Showing posts with label indigenous peoples. Show all posts
Showing posts with label indigenous peoples. Show all posts

Saturday, December 3, 2016

STANDING ROCK: "There's nothing worse than too late"

#NoDAPL encampment at Standing Rock - December 3, 2016


Having answered a call for clergy to go to Standing Rock, my friend Paul Benz, a seminarian at Pacific Lutheran School of Theology (PLTS) here in Berkeley, posted this on Facebook yesterday. With his permission, I share it. (Paul posted the image above after arriving at Standing Rock; I've added additional images that Paul has previously shared on Facebook.)


We left Pacific School of Religion at 10:15 last night after our classmates prayed over us. We reached Reno by 3 am headed for North Dakota. We are responding to the call for clergy to come and support the water protectors at Standing Rock. Why are the Five of us going?

Why am I going?

Standing Rock: "You can't drink oil."
Because water canons are filleting peoples skin in below freezing temperatures with little to no media coverage.

Because Energy Transfer Partners first route for the pipeline was refused by people who had enough money (and white skin) to force them elsewhere and elsewhere happened to be under a lake where people with less money (and brown skin) draw there drinking water with little to no media coverage.

Because if Energy Transfer Partners and the Banks have the money and power to keep us from hearing about this they also have the money and power to put people to work on a new source of energy not a one time construction project that could break and contaminate the Missouri River... the Missouri runs right into the Mississippi River.

Because the Lakota people have a right to have their water source and sacred burial grounds protected and the media isn't saying much.

Because Jesus came to bring good news to the poor and the prophets before him consistently commanded those in power not to oppress the poor of the land and for too long the institutional church has harmed those it was called to lift up.

Because the children may ask me one day "where was I?" What did I do?

Because right defeated is better than wrong unchallenged.

Because the way address evil is not ignoring it.

"Call your bank. Divest from the pipeline."
Because the hottest places in hell are reserved for those who remained neutral during times of great moral crisis (Dante's quote).

Because if I receive call myself a follower of Christ who commanded me to love my neighbor and I turn my back on my neighbor when they are being blasted by water canons and tear gas then i am a liar.

Because going is a way I can do something. It's not the only way. Call sheriffs offices and demand they not spend taxpayer dollars sending officers to coral people at the behest of Energy Transfer Partners.

Call Wells Fargo, Bank of America and Chase and tell them to divest funds from DAPL.

Call the Governor of North Dakota and President Obama.

Because there's nothing worse than too late.

Because Advent is Action and Christ came for Love.

Because it's the right thing to do.



Related posts

As kids across the US turn to making construction paper turkeys and learning the story of The First Thanksgiving, they will inevitably start asking questions.

(See Thanksgiving 2016 and #NoDAPL: 4 Questions)




Every time I've heard an ambulance in the past forty or so years, I've thought, "help is on the way."

(See Christmas: "Help is on the way . . . ")










I believe that once the Church comes out of the closet -- that is, once we start speaking quite openly about the difference between the world as we find it and the world as we believe God wishes it to be -- there is no way this old world will be able to stay the same.

(See Let the Church Out of the Closet )

Saturday, October 29, 2016

Thanksgiving 2016 and #NoDAPL: 4 Questions

The Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) protests are waking people up on human rights, civil rights, immigration, land, water, and environmentalism overall.


Welcome to the land of the free . . . .(V @ UR_Ninja #NoDAPL)
(Please share this image.)


It is fortuitous that the protest against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) is coming to a head as we enter November.

As kids across the US turn to making construction paper turkeys and learning the story of The First Thanksgiving, they will inevitably start asking questions.

Asking questions should have become part of Thanksgiving a long time ago.

To borrow a custom from another commemorative tradition, I suggest people everywhere use this time to ask 4 Questions:


(1) How does a person get to be an "American"?

Our children want to know: Is it "I was here first"? Is it "I got here at the right time"? Is it "I was stronger"?

(Is it "I was lucky enough to be born into a group that was stronger"?)

Maybe the way it works in the future can be different than the way it's worked in the past?


(2) Can we settle conflict by force?

Our children want to know: do we believe that, in the end, the way to settle conflict is for one side to overpower the other?

Is that how disagreements end?


(3) Who owns the land?

Our children want to know: what does it really mean for one person to "own" a part of the Earth? How does that get decided? What happens if someone says, "You're wrong, I own all of this?"

How could new people have come to the Americas and become owners of land if there were already people here who owned all the land?


(4) Will there always be enough water?

Our children want to know: I just go to the sink and turn on the tap and the water comes forever, right?


Make the Thanksgiving season a time of learning.


Related posts

"We need to first acknowledge the genocidal origins of OUR nation’s history of ethnic cleansing and occupation."

(See Native American Rights: Acknowledge the Occupation)













Having recently moved to California, I have a very strong impression that someone was living here before I "discovered" it.

(See DECOLONIZE THIS: The ELCA's Doctrine of Discovery Challenge)













More and more, people are looking to the wisdom of indigenous people to give us strength as we confront the climate crisis and other problems.

(See SDG 15 and Peace: "We are but one thread ... ")






How do you observe Indigenous Peoples Day?

(See Reflections on Indigenous Peoples Day 2015)

Monday, October 10, 2016

DECOLONIZE THIS: The ELCA's Doctrine of Discovery Challenge

The repudiation of the doctrine of discovery by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) poses a challenge to the denomination's congregations.


SWEDISH PIONEERS
"The courage and vision of the Swedish immigrants and pioneers in our western
states was a contributing factor in the growth of a great empire, AMERICA!"
(First Day of Issue - Swedish Pioneer Centennial (1848-1948) - US Postal Service)


Happy Indigenous Peoples Day.

The Christian denomination of which I am a member, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), voted in August to repudiate the  "doctrine of discovery."

You can read the full text of the resolution on page 4 of the pdf of the 2016 churchwide assembly reports.

Meanwhile, there is a grassroots movement within the ELCA to "decolonize Lutheranism."

This leads me to wonder how the organized power of 4 million Lutherans in the US will be brought to bear on the fact that we are living on occupied land.

One possibility: the resolution repudiating the doctrine of discovery affirms that "this church will eliminate the doctrine of discovery from  its contemporary rhetoric and programs, electing to practice accompaniment with Native peoples instead of a missionary endeavor to them, allowing these partnerships to mutually enrich indigenous communities and the ministries of the ELCA." It seems to me that this represents a commitment that each congregation must step up to:

* Where do we encounter the doctrine of discovery in our contemporary rhetoric and programs? What must we do to eliminate it?

* How might we "practice accompaniment with Native peoples"? What does that mean?

* "[A]llowing these partnerships to mutually enrich indigenous communities and the ministries of the ELCA" - what could that possibly mean for our congregation?

Having recently moved to California, I have a very strong impression that someone was living here before I "discovered" it. At the same time, it would be the easiest thing in the world to pat ourselves on the back for repudiating the doctrine of discovery and forget about all the rest.

I don't think I'll figure out good answers to these questions on my own. That's why I'm looking forward to working on them with other members of my faith community.


Related posts

"We need to first acknowledge the genocidal origins of OUR nation’s history of ethnic cleansing and occupation."

(See Native American Rights: Acknowledge the Occupation)













To be sitting in Berkeley and seeing in front of my eyes the spreading of this idea that started in Texas and was nurtured in Philadelphia and got agitated in Chicago felt like a real Pentecost moment.


(See Decolonize Lutheranism -- A Northern California Installment)






How do you observe Indigenous Peoples Day?

(See Reflections on Indigenous Peoples Day 2015)

Thursday, June 23, 2016

SDG 15 and Peace: "We are but one thread ... "

The connection of peace/war and SDG 15 (Life on Land)? Think US history -- especially the decimation of the buffalo and the Native American genocide.


The UN International Day for Peace 2016 has been tied to the 17 Sustainable Development Goals. Life on Land is goal #15.

You can certainly see the truth about a country's attitude toward people by watching how it treats other forms of life on the land.


National mammal

Just weeks ago, the American Bison was named the US "national mammal" -- a reminder of the inexplicable slaughter of that animal in the American West at the end of the 19th century, and of that slaughter to genocide carried out on Native Americans.  It took me less than a minute to reference this quote from Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West by Dee Brown:

Of the 3,700,000 buffalo destroyed from 1872 through 1874, only 150,000 were killed by Indians. When a group of concerned Texans asked General Sheridan  if something should not be done to stop the white hunters' wholesale slaughter, he replied: "Let them kill, skin, and sell until the buffalo is exterminated, as it is the only way to bring lasting peace and allow civilization to advance." (p, 254, in Chapter 11, "The War to Save the Buffalo")

The decimation of the buffalo, like the decimation of the native people, was a decades-long process. More information is in the Wikipedia article on bison hunting.

"Slaughtered for a Pastime"
"Shall the Buffalo Go? Reminiscences of an Old Buffalo Hunter"
Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly, Vol. XV, May 1883, New York,
Original vintage wood engraving, 1883. 11.1 x 15.9 cm
(Source: thegallerii.com )


I have always carried with me the memory of a painting of the hunters shooting buffalo from a passing train. Searching for it led me to the image above. Please take a moment to look at the many beautiful images of buffalo on the website of thegallerii.com. )


If looks could kill . . . 

When I was a teenager, back in the 1970s, I was a huge Beatles fan and would spend hours at the piano and guitar playing through all of their songs -- often just starting at the front of the book ("Act Naturally") and going straight through to the end ("You've Really Got a Hold on Me"). So, of course, when I got to the C's I would play "The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill." Even as I was playing, I would be thinking, "What kind of a song is this? It's not a love song . . . it's not a rock 'n' roll song . . . it's not psychedelic . . . I think it's a satire but . . . what's the point?"

The children asked him if to kill was not a sin
"Not when he looked so fierce", his mummy butted in
If looks could kill it would have been us instead of him
All the children sing . . .


I didn't quite know what it was saying at the time, but it has stayed with me.

Over the years I've realized that the most perceptive observers of a culture tend to be outsiders, and sometimes the only way insiders can hear the truth is to sit with it for a few years -- or decades. The Beatles were perfectly positioned to help with that. "If looks could kill it would have been us instead of him" is sort of the US explanation for everything it does in the world.


The last word . . .

"Humankind has not woven the web of life.
We are but one thread within it . . . . "
(Please share this message.)
More and more, people are looking to the wisdom of indigenous people to give us strength as we confront the climate crisis and other problems. Apt words come from Chief Seattle:

Humankind has not woven the web of life.
We are but one thread within it.
Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves.
All things are bound together.
All things connect.


I guess this is another of those truths that is hard to hear, and takes years to sink in.


Where else in the world do we see this connection between the presence or lack of respect for other forms of life in the land, and justice and peace for people?


Related posts

It will benefit us antiwar activists in the US to attend to and reflect upon the importance of these Sustainable Development Goals to achieving the goal of ending war.

(See PEACE DAY 2016: What comes first? Demilitarization? or Development?)












"We need to first acknowledge the genocidal origins of OUR nation’s history of ethnic cleansing and occupation."

(See Native American Rights: Acknowledge the Occupation)














In much of the 20th century, conflict and war centered on oil resources and the Middle East. Will the 21st century see conflict and war center on fisheries, particularly in the Pacific?

(See Pacific Fisheries' Futile Conflict: How about sharing?)

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Native American Rights: Acknowledge the Occupation

Emblem of Ohlone Costanoan-Rumsen-Carmel tribe native
to the land that is now the Monterey/Carmel area of California.


A growing trend is that people in the US who work for the rights of occupied people elsewhere in the world first acknowledge the American occupation.

As we work to #decolonizelutheranism, we need to be explicit about how concrete the colonialism is.

Maybe the "kairos moment" lies in recognizing that we took this land at the point of a gun . . . and nothing will change until we meaningfully repent of that original sin.

Map of Native American tribes in what is now California.
(Source: Costanoan Rumsen Carmel tribe website)
This sank in recently when I attended the Friends of Sabeel NA (FOSNA) conference on the occupation of Palestine, held in Santa Cruz. The proceedings began with a statement recognizing that the very spot we were sitting in had been taken by force from Native American people:

While we are gathered here today to raise awareness about the ongoing Israeli occupation of Palestine, we need to first acknowledge the genocidal origins of OUR nation’s history of ethnic cleansing and occupation. The very ground that we are now standing on was once the homeland of the Awaswas and Ohlone people, which was ripped away from them by the Spanish conquistadors and used for building missions and settlements. Our nation as a whole however, took part in and was founded upon the ethnic cleansing of countless Native American peoples. To focus solely on Israel as a war criminal complicit in ethnic cleansing would be hypocritical, as we continue to reap material benefits from the slaughter and marginalization of the Awaswas and Ohlone.

This land was not left to us peacefully. It was stolen. It was expropriated. As we are clearly not the rightful inhabitants of this land, it would do us well to shed our sense of entitlement. We need to realize that we are an intrinsic part of this process of genocide and until we act to concretely and directly abolish it here, our actions to bring justice in occupied Palestine are hypocritical and reflective of our underlying white supremacist attitudes.


This wasn't the first time I had attended an event that began with this recognition -- for instance, I remember similar statements at an anti-drones conference, a conference on police crimes, and the installation of a UCC leader -- but perhaps because I am new to this place, I paid close attention.

I would encourage everyone who welcomes this recognition to go the next step: take a minute now to go online and learn about the people who lived in the place you now occupy, back before someone came and took over. Do you know the names of the original occupants of the land you now claim as "your" home?


Related posts

How do you observe Indigenous Peoples Day?

(See Reflections on Indigenous Peoples Day 2015)











"Missa dos Quilombos" asked for forgiveness and sought healing for the legacy of slavery in Brazil. Dom Helder celebrated the Quilombo Mass. He said: "Mariama [Mother Mary], we aren't here to ask that today's slaves be tomorrow's slave masters. Enough of slaves! Enough of masters! We want liberty!" The beating of the drums was overpowering, they exploded like the screams of our souls!

(See Hélder Câmara and Liberation Theology 101: Where? When? Why? Who? )


Sun Raid is a searing reminder that people in the US have always been happy to welcome immigrants to help make their businesses profitable and make sure they had cheap stuff and cheap labor . . . . but how dare they expect to be treated like people!

(See WELCOME MAT USA: Come in! Come in! (Get out! Get out!))











Can there be any more clear illustration than the one at left to remind us that the work of the Church is liberation?

(See Christian "Church"? How about Christian "Liberation Organization"? )

Thursday, April 21, 2016

WELCOME MAT USA: Come in! Come in! (Get out! Get out!)


Ester Hernandez, Sun Raid
Un-naturally harvested
SUN*RAID
RAISINS
Guaranteed Deportation
Mextecos, Zapotecos, Triques, Purepechas
by-product of NAFTA


Saturday is the anniversary of Cesar Chavez' death in 1993, and it seems like an opportune time to lift up the work of artist Ester Hernandez.  I first saw her poster Sun Raid at the "Fires Will Burn" exhibition at DePaul University in Chicago.

Sun Raid is a searing reminder that people in the US have always been happy to welcome immigrants to help make their businesses profitable and make sure they had cheap stuff and cheap labor . . . . but how dare they expect to be treated like people!

(For a book-length treatment of this subject, see Juan Gonzalez's Harvest of Empire: A History of Latinos in America.)

We are living in a year in which we are seeing Donald Trump get away with demonizing immigrants. Maybe we need to take advantage of this moment and turn the phenomenon on its head. Who, after all, are the immigrants? Who is "entitled" to be here? What can it possibly mean anymore to say that certain people are tolerated and others are "illegals"?

I've heard people say that the problem is that Trump is a master at using the media to get attention, and the rest of us need to get with the times. Okay, here's my contribution:


Eva Longoria on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert:
"We didn't cross the border, the border crossed us."
Maybe when Eva Longoria says it, people will remember???
(Please retweet this message.)


A few weeks ago, on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, super-celebrity Eva Longoria repeated the expression familiar to many of us: "We didn't cross the border, the border crossed us." Maybe when she says it, people will remember???

More on "We didn't cross the border, the border crossed us" here.


Related posts

It will take me multiple posts to spell out everything that I feel needs to be said about the Ayotzinapa 43.  People in the US need to work to change their own attitude about Mexico, and about the culpability or all of us here in the US in the wrongs that are being done down there. The Ayotzinapa 43 were persecuted for saying "the future can be different." It's time for us to take up their cry.

(See Ayotzinapa43: US People Need an Attitude Adjustment )





El Buen Pastor by Luis Jiménez depicts Ezekiel Hernandez -- a shepherd who was shot by U.S. marines in the area around the US-Mexico border as he was tending his sheep. The artist has said, "having [marines] patrolling the border in the 'war on drugs' is 'an accident waiting to happen.'"

(See Holy Week 2016 and "El Buen Pastor")












Part of what I loved about Du Hai was the way it used large pieces of fabric to convey the sensation of being in a boat among billowing waves, and the multiple uses to which they put the fabric - sea, clouds, sail, and more. Even a newcomer to modern dance, such as myself, could grasp what was going on.

(See Wanna Fix the U.S.A? Welcome an Immigrant Today! )

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

COLOMBIA: Where did the violence come from?

Colombia (with marker at the Pacific port of Buenaventura)
As a peace agreement draws near in Colombia, it is a good time for people in the US to try to learn a little bit about what has been going on in that country.

A few years ago, I got way outside my comfort zone and read One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez. Yes, yes, I know it's a work of fiction -- "magical realist" fiction at that -- but it's also a plunge into one particular point of view about the Latin American experience from the perspective of someone who came from northeastern Colombia. (Not to mention some basic facts of geography and demographics: but of course, unlike me, you already knew that Colombia has a Caribbean coast and a Pacific coast, connecting to Panama at its northwest corner, right?)

I had thought (like most people in the US, I suppose) that Colombia is a country of jungles, suitable for clandestinely growing cocaine and channeling it to markets like the US. I couldn't picture much else. But as I read One Hundred Years of Solitude, I started to try to imagine the history of Colombia -- a place to which thousands of people had come to try to make a life through mining and agriculture and trade. I tried to imagine the spirit in which people embarked on military campaigns, as a logical extension of their efforts to build wealth and grow their families. Riding roughshod over the indigenous peoples, disregard for inequality and inequity, and deep-seated racism seemed to be part of the ethos.

Hold that thought.

Now, read the snapshot of life in the southeast coastal area of Colombia (red flag in map above) on the Peace Brigades International website: "The women of Puente Nayero."  This is a current account of the simple existence that the ordinary people of Colombia are trying to eke out, and the pain and trauma they are experiencing as a result of the years of violence in Colombia.

Perhaps, like me, you will read a sentence like, "In 2001, many people came to her neighbourhood looking for a new home, fleeing from the Naya River where the paramilitaries had massacred and displaced the Afro-Colombian communities," and wonder what it refers to. Luckily, these days we're all just a few clicks away from answers:

Another massacre took place at Alto Naya, Cauca department on April 12, 2001, in which an estimated 40-130 civilians were killed, and thousands displaced. Approximately 100 paramilitaries from the Frente Calima ("Calima Front") participated in the killings.

The first victim was a 17-year-old girl named Gladys Ipia whose head and hands were cut off with a chain saw. Next, six people were shot while eating at a local restaurant. Another man was chopped into pieces and burned. A woman had her abdomen ripped open with a chainsaw. An indigenous leader named Cayetano Cruz, was cut in half with a chainsaw. The paramilitaries lined up the villagers in the middle of the town, and asked people if they knew any guerrillas. If they answered "no", they were hacked to death with machetes. Many of the bodies were dismembered, and strewn piecemeal around the area, making it difficult to gain an accurate body count and identify victims. Between 4,000 and 6,000 people were displaced as they fled the area during and following the violence.

Despite repeated warnings over the preceding two weeks that such an attack was about to occur, the Colombian military refused to provide protection for the villagers. And although the massacre went on for more than three days, the nearby Third Brigade did not show up until after it was over. Yet when the FARC attempted to take over a town, in neighboring Nariño, the military responded within three hours. Some of the villagers traveled to the Colombian Army's Third Brigade an hour away. The Cauca People’s Defender, Victor Javier Melendez, notified the military that a massacre was occurring on the morning of April 13. He received no response. The Colombian Public Advocate's office stated: "it is inexplicable how approximately 500 paramilitaries could carry out an operation of this type without being challenged in any way, especially since the area that these men entered is only twenty minutes from the village of Timba, where a base operated by the Colombian Army is located and has been staffed since March 30 of this year." (Source: Wikipedia: "Right-wing paramilitarism in Colombia: The Alto Naya massacre")

Perhaps, like me, you'll wonder how cruelty like this can occur. Scroll up the page and discover the picture of a US military officer:

General William P. Yarborough
In October 1959, the United States sent a "Special Survey Team", composed of counterinsurgency experts, to investigate Colombia's internal security situation, due to the increased prevalence of armed communist groups in rural Colombia which formed during and after La Violencia. Three years later, in February 1962, a Fort Bragg top-level U.S. Special Warfare team headed by Special Warfare Center commander General William P. Yarborough, visited Colombia for a second survey.

In a secret supplement to his report to the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Yarborough encouraged the creation and deployment of a paramilitary force to commit sabotage and terrorist acts against communists:


"A concerted country team effort should be made now to select civilian and military personnel for clandestine training in resistance operations in case they are needed later. This should be done with a view toward development of a civil and military structure for exploitation in the event the Colombian internal security system deteriorates further. This structure should be used to pressure toward reforms known to be needed, perform counter-agent and counter-propaganda functions and as necessary execute paramilitary, sabotage and/or terrorist activities against known communist proponents. It should be backed by the United States." [emphasis added]

The new counter-insurgency policy was instituted as Plan Lazo in 1962 and called for both military operations and civic action programs in violent areas. Following Yarborough's recommendations, the Colombian military recruited civilians into paramilitary "civil defense" groups which worked alongside the military in its counter-insurgency campaign, as well as in civilian intelligence networks to gather information on guerrilla activity. Among other policy recommendations the US team advised that "in order to shield the interests of both Colombian and US authorities against 'interventionist' charges any special aid given for internal security was to be sterile and covert in nature." It was not until the early part of the 1980s that the Colombian government attempted to move away from the counterinsurgency strategy represented by Plan Lazo and Yarborough's 1962 recommendations. (Source: Wikipedia: "Right-wing paramilitarism in Colombia: Plan Lazo")

Plan Lazo? Clearly there is much more to learn and think about . . . .


As the peace process yields fruit in Colombia, let's not let it be an invitation to wash our hands and say, "Well that's one problem solved," and forget about it. Let's have the fortitude to try to learn a little bit about what has been happening in Colombia -- and what our part in it has been -- and begin to ask how we can participate in healing.

Yes, read One Hundred Years of Solitude. But also devote at least the same amount of time to connecting the dots about recent Colombian history and the role of the US.


Related posts

It will take me multiple posts to spell out everything that I feel needs to be said about the Ayotzinapa 43.  People in the US need to work to change their own attitude about Mexico, and about the culpability or all of us here in the US in the wrongs that are being done down there. The Ayotzinapa 43 were persecuted for saying "the future can be different." It's time for us to take up their cry.

(See Ayotzinapa43: US People Need an Attitude Adjustment )





How do you observe Indigenous Peoples Day?

(See Reflections on Indigenous Peoples Day 2015)











"Missa dos Quilombos" asked for forgiveness and sought healing for the legacy of slavery in Brazil. Dom Helder celebrated the Quilombo Mass. He said: "Mariama [Mother Mary], we aren't here to ask that today's slaves be tomorrow's slave masters. Enough of slaves! Enough of masters! We want liberty!" The beating of the drums was overpowering, they exploded like the screams of our souls!

(See Hélder Câmara and Liberation Theology 101: Where? When? Why? Who? )


"You may not understand every word, you may feel uncomfortable, you may have to spend time later trying to figure it out or to humble yourself now and ask for help; you may have to work at it. But in the long run . . . a Spanish speaker is what you are . . . because that's the community you're a part of!"

(See Don't speak Spanish? "Sure you do . . . .")




In a composition suggestive of a yin-yang symbol, a woman in a burka (but wearing audacious red glitter platform heels) is surrounded by genie-ish tableaus of the many male obsessions/pastimes that some of us rail about frequently -- sexualized pop singers, professional sports -- as well as some that we probably should rail about more (such as patriarchy in religion and political violence).

(See VIOLENCE: " . . . and the women must live with the consequences . . . " )

Friday, November 27, 2015

GLOBAL HIBAKUSHA: The Result of the "People Who Don't Matter" Mindset


"Della Rae Morrison, chair of the Western Australian Nuclear Free Alliance
and an Aboriginal woman from the Bibbulmum Nation in Western Australia,
has been active in the fight against nuclear power and uranium mining since
the threat of uranium mining occurred in her country." (Peace Boat image)


The outstanding aspect of the "global hibakusha" phenomenon that I learned about at the World Nuclear Victims Forum in Hiroshima was that in situation after situation, great harm is done because someone has the attitude that "these people don't matter." (See HIROSHIMA: What does it mean to say, "We are ALL 'hibakusha'?" )

Spread radioactivity throughout the Navajo lands of the US Southwest? Could it because someone said, "Don't worry, those people don't matter . . . " ?

Radioactive fallout in the lands of the aboriginal people of Australia?  Could it because someone said, "Don't worry, those people don't matter . . . " ?

Workers sent in to clean up the Chernobyl radiation release and then getting radiation sickness?  "Don't worry, those people don't matter . . . "

Workers sent in to clean up the Fukushima radiation release and then getting leukemia?  "Don't worry . . . "

A huge increase in cancers in the Xinjiang area of China after nuclear testing?  " . . . those people don't matter . . . "

Hiroshima?  " . . . those people . . . "

Nagasaki?  " . . . don't matter . . . "

DU in Iraq? Testing in the Marshall Islands? US downwinders? Indian uranium workers?

And on and on and on . . .

It has to do with racism. It has to do with class. It has to do with colonialism and imperialism. Most of all it has to do with power.

The Declaration of the World Nuclear Victims Forum in Hiroshima (Draft Elements of a Charter of World Nuclear Victims’ Rights) states:

We acknowledge that the mining and refining of uranium, nuclear testing, and the disposal of nuclear waste are being carried out based on ongoing colonization, discriminatory oppression, and infringement of indigenous peoples’ rights, including their rights to relationships with their ancestral land. These activities impose involuntary exposure to radiation and contaminate the local environment. Thus, the local populations are continually and increasingly deprived of the basic necessities for human life with ever more of them becoming nuclear victims. (Section 5)

(Read the Declaration of the World Nuclear Victims Forum in Hiroshima (Draft Elements of a Charter of World Nuclear Victims’ Rights) in English | in Japanese )

That's why it's time to say, "We are ALL hibakusha" . . . and to join the global movement to stop the harm from nuclear radiation.


#GlobalHibakusha: what are we going to do about it?
(Please retweet this message!)



Related posts

Hibakusha is a word that has traditionally been used to refer to people affected by the nuclear blasts in Hiroshima and Nagaski.  It is now being broadened to recognize the many additional victims of acute affects of nuclear radiation (including fallout from tests and radioactivity from mining and processing). In fact, we are all subject to the impact and threat of nuclear radiation spread indiscriminately by nations and corporations.

(See HIROSHIMA: What does it mean to say, "We are ALL 'hibakusha'?")






2015 marks the 70th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (August 6 and 9, 2015). Let's do something about it: make a nuclear ban a reality.

(See TIME FOR A NUCLEAR BAN? On the 70th Anniversary of Hiroshima/Nagasaki )





 


The biggest idea coming out of the 2013 Drone Summit? We will only deal successfully with the crimes being committed using drones when we understand them as part of the much larger war against communities of color . . . .

(See Drone Gaze, Drone Injury: The War on Communities of Color )












It will take me multiple posts to spell out everything that I feel needs to be said about the Ayotzinapa 43.  People in the US need to work to change their own attitude about Mexico, and about the culpability or all of us here in the US in the wrongs that are being done down there. The Ayotzinapa 43 were persecuted for saying "the future can be different." It's time for us to take up their cry.

(See Ayotzinapa43: US People Need an Attitude Adjustment )





(May 21, 2012) As the Obama administration expresses fury at Pakistani resistance to further NATO war operations and excludes Pakistan's president from the NATO Summit, members of the wider community will gather to memorialize people killed by U.S. airstrikes and drone attacks in Pakistan as well as in the U.S. occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as U.S./NATO operations in Yemen, Libya, and elsewhere. Recognizing what veterans on Sunday called "the burden of blood that has stained these medals", Trinity Church has opened its lawn to expressions of grief and remembrance by the entire community.

(See #NATOvictims )






How might an uprising against inequality and dismantling the military-industrial complex dovetail?

(See WHERE'S MINE? Inequality in the US and the Military-Industrial Complex )