentional in planting trees at all of its mission stations to ensure that strong winds will not destroy homes there.

Swen is a communicator in Liberia. News media contact: Vicki Brown, Nashville, Tennessee, (615) 742-5470 or [email protected].


Like what you're reading? Support the ministry of UM News! Your support ensures the latest denominational news, dynamic stories and informative articles will continue to connect our global community. Make a tax-deductible donation at ResourceUMC.org/GiveUMCom.

Sign up for our newsletter!

Subscribe Now
Faith Stories
Susie and Ed Keefer pose with Miriam, age 4, in Kinshasa, Congo, in 2013. Shortly afterward, Miriam went home with the Keefers to the United States. The matching outfits were a gift from Dr. Rebecca Yohadi. Photo courtesy of Susie Keefer.

From mission volunteer to adoptive mom

When Susie Keefer traveled to the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2010, little did she know it would be the first of many mission journeys.
Mission and Ministry
The Rev. Jonathan Baker and Donna Baker are overwhelmed as water gushes forth from a well in Wembo Nyama, Democratic Republic of Congo, in 2016. The local people had been praying for water for decades. New Covenant United Methodist Church in The Villages, Fla., and its Lake Deaton United Methodist Church campus in Wildwood, Fla., raised the money for this first well in the Sankuru Province of Central Congo. Photo by the Rev. Jim Divine.

Calling led couple to ministry in Congo

The Rev. Jonathan Baker, former conference council on ministries director, and registered nurse Donna Baker shared their skills with the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Mission and Ministry
John Kodjo (standing), a member of Mapamboli United Methodist Church in Kinshasa, Congo, tries to salvage things from his flooded home. Torrential rains and flooding on April 5 damaged over 1,000 homes in the area and killed at least 33 people. Kodjo’s family fled on the roof of their home. Photo by the Rev. Fiston Okito, UM News.

Floods devastate United Methodists in Congo

Thousands have been displaced and two United Methodist churches have been damaged by flooding in Kinshasa, the country’s capital.

United Methodist Communications is an agency of The United Methodist Church

©2025 United Methodist Communications. All Rights Reserved