![]() When it was established in the 1950s, the school received farmland to grow crops and meet its administrative needs. “We have been expanding our orchards with the help of scientific methods.” “Seeing the havoc that floods wreaked recently, we will have to plant more trees,” Farooq said. It now has 8,500 mango trees, 1,400 date palms and a lemon orchard. The seminary, which is also a trailblazer in introducing science alongside religious education, has been planting trees for the past four years. “What’s happening due to climate change makes it essential for us to plant more and more trees to stop its adverse effects,” Umar Farooq, who supervises the institute’s agricultural land, told Arab News. Located in Hala village in Sindh, a province that was one of the worst affected by the floods, the Jamia-Tul-Uloom-il-Islamia boarding school also saw its orchards destroyed, which made it even more determined in its tree-planting drive. Last year, one-third of the country was submerged by unprecedented monsoon floods that claimed the lives of more than 1,700 people and caused an estimated $30 billion in damage. Pakistan contributes less than 1 percent of the global greenhouse gases that warm our planet but its geography makes it one of the countries most vulnerable to climate change. KARACHI: A seminary in southern Pakistan has set a new trend for religious schools as it cultivates large swathes of land to mitigate the impacts of climate change.
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