In 2007, when Northern Gateway was just beginning to rear it’s troublesome head I wrote in The Dominion, that Aboriginal Rights and Title were going to be the strongest defense against pipeline developments in British Columbia. I knew an uphill battle was coming as I wrote, “blockades are used as a last resort when the laws and policies of the Canadian state fail to take into consideration constitutionally protected Aboriginal rights and title”. Seven years later, we are now faced with this last resort. Over the years, we have spent countless energy trying to protect our water, our salmon, our air and our very cultures from fossil fuels being pumped through out yintah. In that article years ago, I asked, “Where do we go from here? Sit idly by as pipelines cut new borders and deep wounds in the earth?” Luckily, we have not been idle, and have actually declared that we will be Idle No More! Thanks to Enbridge, peoples from across Turtle Island have become politicized to the ongoing crisis to protect our lands. As citizens to our various nations we have had to take it upon ourselves to consider the next seven generations and uphold our responsibility to speak for them in the face of relentless greed and consumption of natural resources. “Resources” that we hold sacred. Countless people have taken to the streets in peaceful protest in the assertion that--we will not, cannot, entertain the idea of a pipeline spill in our Yintah. We have suggested alternatives, asked for cumulative assessments, sat through hearings and referendums and the answer from the people, even our children, is a resounding “NO! We do not want a spill. We do not want climate change. End of story.” Sadly, it is clear that this story is long from over. The government’s agenda is to get the land locked fossil fuels to the coast as quickly and expediently as possible. The Joint Review Process which, was not cumulative in scope, was fast-tracked and ignored the evidence that the people and the land do not want Enbridge. Environmental laws were changed, sketchy deals made behind closed doors, and every attempt was made to silence the people—those crazy radicals who are terrorizing the Canadian government. The cost of Enbridge has already been huge. Relationships in communities have been broken, people have lost their jobs, freedom of expression has been stifled, and our precious time has been wasted. Seven years have passed which could have been spent finding solutions to global and local problems rather than trying to wake up our own governments. Indigenous nations across the carbon corridor have spent considerable time and energy preparing for meetings, reviews, and assessments that were ignored. We’ve protested, rallied, had sit-ins, hosted free workshops, built communities of solidarity, wrote articles and blogs and songs and poems. In hindsight, it would have been better if all of us realized years ago that our voice did not matter and that the economy is the one and only trump card. We have a debt to pay and politician’s visa expenses, corporate jets, and poodled purses are more important than our salmon, than our culture, and our relationship to the state. Nevertheless, I think this seven year’s war has been necessary to wake up the majority of people and prepare them for the battle that lies ahead. The laws and policies have failed to protect not only our Aboriginal rights and title, but our collective human rights. I believe we have enough people now to take on this next challenge which is going to require a change of tactics including physically halting access to our lands, legal battles, and aggressively pursuing alternatives to fossil fuels. We can’t just fight this one company anymore, we must change the way we live so our future is secure. The ocean’s will be rising at least one-metre in our generation, the salmon may go extinct, our water may be our most precious resource we have…so when we stand in front of the pipelines in solidarity, know you are standing up for our future. This is not just an Indian problem or an environmentalist’s problem anymore, finding a way to stop our fossil fuel dependency is a cause for every human on this planet. Not even the wealthy can drink dirty water or breath filthy air. Let’s use this momentum that has been created to find real solutions, to assert title to our lands (for Wet’suwet’en…as one united nation) that has never been ceded, and work together to make this world a better place. Let’s drop the language of consultation and accommodation. In unceded lands we speak the truth of free, prior, and informed consent. Push that agenda, protect our lands, and defend our communities. Strength and love to my people, my friends, over the next roadblock that has been put in our way. All my relations.
5 Comments
Sandra small
6/17/2014 01:28:05 pm
Nicely put thank you. But who are you I do not see a name anywhere
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Sandra small
6/17/2014 01:30:25 pm
Sorry ignore my previous question I just read your BIO 😳😉👍
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Carla Lewis
6/17/2014 03:31:39 pm
:) Thanks Sandra! And I should note too that I live right on Burns Lake where the pipes are proposed to cross at a narrow point about 4 kms from my house in our traditional territory.
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Renate Van Dorsser
6/17/2014 09:24:40 pm
I stand in concert with the native people's fight against big oil and the fight to preserve our most sacred heritage. It is time we the people fought the destruction of not only our mother earth but the erosion of Democracy as well..........stay strong and stay united
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Carla Lewis
6/18/2014 05:18:41 am
Thank you Renate :) We're all in this together!
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