In 2014, the Totem Pole Journey would deliver a Totem Pole
of solidarity and healing from the Lummi House of Tears Carvers, to the Beaver
Lake Cree Nation whose Sacred Lands, Waters and Lifeways were being
systematically destroyed by tar sands extraction. Blessed by thousands of hands and voices all
throughout the North Pacific and Mid-West of the U.S. and British Columbia and
Alberta Provinces of Canada, the Totem Pole had become a unifying symbol in our
shared struggle to preserve the Earth.
Just prior to the 2014 Totem Pole Journey, another symbol
was created and then also accompanied the Totem Pole on its Journey. This was a Declaration, signed by some of the
leadership of the faith community in the Northwest to the Northwest Tribes,
entitled A Public Declaration to the
Tribal Councils and Traditional Spiritual Leaders of the Native Peoples of the
Northwest. The text of the Declaration
reads as follows:
August
2014
c/o
Jewell Praying Wolf James, Lummi
In 1987 and again in 1997, bishops and
denominational executives of churches in the Northwest offered letters of
apology to the indigenous peoples of our region. These letters acknowledged the
historical disrespect of traditional Native American spiritual practices and
traditions. In those letters, the leaders of our denominations promised “to
honor and defend the rights of Native Peoples … [including] access and
protection of sacred sites … [and to] end political and economic injustice
against tribal communities.”
In this decade a new threat has arisen against
Native Peoples: the mining, transport, burning, and disposal of fossil fuels.
Proposed coal export terminals would damage native fisheries protected by
long-standing treaties and poison our shared air and water. Coal trains
servicing these terminals would cut across lands sacred to indigenous peoples,
and impact the health of those communities. In this generation we also
acknowledge that the mining and burning of fossil fuels creates the terrible
threats of climate disruption, ocean acidification, and pollution to the harm
of all God’s children, especially the poorest.
Tribal leaders have asked us to keep our past
promises, and to stand with them in defense of their sacred lands and fishing
rights. And so we call upon the Northwest Congressional delegation and other
elected officials, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the U.S. Department of the
Interior, and all people of goodwill to uphold the treaty rights of Native
communities of the Northwest. We ask that all environmental and cultural
harm to Native lands and peoples be considered in making public policy
decisions about the mining, transport, and export of coal and other fossil
fuels.
As religious leaders we call for the
protection of the life we have been given and the Earth we all call home. Our
greatest commandment is to love our neighbor as ourselves (Mark 12:30-31).
Putting this ethic into action, we stand in solidarity with our Native
neighbors to safeguard the traditional lands, waters, and sacred sites of their
peoples from destruction.
At the request of
several northwest Unitarian Universalist congregations and activist groups, the
Unitarian Universalists Association (UUA) Pacific Northwest District (PNWD)
agree to consider becoming signatories to this document. At their annual meeting during the UUA
General Assembly on June 27, 2015 in Portland, Oregon, PNWD delegates and board
unanimously voted to become
signatories.
It is now
mid-September 2015. In the intervening
time, UU individuals and congregations rallied behind the 2015 Totem Pole
Journey. They organized, hosted, spoke,
supported, fundraised, publicized and participated in Totem Pole Blessing stops
that began in Vancouver, British Columbia, traveling through Washington and
Oregon and into Montana. The Totem Pole
would find it’s way to a new home in Lame Deer, Montana, home to Northern
Cheyenne who’s Sacred Lands and Waters are threatened by coal projects along
Otter Creek and the Tongue River.
Now, that our role
in the Totem Pole Journey is complete, it’s time to turn our attention back to
the Declaration we signed onto earlier.
The 2015 Totem Pole Journey was just a beginning for UUs in bringing the
Declaration to life. But our work is not
done yet.
As UUs, we have a
long history of supporting First Nation/American Indian issues reflected in our
policies and statements as a denomination.
Historically, we passed:
· 1970 Business Resolution on Indian Rights,
· 1975 Business Resolution on Native Americans
· 1976 General Resolution on Opposing the
Extradition of Dennis Banks
· 1993 General Resolution on Justice for
Indigenous Peoples
· 1997 Solidarity with the San Carlos Apache
Regarding Mt. Graham
· 1998 Action of Immediate Witness for the Fair
Treatment for Native Americans
· 2000 Statement of Conscience on Economic
Injustice, Poverty and Racism
· 2000 Responsive Resolution for the Cleveland,
OH Native American Community
· 2001 Responsive Resolution on Racism and the
Sports Media
· 2007 Truth, Repair and Reconciliation
Responsive Resolution,
· 2012 Resolution on repudiating the Doctrine
of Discovery
· 2015 Act of Immediate Witness Act For a
Livable Climate
· 2015 PNWD becomes signatory to A Public Declaration to the Tribal Councils
and Traditional Spiritual Leaders of the Native Peoples of the Northwest.
On October 9th,
as part of the NW UU Justice Network Annual Summit, UUs are gathering, with
other representatives of the faith community, to learn more of the history
behind the document that we signed, discuss and scope out our commitment to the
NW Tribes and how to put action to that commitment. Lummi Elder and Indian Rights Scholar Jewell
James will be speaking with us on what the Declaration means to the Native
community and the Vision for what that document could become. This gathering will be held at the Bellingham
Unitarian Fellowship in Bellingham, WA. More
information about the Declaration event can be accessed at: http://tinyurl.com/Pre-Event-Oct9
and registration is at: http://tinyurl.com/RegisterOct9Event
The Summit (October
10th) information can be found at:
http://www.nwuujn.org/topics/view/552c1b4c0cf24df5070a05b7/
We need all hands on
deck and hope you’ll join us! If you are
unable to attend the event, but still interested in working with a group of UUs
and other interfaith folk, please let me know at dwcruz@comcast.net
Let’s erase the
cultural, national and international borders that block our way from preserving
the Earth and the Right to Exist for all Her Children.
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