U.S.: Young Tribal Activists Nix Coal, Embrace Green
Print This
By Ngoc Nguyen
New American Media
Friday, Dec 18, 2009
Wahleah Johns grew up near the coal mines of the Black Mesa region of
Arizona and experienced first-hand the toll that mining takes on
people, the land and the groundwater. Her community, Forest Lake, was
one of several communities atop Black Mesa, where Peabody Energy ran
the largest strip mining operation in the country on Indian land until
recently.
Today, Johns, 34, co-directs the Black Mesa Water Coalition, a
grassroots organization of Native American and non-Native activists in
Flagstaff, which combines the goals of traditional environmentalism
with the commitment to Native culture and reverence for the land.
Johns and the Coalition are not unique among American Indians. But
their activism against fossil fuels and polluting power plants and for
sustainable, environmentally friendly growth reveals a generational
schism within the largest Native American tribes that has profound
economic and political implications for the future. That schism was
brought into sharp relief in September when the Hopi government banned
local and national environmental groups, including the Sierra Club and
Natural Resources Defense Council, from their lands.
The Navajo Nation supported the ban and pointed the finger at local and
national environmental groups, calling them “the greatest threat to
tribal sovereignty.” What triggered the ban was the environmentalists’
opposition to tribal government’s support for coal mining and power
plants.
While tribal leaders blame outsiders, Native American activists on and
off the reservations pose the real challenge to economic policies and
leadership, and the very ideas of Native cultural ties to the
environment. Young Navajo and Hopi tribal leaders – mostly women – are
working to create a green economy, infused with indigenous knowledge
and values. Their vision collides with that of their tribal
governments, who have long depended on coal royalties to prop up the
tribal economies.
Increasingly, grassroots environmental groups and their allies are
viewed as a threat to those revenues. They were instrumental in pushing
for the closure of the Mohave coal-fired power plant in Laughlin,
Nevada, in 2005. The tribe netted upwards of $8.5 million a year from
the sale of coal to fuel the plant.
Lillian Hill, a Hopi environmental activist, was among those who
opposed the Mohave plant. She says she could be exiled from the
reservation for carrying out her work to protect age-old aquifers.
“I’m not fearful of being banished from my homeland, because I have a
connection to my homeland…and that goes beyond government,” says Hill,
28, an organizer with Native Movement. “I’m fearful for the future,
because our tribal government and world governments are not looking
beyond profit margin.”
The coal for the Mohave Generating Station came from Hopi lands, as did
the water used to ferry the mineral via a pipeline across state lines.
Young tribal leaders like Hill grew up witnessing springs, a source of
water for drinking and farming, dry up, and become contaminated with
heavy metals from mining operations.
Hill says what she’s most worried about is that “there might not be enough water for future generations.”
The Hopi government says their economy would “collapse” without coal
revenues. But young Native American activists say those profits come at
the cost of their own physical and cultural survival.
“As Indian people, we’re economically dependent on our own cultural destruction,” says Navajo activist Jihan Gearon.
Gearon, 27, who hails from Fort Defiance, a town near the Navajo Nation
capital of Window Rock, says she grew up “poor.” Her house had no
running water, so Gearon used to help haul water home to be used for
cooking, cleaning and bathing.
She remembers that the men in her family worked hard, mainly doing
construction work. One uncle worked “blasting stuff” in the coal mines
of the Peabody Western Coal Company. Her grandfather labored in an old
saw mill.
“That’s the first industry people exploited, our timber,” Gearon says.
She came to realize the extent of the exploitation of natural resources
on tribal lands when she went to college at Stanford University. There,
she realized that tribal dependence on the extraction and sale of coal,
water and other natural resources was out of sync with traditional
native teachings.
“Our traditional culture is about protecting the environment, and being
minimalist and living in a balanced way with the environment,” Gearon
says. “We realize that [the earth] takes care of us so we need to take
care of it.
“On the other hand, for many of us, our only base for economic income
is through the destruction of the environment -- digging it up, cutting
trees, burning it, exploiting and destroying it. And, in the process,
we create pollution that makes our people sick.”
In college, Gearon met other tribal youth, who were interested in
bringing their knowledge back to the reservation. She now works as an
organizer on energy issues with the national nonprofit organization
Indigenous Environmental Network.
Wahleah John’s group pushed for the closure of the Mohave power plant.
They want the Navajo Nation to end its dependence on fossil fuels and
transition to a more sustainable economy. They formed a coalition to
push for green jobs legislation. The coalition scored a victory when
the Navajo Nation became the first tribe in the nation to pass green
jobs legislation. Passed in July, the Navajo Green Economy Act
establishes a commission and fund to spur green jobs.
“We wanted to give back to local people and community that often get
ignored,” says Johns, who adds that her people have been engaged in
sustainable practices for a long time. “We want to support weavers
co-ops, organic farms, organic ranching. A majority of people on the
reservation still grow their own food and raise sheep, cattle and
horses.”
Johns was recently appointed to sit on the five-person Green Economy
commission (confirmation pending). To date, the Navajo Nation has
invested no money in the green jobs fund, Johns says.
“We constantly have to prove ourselves, and show them this can work,”
she says. “We have to brainstorm with leaders on how to tap into
funding.”
Hill of Native Movement also wants to see green jobs benefit local
people. She says tribal governments negotiated agreements to sell coal
and water rights well below what they were worth, and corporations were
not held accountable for environmental degradation. And, in the end,
she says, coal royalties “benefited just a few people in the Hopi
nation and community.”
Gearon of the Indigenous Environmental Network says large-scale
renewable energy projects like wind turbine farms may not benefit local
people. Gearon favors community or small-scale energy projects, locally
owned and operated, in which the energy produced is used to power
Navajo homes. Ironically, while the Four Corners region is currently
home to two mega coal-fired power plants – Navajo Generation Station in
Page, Ariz., and the San Juan Generating Station in Farmington, N.M.,
nearly half of Navajos do not have electricity.
Sustainable practices and green jobs creation are critical strategies
for tribal members to provide for themselves, says PennElys GoodShield,
director of the Sustainable Nations Development Project in Trinidad,
Calif. “My take is providing food, water, shelter, and growth for our
national growth before we go commercial,” says GoodShield. “Lots of
people on our reservation have no electricity. There’s lots of work we
have to do to sustain ourselves to act as a sovereign nation.”
Her organization trains tribal youth across the country and fosters
leadership on sustainability issues. In northern California where the
Project is based, GoodShield says, members of local tribes including
the Yurok, Hupa, and Karuk have tapped energy from the many creeks on
the reservation by building “micro hydroelectric” devices from parts
purchased at local hardware stores and car alternators. GoodShield says
she’s working to raise funds to support these small-scale energy
projects that can generate enough power for several households.
Hill says people can draw upon traditional knowledge to find modern
solutions to climate change. The use of natural building materials such
as bale and straw in homes can promote energy efficiency. Another
example is dry farming, an ancient Hopi agricultural technique that
optimizes rainwater storage in the land to grow crops.
“We basically look at the landscape as a whole and identify the
watershed,” she explains. “Rainwater flows off the mesa into valley
where farmland is located.” Hopi farmers cultivated varieties of corn,
beans, squash and melons that could survive during drought conditions.
Gearon and Johns attended the 11-day climate change summit in
Copenhagen that ends today. Traditional knowledge and indigenous wisdom
are messages they carried with them to the conference, where world
governments will wrangle over how to cap greenhouse gas emissions
blamed for warming the earth to dangerous levels.
As world governments, including the United States, look to energy
policies that could ramp up nuclear and clean coal technology and a
market-based system for capping carbon dioxide emissions and trading
the credits (cap and trade), the women say these policies will continue
to harm health and the environment.
Gearon will tell the Navajo parable she learned from her elders.
“Black Mesa is a woman, and we’re taught that coal is her liver.
Everything on her is a part of her body and coal is her liver…What coal
does in the ground-- it filters out the water,” Gearon says. “In order
to make money, we’re taking out her ability to clean herself and clean
our water that we drink in the region.”
New American Media
Print This
|