One of the Grandmothers' key messages was about the element of
water. They implored people to reflect upon our relationship with water
and how each of us can take action for the healing of our water
systems. They asked us to imagine a day without safe water. One week.
One year. Indigenous peoples globally are observing that the world's
oceans, aquifers and watersheds are in acute distress and that this
water is our life-blood.
On the gathering’s second morning Evon
Peter was scheduled to talk. The Marin Center’s large stage quietly
filled with almost three dozen native persons of all ages. They sat
down together on the floor. One by one — in their distinct languages —
each indigenous person briefly introduced themselves, their tribe and
their home, sometimes with an English translation. This simple
coming-together created a powerful context. Within that collectivity
and after his wife and young daughter in her lap had spoken, the former
chief welcomed the audience as guests to “our homeland.”
“Some
of my husband’s words may seem harsh,” Peter’s wife warned, “but he is
not a harsh man.” In a calm, clear, and determined voice, he did indeed
remind those gathered of the occupation of this land by European people.
“We
indigenous people are still here,” he added. “I’m happy to be sitting
with all of you. Our songs, prayers, and words are our practice of who
we are in our homeland of California. We welcome you.” Peter spoke of
the “imbalances in the world,” noting, “There is an awakening and an
opening up in the world today.”
“Vagina Monologues” playwright
Eve Ensler spoke next on the heart-opening Oct. 20 morning. She
condemned the continuing violence against women that she has witnessed
in travels to some of the 119 countries where her play, translated into
45 languages, has been performed in the last decade.
“Are there
any vaginas in the house?” she asked, which received a roaring
affirmative answer. “Are there any vagina-friendly men here?” produced
a loud echo.
“We have to be bolder now, if we are going to save
humanity on this planet,” Ensler told a small group the day before her
public talk. She was speaking primarily to teenage girls from New York
City. When one explained that she was from the Congo, Ensler replied
that she had recently returned from that “heart of Africa.” She
described the most horrible violence against women that she has ever
experienced, which brought tears to the girls’ eyes, who leaned on each
other for support. “We must turn pain into power,” Ensler asserted.
This reporter later saw those same girls walking together with
strength. A fierce public speaker, Ensler listened and interacted
sensitively with these young females.
This year’s conference had
more emphasis on the pain and suffering in the world than previous
gatherings. One reason the Bioneers is evolving is because the Earth
itself seems to be having greater problems. The wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan are taking more lives and being more destructive, with the
U.S. escalating its threats against Iran. The global climate is getting
more chaotic. Studies reveal that the gap between the rich and the poor
is increasing. Various people at Bioneers indicated that the planet
seems to be at a “tipping point” that typically proceeds great change.
The
founder of Sustainable South Bronx, Majora Carter, spoke of their work
to restore the Bronx River in an impoverished community. “Environmental
justice is a civil rights issue in the 21st century,” Carter asserted.
“We must green the ghetto.”
Another African American, Van Jones,
talked about the need for “green collar jobs” for the urban poor.
Though the topics were usually serious, they were often presented with
a sense of humor and play that evoked frequent laughter. Jones, for
example, poked fun at the Prius-driving audience while he advocated the
needs of the urban poor. “As this movement now moves from the margin to
the center,” Jones asked, “Who are we going to take with us and who are
we going to leave behind?”
“Van Jones rocked the house,” someone
wrote on the Bioneers blog. “He’s an unequivocal juggernaut…‘I feel
like I was listening to Martin Luther King,’ a woman said
afterward…Jones has become the inner city conscience of the
environmental movement.” He was one of many speakers to receive a
standing ovation.
Among the words used in interviews to describe
the Bioneers were the following: hopeful, exhilarating, passionate,
overwhelming, graceful, magical, innovative, exciting, educational,
life-changing, rejuvenating, exhausting, energizing, imaginative,
multi-dimensional, diverse, transformative, insightful, respectful,
catalytic, and regenerating.
“I was very inspired by Judy Wicks
of the White Dog Café,” writes Ellen Bicheler of Sonoma County,
California, on that region’s GreenAction email list. “Judy uses good
food to lure customers into social activism, pays all her employees a
fair wage and benefits, and makes special arrangements with local
farmers for most of her food.”
In his talk on “Modern War’s
Devastation” psychotherapist and author Edward Tick asked all the
military veterans to stand and be welcomed home. His presentation was
one of the most emotional and controversial, exposing the inner
conflict that some members of the progressive community experience when
asked to support work with damaged veterans even though they reject war.
Ensler
and Tick were among the panelists at a workshop on “Healing the Trauma
of Social Violence and War.” Tick asserted, “Our common wounds can
bring us together. The worse thing we can do is to cover up our
wounds.” Ensler added, “Wounds are openings, like wombs. A wound can
open the door and make you permeable. The more willing we are to go
into the wound the more we can heal.”
The national group Farms
Not Arms hosted an evening reception with food from the Marin Farmers
Market. This group of farmers and anti-war activists seeks to find jobs
for Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans on farms, where they can work and
find healing.
In addition to the many scheduled speakers, other
interesting people abounded. Col. Ann Wright (retired), a former Army
officer and U.S. diplomat, resigned to protest the Afghanistan War. Her
book “Dissent: Voices of Conscience” was scheduled to be published by
the time of the conference, but has been held up by State Department
censors. Its pre-publication cover describes its content as “government
insiders speak out against the war in Iraq.” Col. Wright spoke
informally with people this year and at a previous Bioneers and at a
reception hosted by the women’s group CODEPINK: Women’s Group for
Peace. One of the gathering’s most important aspects is what happens
around the sides, where new and old friends meet, network and create
community.
Absent from this year’s gathering — as well as from
previous conferences — was a workshop on the impact of the lessening
supply of oil and the simultaneous increasing demands for it to fuel
industrial societies. The only plenary speaker that this reporter heard
who mentioned this crisis, often described as Peak Oil, was Native
American Winona LaDuke. One participant described this as a “blind
spot” to Bioneers.
“I experienced deep feelings of awe and
gratitude for the amazing quality of the teachings, performances,
music, art and countless personal interaction al this sublime event,”
photographer Scott Hess of Petaluma, California commented online. “My
soul was stirred to the very core.”
“I experienced great joy in
being at a gathering where all levels of transformation are
recognized,” commented Zanette Johnson. She is of mixed
European/African American/Native American ancestry and is finishing her
doctoral studies at Stanford University. “The transformation we are
envisioning will take more than just the rebuilding of infrastructures
for sustainability. To create a truly viable future, there must be
inner transformation as well — an examination and repair of the deep
unconscious ideas that have led us to this state of imbalance. I love
the way that Bioneers includes the spiritual, emotional, and social
elements in the conversation as well as the technical aspects of this
essential visionary work.” The youth presence and clarity at Bioneers
was one of its most inspiring elements.
More than just an annual
conference, Bioneers publishes books and provides DVDs of its plenary
speeches. It hosts a radio series and provides a variety of other
services and tools.
Many people return from Bioneers all fired
up. Here is how one, Canadian Carolyne Stayton responded a couple of
days later, “It is a time for courage; a time to go beyond fear. It is
a scary time: Witnessing the death of a planet. Pull the emergency
brake! I am scared of sea level rise, of lack of drinking water, of
toxic oceans and catastrophic storms, of drought and wildfires,
cessation of ocean currents, a modern ice age, extinction of species.”
Stayton
added, “But most of all I am afraid of the political chill, the very
cold war I feel in the United States. The cold war waged on its
homeland; the cold, calculated removal of rights couched in patriot
acts, the manipulation of our votes, insidiousness of surveillance, the
intimidation of dissenters through bullying, scandals and tazers.”
“My
mouth is now open,” Stayton notes. “I also have a pen in my hand. My
feet carry me through my fear. I am going forward to what I fear most:
To the treasonous take-over of this land, to the fascist up-currents
that place Blackwater mercenaries in Los Angeles, use torture, and keep
lists of their critics to effectively disable them from crossing
borders. To this land that I have come to love so deeply and its people
who have become my family: You are being imprisoned and soon the bars
will become visible!”
One of the best-received speakers at last
year’s gathering was Paul Hawken, who referred to “the largest movement
in the world,” described in his recent book “Blessed Unrest.” This year
his co-workers distributed postcards promoting a free international
community directory at www.WiserEarth.org. It is described as a
“network forum of organizations and individuals addressing the central
issues of our day: climate change, poverty, the environment, peace,
water, hunger, social justice, conservation, human rights, and more.”
Wiser Earth activist Camilla Burg added, “We hope to keep the
conversation going long after the participants have gone home.”
Next
year’s Bioneers is scheduled for the same time, same place—Oct. 18-20
at the Marin Center in San Rafael. This year was more international
than before and founder Ausubel indicated that next year will be even
more international. Information at www.bioneers.org.
(Shepherd
Bliss, sbliss@hawaii.edu, currently teaches at Sonoma State University
and has owned the organic Kokopelli Farm for the last 15 years. He has
contributed to over 20 books, most recently to “Veterans of War,
Veterans of Peace,” www.vowvop.org.)