Monday, October 13, 2014

I Speak for the Land: Indigenous People's Day, 2014

I speak for the land.

I have raised myself up and laid myself low, creating mountains and meadows, and furrows where the water runs to form creeks and rivers.  Living creatures die to me, and I take them into myself that their bodies may nourish future life.  I provide food for all, even for the animals that other animals feed upon.  Such is the cycle of life. 

Now, humans have built fences on me, of wood and wire, of roads of crushed stone, of steel rails laid on wood.  Now the herds of creatures can no longer wander freely, imprisoned by these fences, which cross the places where once the herds and the humans wandered freely. 

The humans have done this, in the name of something they call “private property.”  They trade pieces of paper and put up signs with the words, “No trespassing”.  They kill or imprison all who, without their permission, wander onto the land they think they own.

Private property.
Private.

They are indeed a private race, walled into their small definitions of who they are, living in fear behind their self-built fences, suspicious of any wanderer that they perceive as an invader.

They themselves have forgotten the Way of the Wanderer.  Their little “private” properties are their fortresses and their prisons.  How little freedom they allow themselves.  They equate “freedom” with the right to shoot an intruder, human or non-human. 

Would that they could all wander freely on me!  But the notion of wandering is abhorrent to them.  This they do not see, nor do they want to see it.  Each one is isolated from all around them, frightened of the others, willing to do harm to fellow brothers and sisters, the beasts, the plants, the rivers, the forests – even the mountains.

I, the Land, am not private.  Nor am I property.  You shall see and know that this is true.