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Capitalist Machine, Extreme weather events, Finding balance, Imbalance of Earth’s planetary systems, Indigenous knowledge and wisdom, Indigenous Voices, The Changing Earth

Photo Credit: Agroinformacion News
This is the fourth article in my series about our changing Earth from interviews with Native Americans shared in We Are the Middle of Forever: Indigenous Voices from Turtle Island on the Changing Earth, edited by Dahr Jamail and Stan Rushworth (USA 2022). My presentation does not follow the order of the interviews.
#4: Shannon Rivers (Akimel O’otham) – Balance
(Chapter 10, pp. 140-158)
Shannon Rivers, a member of the Akimel O’otham (River People), talked with Dahr and Stan in October 2020 from his humble office at the Indian Health Center in San Jose, California. Born in 1966 and raised on the Gila River Indian Community in Southern Arizona, he grew up in poverty, typical of Indigenous reservations.
His stepfather, who entered his life when he was about six or seven years old, was a Korean War veteran. He had an ugly hump on his shoulder from a bullet wound in his collarbone, which shattered and never healed correctly. He drank heavily every day, then awakened at 3 a.m. to work in the cotton fields in the Arizona heat, seven days a week. Though he sobered up around the time Shannon was twelve, there were still issues and dysfunction in the family.
Despite the extreme poverty of reservation life during his youth, Shannon’s parents decided to stay. Many Native families left, including many of his relatives, spreading across the country.
People were moving all over the country, people were leaving. And the reason why that story is significant, is that even then environmental and climate change were impacting those of us living along the Gila River. When the European settlers came, they started damming our rivers upstream, in towns like Florence, Arizona, and even further northeast of us.
Housing development in Phoenix and Tucson further destroyed the traditional ecosystems that kept the soil in place and hindered the spread of dust. This dust later caused a respiratory sickness known as Valley Fever. Without water and their traditional food crops, their way of life became impossible. So, incentivized by the government, the people relocated.
My mom said that she would not leave because her trauma from dealing with Christian and Catholic people was so devastating that she was afraid of them…. And my mom was a little girl when this happened to her, so my mom never left the reservation. Never. And she’s seventy-plus years old now, and she’ll more than likely die there.
Shannon’s family existed on government commodity foods. When they were lucky, they would also get beans, tortillas, and hot dogs. He pointed out that this is what happens to Native people when their environment is destroyed or altered. The destructive impacts from the climate crisis adds a new context to their situation.
There is a legacy of environmental destruction that has happened since the settlers landed in 1620. Since they came from the south in the 1500s, there has been a legacy of environmental destruction.
Though the Southern Arizona Water Rights Settlement Act (SAWRSA) was signed in 1982, it was not until 2008, after years of his tribe fighting back for their water rights, that President George W. Bush signed an executive order returning water to them. You can learn more about the major irrigation project that has restored water to the Gila River in a video (7:28 minutes) published by This American Land in 2018.
Shannon, too, left the reservation because there was nothing for him there. He considers himself one of the lucky ones among his friends to get out before being trapped in drug and alcohol addiction. With a degree in environmental science, he serves for several years now as a Native American Traditional Cultural Advisor to the Indigenous inmate populations at the county, state, and federal prisons in Arizona. He is also a delegate and participant at the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFII) held at the UN headquarters in New York City. As co-chair for the Global Indigenous Peoples Caucus (GIPC), he has conducted and hosted lectures on the UN Declaration of Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) at the State Capital in Arizona and for Arizona State University. He is also active in political and social justice actions in Central and South America.
In his work with incarcerated Indigenous people, Shannon talks about the balance of “natural law.”
[T]rying to be harmonious is the most difficult thing. The balance is already there. It’s us as human beings that are destroying this balance. It is us, the two-legged, that are constantly greedy and looking for something that can move us up the scale of economic stability.
Unlike the Western concept of asking God for forgiveness when we’ve done wrong, Native people have the concept of balance.
How do we balance ourselves?… So, we as Native people need to look beyond the concepts of a White, Christian, male patriarchy, because that destroys our balance with Mother Nature. Natural law influences our thinking, and this is why we must go back to it.
Shannon explained that being out of balance comes when we see each other and other life forms as separate beings.
We’re so out of balance that we will negotiate around whether it’s okay to cut through one of our sacred mountains back home to build a freeway. We’re so out of balance that we allow the government/state actors to come in and destroy our rain forest and our water systems.
He further emphasized the critical necessity of balance.
This [COVID-19] pandemic has shown how weak we are as a country, how weak we are as people, how unbalanced we are as people that we would argue against something like a pandemic and say, ‘No, I don’t want to wear a mask because it violates my sovereignty.’ No. If you had balance, you would understand.
Shannon stressed that it is time to listen to the people who know.
Listen to the Hopi, listen to the Navajo who tell us we are destroying the natural balance, the natural law of our spiritual relationship to that mountain [in Arizona]. As a human being, you’re trying to interfere with something that you shouldn’t interfere with, just to expand a ski resort, just to increase your economic growth, just to increase economic development in the city of Flagstaff [Arizona].
Shannon pointed to the contrast between how non-Native people see land as a resource linked to the economy, while Native people see it as a means of survival, and a way of living “for,” rather than “against.” Across our planet, we’re destroying ecosystems and elect political leaders who say:
Oh yeah, we agree with you, keep cutting those trees because we need our nice furniture. Let’s create this massive farm in the Amazon and cut down all these trees and build these cattle ranches.
He contrasted this mentality with the way in which Native people only took what was needed when they used to hunt buffalo and other wildlife.
That traditional ecological knowledge is not just based on ecosystems; it’s the way we try to balance ourselves with the animals and the plants and the water systems upon which our livelihood depends. It is how we survive, and how we have survived.
He also reiterated the concept of land ownership as contrary to the natural balance of who we are, and what we are in relation to Mother Earth. He cited the need for building community centers and gardens, which would take care of people and their families for generations to come.
For Native people worldwide, the struggle is great for those who are trying to maintain balance between our ecosystems and our economy.
They’re up against this huge machine of devastation, and that devastation is capitalism. Capitalism is a machine. It’s hungry and we keep feeding it, and we’re starving. We’re starving for something else other than capitalism. We’re starving to survive, and we’re starving for that balance. We’re starving for that prayer. We’re starving for that song.
We [Native Americans] are ecological warriors. Mother Earth will balance herself. Whether or not we get to see that balance, and whether or not it will happen in our lifetime, we don’t know. In the meantime, we have to slow the growth of this capitalist machine, and we have to stop it. We have to say, ‘Wait a minute, we’re destroying what we’re trying to build for our children.’
Thinking of his nephews and nieces that he loves deeply, Shannon added:
This probably won’t happen in my lifetime. Justice is a slow process, right? Justice through the lens of Indigenous people that have that moral compass, that have that idea of balance, that have that idea of relationship building and interconnectedness between the Earth and our love for our fellow two-legged and four-legged and winged brothers and sisters. That’s the moral compass that I believe that we bring into the prison systems, and that we bring to the reservations. I believe that we can bring it to people around the world.
* * * * * *
Have I achieved the kind of balance with Mother Nature that Shannon describes? I’ve a sense of our spiritual interconnectedness with each other and with non-human life. I know that our survival depends not only on combined human effort, but also on the diverse ecosystems and planetary systems of Spaceship Earth. Yet, I cannot claim that I live in harmony with Mother Nature. I’m part of the “capitalist machine.”
In my elder years, it’s easy to consume only what is essential for my health and well-being. My adult sons take care of their own needs. I’ve no grandchildren or grandnieces and nephews clamoring for the latest toy or techno gadget. For several years now, I’ve committed to a vegetarian diet. I conserve water and energy, though the energy company thinks I can do better. I splurge on buying printed books (not good for the trees) and garden supplies (not good for its plastic packaging).
I’m an urban dweller, pampered by the ease of buying what I need in large grocery stores and shopping malls. Plastic is everywhere. I re-use and re-purpose, wherever possible. To live plastic-free remains out-of-reach. I cannot give up trying to do better.
Through the ways of living that we’ve created for ourselves since the Industrial Revolution, we humans have caused an imbalance in the planetary systems that make life possible on Earth. More and more extreme weather events will continue to upend our lives. Fighting among ourselves, building walls and fences, exterminating others to seize their lands, coveting foreign oil and rare earth mineral reserves, amassing billions of dollars in personal wealth, and fantasizing of colonizing a distant dead planet will not save us from the fury of Mother Nature that we’ve unleashed.
We all have to do better. There’s too much at stake.
Click on links below for previously featured interviews:
#1: Raquel Ramirez (Ho-Chunk, Ojibwe, Lenca) – Awareness
#2: Alexii Sigona (Amah Mutsun) – Stewardship
#3: Terri Delahanty (Cree) – Sacred Feminine and Sacred Masculine
Thank you, Rosaliene, for consistently speaking up about Indigenous rights and environmental destruction. As you know I feel a strong connection to the Indigenous worldview. Hardship, poverty, and exploitation still take a massive toll on native populations far beyond the US. When we destroy their environment and exploit their lands, they have no choice but to leave and look for better conditions elsewhere. But while we privileged people make massive profits off their loss, we create even more hurdles for those fleeing and simply refuse to share what we took from them.
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Friedrich, thanks for sharing your thoughts. I totally with all the points you’ve made. It’s ironic that, after centuries of oppressing the Indigenous peoples in the Americas and worldwide, we’re coming to realize that they have a lot to teach us about living in harmony with our natural environment.
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Such exemplary wisdom
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Thanks very much, Derrick.
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A fascinating post…again…! Thank you for continuing to highlight the difficulties that indigenous peoples face! However, whilst I often see myself as a modern person, I am NOT. I’m still a human being carrying so much DNA from the past but somehow it is lost in my being.
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Thanks very much, Ashley. These Indigenous stories are a learning process for me. You’re so right about carrying so much DNA from our ancestral past. The Indigenous peoples understand this much better than we do.
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Another case of ignoring the wisdom of those who were here first, as we proceed with our worship of greed and power. We need to do better, but we can’t get out of our own way and we oppress all who do not subscribe to our views.
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So tragically true, Allan. We’re so set in our self-destructive ways that we cannot tolerate other ways of being and doing.
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Rosaliene, very interesting post about environmental destruction, indigenous peoples, and more. I’ve been to Phoenix several times, and there’s something about that city that feels too overdeveloped to be sustainable amid its changing climate.
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Thanks very much, Dave. I share your view of Phoenix. Despite the constraints of water supplies, they continue to add more housing projects. I’ve observed a similar situation in California’s High Desert region where my sister has relocated.
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Yes, Rosaliene! Not enough water, as well as some brutal heat (many days well over 100 degrees Fahrenheit) the past few years.
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Dave, that heat is a killer.
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It is, Rosaliene. 😦
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Wars and politics tend to steal attention from environmental issues these days, but environmental issues are of the highest importance. Individuals can do their best, but it is a societal problem.
Plastic is a well-entrenched scourge. Even the water in our house flows through plastic “pipes.” Most of our food comes in plastic. We recycle, but learn that much of what we put in recycling still ends up in landfills.
There are plant based “plastics” that are biodegradable, but they cost more. Food producers can’t compete if they spend more than their competitors on packaging. Government could regulate food packaging or offer financial incentives to those who use biodegradable packaging, but the change might still be unpopular because of cost.
Threats to the environmennt are complex and pervasive. Solving them should be a priority. Thank you, Rosaliene, for this article which gives a persuasive Native American perspective on environmental problems. 💕
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Thanks so much, Cheryl, for sharing your thoughts. I agree that this is a societal problem that demands collective action.
When it comes to plastic, we have truly encased ourselves with the stuff. What could go wrong when you create a quasi-indestructible product!? Here in Los Angeles, our supermarkets are providing biodegradable plastic bags for packaging our fresh produce purchases. But other diverse packaged products remain the same.
I totally agree that threats to our environment should be priority. Tragically, our current political leaders have other ideas 😦
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Cheryl Batavia’s comments are spot-on.
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I agree, Neil. Thanks very much for joining the conversation.
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This is a very beautiful reminder to focus on what is really of value in this life and to find peace wherever we can.
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Thanks very much, Kim.
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Thank you for sharing some more Indigenous wisdom, Rosaliene. I think balance is a great way to think about things. By balance I don’t mean moderation, a word we westerners like to use to describe “doing things”. But, balance in a connective way, to each other and the land we share. I think we all could use some serious balance.
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My pleasure in sharing, Mara. Shannon Rivers is, indeed, speaking of a different kind of “balance” than our common use of the word. As you indicate, the balance he speaks of is more in line with “living in harmony with” the natural world of which we are a part. How do we even begin to stop thinking of ourselves as separate from Mother Nature?
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Years ago when I lived in Tucson, I, my 2nd husband and his grown son participated in Inipi ceremonies held on the land of the drug and alcohol treatment center. A lodge had been built on the land to welcome people into the cleansing ceremonies held there. My husband and step-son were pipe carriers and Sundancers and had poured water in many lodges. I was welcomed as my husband’s wife and it was my job to teach the Native women how to prepare for the ceremony, an honor I held dear in my heart. We were part of their spiritual and physical healing from addiction. The pain they had endured from what they had lived on their reservations needed to be healed, and coming to the ceremonies was a vital part of it.
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Tamara, thanks for sharing your participation in the Inipi healing ceremonies. There’s lots of pain and trauma among our Indigenous peoples.
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Yes, the damage in many communities is still very much in force and lip service is done by many and minimal efforts to change things is all too common.
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Sadly true, as I’m learning, Tamara 😦
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I like what Shannon said “that being out of balance comes when we see each other and other life forms as separate beings.” We, the plants and animals (including humans), are one with the earth.
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I liked that observation, too, Rebecca. In our globalized capitalist economies, such a perspective will not be easily internalized.
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It’s so sad when religion is used as a weapon. That must be one of the greatest sins.
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That’s sad, indeed, Mary. We humans have done so much harm in this world that I’m not sure how weaponizing religion would rank.
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Housing developments, ecosystems, and lives interrupted and destroyed do seem to revive themselves over and over again Rosaliene. As Shannon noted, “Natural law influences our thinking, and this is why we must go back to it.”
Excellent and relevant research my friend. 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽
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Thanks very much, Kym. With our intelligence and technological achievements, we humans far too often act like we’re above the natural laws. The extreme weather events, now upending our lives with more severity and frequency, remind us that we know not what we do in tampering with Earth’s natural systems.
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