[Recharge]
Stories thatâll get you through the week. / June 6, 2018
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[Her Car Rolled Over. She Was Trapped. Then Came the Football Team.](
The 13- and 14-year-olds of an Idaho football team were jubilant on their way home through Oregon after winning a tournament in California.
Then they saw the overturned car and a couple stuck insideâand they got to work.
Alan Hardman said he was passed out from the crash when he thought he heard "young voices." The teens got Hardman out, but his wife, Margaret, remained trapped. Six offensive linemen couldnât push the car back over. But then 12 players from another van joined in to free her.
"I donât know how we would have done it without them," Alan Hardman tells the [Idaho Statesman](. "They didn't even hesitate."
Last Thursday, two days after the rescue, the Boise team visited the Hardmans, who were staying at a relativeâs home in Idaho. They brought a signed football, flowers, cookies, and cardsâand got hugs back in return.
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Hi, David Beard here, and this week in Recharge, Iâm highlighting some of the relentless and resilient young people who are striving for a better world.
The odds were against them. They didnât stop. It took some of these teenagers two years, but they finally got Utahâs solidly GOP legislature to talk about climate changeâand to pass a resolution signed by the Republican governor acknowledging its effects.
At first the Senateâs Natural Resources Committee wouldnât even grant them a hearing. So the students organized an unofficial oneâfilling one of the biggest conference rooms in the state Capitolâand persuaded GOP state legislator Becky Edwards to sponsor a resolution in 2017.
It failed, but dozens of teens came back this year with a bipartisan resolution focusing on factors that affect Utah residents every day, such as rising temperatures, varying snowfall, and worsening air quality. "I'm hoping that other conservative states, people, and students especially see that it is possible to work towards a healthy future and not lose hope," says Mishka Banuri, a high school junior. ([CNN]()
This photographer captured a manâs scariest moment. Also, his best. Last August, Marcus Martin risked his life to save a woman from a speeding car driven by a white supremacist in Charlottesville, Virginia. Photographer Ryan M. Kellyâs image of Martin being struck by the car soon became iconic and would go on to win this yearâs Pulitzer Prize for breaking news photography.
Nearly a year later, Martin and Kelly reunited, but under happier timesâMartin was marrying the woman he saved, Marissa Blair.
And Kelly was happyâeven honored, he told me last weekâto serve as their wedding photographer. ([Slate]()
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After this state banned pesticides, tourism and wildlife flourished. The tiny Indian state of Sikkim, high in the Himalayas, decided 15 years ago to ban all pesticides from its farms. It eventually outlawed pesticides and chemical fertilizers altogether, and phased out plastic utensils and dishes.
Now Sikkimâs 600,000-some residents are setting a model for the worldâs most populous democracy. The number of foreign tourists has increased significantly over the years, and in 2014, Sikkim was named the worldâs top destination by Lonely Planet. The state's production of large cardamom (think Earl Grey tea)âhas increased by nearly 23 percent since 2014, and officials credit the resurgent bees that cross-pollinate the crop.
Not all of the governmentâs efforts have been a complete success, however. The price of cabbage tripled, and some farmers say they need more access to organic manure, training, and markets where they can sell their food. But other countries are still paying attention: Sikkimâs Himalayan neighbor, the kingdom of Bhutan, is planning to go all-organic by 2020. ([Washington Post]()
Away from Rwanda, and backâas a pacesetter. There are four neurosurgeons, all male, in Claire Karekezi's once-riven homeland of Rwanda. Next month, Karekezi will join them as the first and only female neurosurgeon in the country.
"I need to carry the dream to the end," says Karekezi.
As a 10-year-old who had to flee the genocide in 1994, Karekeziâs dream was to become a doctor. Though she endured the 100-day massacreâand lost relatives during itâit didnât deter her. "I always tell people that thatâs what sort of made us who we are today as Rwandese people," she tells the Toronto Star. "Because we grew up knowing that we cannot count on anyone but ourselves. So this kind of spirit kept me going, to do whatever it takes to get where I want to go." ([Toronto Star]()
Recharge is written by David Beard, a contributing editor at the Poynter Institute. He's always looking for tales of people who present truth to power and developments that can better our world. Send him tips, stories, or feedback at [recharge@motherjones.com](.
Thatâs it for this edition! We hope these stories help you in the week ahead. Weâll leave you with this [photo]( of the fog rolling over the Golden Gate Bridge from Dave Gordon.
Image credits: The Boise football players with the couple they rescued. Screenshot via the Idaho Daily Statesman; Golden Gate Bridge. [Dave Gordon](/[Department of the Interior](. Â
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