Navigation
Search
Recent blog posts
- Why You Need Protection From Big Pharma
- Why Politics Has Become So Destructive
- The Key to Happiness? Change Your Government!
- Truthfulness in Government ... Let's Discard the Term "War On Terror"
- Truthfulness In Government ... It Should Be The Law
- Whither Democracy?
- Pay to Play ... One More Mole
- Bailout ... Transparency and Accountability
- Economic Recovery ... Include National Service
- Our Response to Authority .... OK
Donate
How an Indigenous Community Defeated a Logging Giant - Jessica Bell, AlterNet, June 23, 2008
admin — Tue, 12/30/2008 - 14:54
It was below zero degrees Fahrenheit on the night of Dec. 2, 2002, when sisters and young indigenous mothers Chrissy and Bonnie Swain from the Grassy Narrows First Nation drove from their reserve, located in the southern fringe of the vast Boreal Forest in northern
The sisters felled trees over the road to protest unwanted logging on their land by Abitibi Consolidated. They then headed home, afraid their father would be mad at them. Instead, he was proud. Their protest was the spark that ignited their small community of 1,000 to launch a sustained direct-action campaign to stop logging.
Located about 250 miles north of the
Roberta Keesick, a
The clear-cutting of the land and the destruction of the forest is an attack on our people. The land is the basis of who we are. Our culture is a land-based culture, and the destruction of the land is the destruction of our culture. And we know that is in the plans. The logging companies don't want us on the land; they want us out of the way so they can take the resources. We can't allow them to carry on with this cultural genocide.
From Dec. 2, 2002, onward, members of the Grassy Narrows First Nation established a permanent encampment on the road and turned back all Abitibi logging trucks. The reserve's only school moved to the blockade site and conducted classes there for a summer, and the community began pulling in outside supporters, including national and international environmental and human rights groups, to campaign with them. In response, Abitibi transferred its logging operations to a more remote section of
This year,
Of course, this campaign took a lot of work. Prior to the blockade, Grassy Narrows advocated for decades using more traditional means of dissent, such as meetings with the government, letter writing and protests, before escalating to direct action. In
Amnesty International produced rigorous research reports and lobbied the
Environmental groups led by Rainforest Action Network (RAN) launched a sustained direct-action campaign against corporate buyers of wood and paper products from the region. Logging company Boise Inc. agreed to stop purchasing from the region in February 2008 after RAN linked wood sourced from
In fact, peaceful direct action was a defining trademark of the
Not only will this victory result in the protection of two and a half million acres of forest, an area more than three times as large as Yosemite National Park, it represents a powerful step forward in the movement for indigenous self-determination and the right of First Nations to control industrial activities on their lands and say "no" to colonialism.
For
Like most indigenous communities in
These traumas have caused many social, health and economic problems, as well as the near devastation of the culture.
But the people of
Keesick said in an interview with CBC radio on June 5 that the victory gives
The success in
Indeed, the snowballing movement for self-determination is forcing
The resurgence of indigenous people power is global. On Sept. 13, 2007, the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was adopted by the U.N. General Assembly. The declaration affirms indigenous land rights and the right of self-determination. The only four dissenting countries were the
Meanwhile,
As former organizer for Rainforest Action Network's Old Growth Campaign, Jessica Bell worked to support Grassy Narrows. Now she works for the
© 2009 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/89138/
