MISSION: Southwest Research and Information Center is a multi-cultural organization working to promote the health of people and communities, protect natural resources, ensure citizen participation, and secure environmental and social justice now and for future generations.

Voices from the Earth: Current Issue

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Table of
Contents

HOMELAND: Four Portraits of Native Action
Gail Small: The Coal Wars
Northern Cheyenne Reservation, Lame Deer, Montana

Evon Peter: The People and the Caribou Are One
Arctic Village, Alaska

Rita & Mitchel Capitan: Yellowcake, New Mexico
Navajo Reservation, New Mexico

Barry Dana: A People and Their River
Penobscot River, Maine

Winona LaDuke
Book Reviews
SRIC Extras

"There's a prophecy, it's called voice form the north, there's gonna come a time when a voice from north is gonna rise. When that voice from the north rises, it signifies a time for human kind to change their ways."

— FAITH GEMMILL
Gwich'in Steering Committee
 
Book Reviews

The Green Belt Movement - Expanded Edition The Green Belt Movement: Sharing the Approach and the Experience
Wangari Maathai
New York :Lantern Books, 2004
160 pp., $15.00, paperback
ISBN: 1-59056-040-X

You can plant a tree or you can plant an orchard. Or, if you are Wangari Maathai, you can be the reason why more than thirty million trees stand proudly in Kenya to date. Maathia's Green Belt Movement (GBM) emerged some forty years ago and consists of efforts to end Africa's desertification and provide jobs for local economies- all the while self-development of Kenyan women gains momentum. How can one woman achieve this you say? Well, for starters we aren't talking about just any woman, we are talking about a WOMAN. A woman with strong personal convictions, who in her feat to change society for the better, placed herself in harms way to carry out a vision of sustaining community and the lives of its members. If you think Lance Armstrong (6-time Tour de France winner) has superhuman abilities, allow me to introduce you to Wangari Maathai. She is a person with unlimited amounts of energy, the ability to transform a nation, and someone who embodies spirit in the greatest sense of the word. Her driving strength transcends actions of environmental justice. This can be witnessed by her life's work where she operates from a place inside herself that embraces anger as a result of existing environmental conditions. In addition, an incomparable will is used to improve upon conditions that is powered by love. Love of the earth, its inhabitants, and expressed in human vivacity that has literally moved a nation to its feet. Overall, Maathai has proven to be a leader and a pioneer whose goals are to redress environmental degradation by methods designed to improve the lives of women and girls alongside democratic capacity. Indeed Maathai's GBM conceptual approach is birthed out of basic human need. In Kenya, women are the gatherers of fuel and water. Given drought conditions and the need to collect wood for heating and cooking, women were traveling farther and farther into the forest in order to support basic activities such as bathing, washing clothes, and cooking. What started out as a green house project in Wangari's home, flowered into a full-scale tree planting and economic development scheme of the grandest kind. Wangari Maathai is the first African woman and the first environmental activist in the history of the Nobel Peace Prize to receive such an honor.

Produced by Lantern Books using 100 percent post-consumer waste, chlorine free paper, Maathai's The Green Belt Movement, revised edition, begins with the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize announcement, followed by a statement by Wangari. Next, is an introduction, history of the GBM, organizational structure, and funding respectively. The subsequent chapter describes achievements and is the heart of the book. This section deserves more attention. The condensed nature of the chapter could be greatly expanded upon and presents opportunities for another book altogether. Maathai, unfortunately is like so many other women in that she is guilty of scaling down her accomplishments that are in all actuality stunning. For those eager to get a little dirt under the fingernails, Maathai offers a ten-step, "How to run a tree planting campaign." This is an example of writing that so many other books about social action should include. Written in a succinct, to the point, and accessible style, The Green Belt Movement is a must for anyone interested in managing a tree nursery with a verve for social change. Having some experience planting trees myself for the National Forest Service, I know that in western mountain regions of the United States: a) Trees are clear-cut at an increased rate annually; b) Silva-culture can be greatly improved for seedling survival; and c) What appears to be a simple act of planting a tree takes more than a pulaski forestry axe and a skilled hand. Planting a tree requires the will and heart of an individual to ensures survival of a plant that will, under proper care, conditions, and nourishment, grow to provide shade, fruit, and improve soils for generations to come. Wangari Maathai's publication has wide appeal and can be used by youth, young adults, and adult audiences in the classroom and community. A luminary for women and girls in particular, Maathai inspires the mind and awakens the heart of humanity for the betterment of society throughout the world.

Wangari Maathai I hope your book reaches the hands of folks who see the beauty in your face (her photo appears on the cover of Green Belt Movement), a beauty that you invoke daily by your work.

— Frances Ortega

ORDER FROM:
Lantern Books
P.O. Box 960
Herndon, VA 20172-0960
(800) 856-8664
www.lanternbooks.com
 


Homeland: Four Portraits of Native Action has won The Fund for Santa Barbara Social Justice Award for Documentary Film at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival, and The Audience Award for Documentary Film.

Homeland was shot on film by cinematographer, Dyanna Taylor; directed by veteran documentary filmmaker, Roberta Grossman, executive produced by Lisa B. Thomas and produced by Katahdin Productions/The Katahdin Foundation. Composer Todd Boekelheide created the music for the film.

 
SEE THE MOVIE!  Contact your local Public Television station for airtimes.

You can help stop uranium mining on Diné lands by:
  • Writing New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson to support publicly the Navajo Nation uranium mining ban: Office of the Governor, 490 Old Santa Fe Trail, Room 400, Santa Fe, NM 87501. Or call his office at: (505) 476-2200.
  • Writing Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley, Jr., and Navajo Council Speaker Lawrence Morgan, telling them you support the Navajo Nation uranium ban: P.O. Box 9000, Window Rock, AZ 86515.
  • Making a generous, tax-deductible donation to ENDAUM, c/o SRIC, P.O. Box 4524, Albuquerque, NM 87196. (Credit card donations are accepted, please call us at 505/262-1862 for processing, or online through Network for Good.)

NAVAJO NATION PRESIDENT SIGNS BILL BANNING
URANIUM MINING AND MILLING

Crownpoint, N.M., April 29, 2005. Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley, Jr., today signed what is believed to be the first Native American tribal law banning uranium mining and milling. With dozens of community members and dignitaries looking on, Shirley signed the Diné Natural Resources Protection Act (DNRPA) of 2005, which was passed by the Navajo Nation Council by a vote of 63-19 on April 19. As amended by the Council during floor debate, the act states, "No person shall engage in uranium mining and processing on any sites within Navajo Indian Country." The law is based on the Fundamental Laws of the Diné, which are already codified in Navajo statutes. The act finds that based on those fundamental laws, "certain substances in the Earth (doo nal yee dah) that are harmful to the people should not be disturbed, and that the people now know that uranium is one such substance, and therefore, that its extraction should be avoided as traditional practice and prohibited by Navajo law."
See Press Release

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