Learnin’ to soften my soul

I have long appreciated Nahko and Medicine for the People. I like the idea of music as medicine.

The only time I’ve seen Nahko in person, I didn’t know who he was. The photo below was taken during one of our Dakota Access pipeline gatherings in Indianapolis. I was there with my friends Joshua Taflinger and Brandi Herron (2016). You might be able to make out Nahko & Medicine for the People on the marquee.

As we were standing there, shivering, several members of the band walked past us and gave us big smiles and fist bumps. The person I later discovered was Nahko Bear opened the theater door then went back inside. I have regretted that I didn’t attend the performance that evening.

I enjoy his spiritual musings as much as his music. I’ve often written of those things on this blog: https://kislingjeff.wordpress.com/?s=nahko

P A R T   P R O B L E M

“Part Problem” reflects on the fact that no matter our circumstances or origins, we’re each ultimately responsible for our own path in life. 

Admitting you’re part of the problem can be difficult, but raising your hand and asking for help when you need it is essential. It’s the only way you can learn to love yourself and forgive yourself.

The song is released in tandem with the New Moon, as per our tradition of releasing singles with thoughtful intention, coinciding with the lunar calendar throughout the album campaign for Take Your Power Back. During this time of great sacrifice and uncertainty, we may naturally get drawn into the harsh edges of fear, chaos, and hysteria, but we have a unique opportunity to ground in and soften amongst it all.

What if during this isolation we broke bread with other fears we’ve been harboring? My intentions this New Moon are pretty straight forward: stay grounded, meditate on the manifestation of immediate global healing, and take responsibility for my part in creating a solution.

– Nahko

“Part Problem”
Nahko and Medicine for the People

What did you think this would be, easy love?
There ain’t no easy love, no, no
Oh, beloved, what did I do to us?
How could’ve I lost touch? I was

Fightin’ with my shadow
That is somethin’ I am good at
Givin’ me the power that is
Provin’ to have backlash
Good heart
Off to a bad start

How do I keep myself from fallin’ apart
When I ain’t never felt part of a whole?
Somewhere along the line I got disconnected
Started losin’ perspective, I know
I’ll admit that I am part of the problem
Part of the problem (part of the problem)
I’ll admit that I am part of the problem
Part of the problem

What about all that shit I did for love?
Maybe it wasn’t love, no, no
Who’s in charge here, is it really me?
A face you rarely see

I was lookin’ for connection
But is this just a mixed message?
Come a little closer
Maybe you can make some sense
Of my good heart
Off to a bad start
That is my good heart
Off to a bad start

How do I keep myself from fallin’ apart
When I ain’t never felt part of a whole?
Somewhere along the line I got disconnected
Started losin’ perspective, I know
I’ll admit that I am part of the problem
Part of the problem (part of the problem)
I’ll admit that I am part of the problem
Part of the problem

So I’ll learnin’ to soften my soul
(Part of the problem, part of the problem)
Soul
(Part of the problem, part of the problem)
Soul
(Part of the problem, part of the problem)
Soul
(Part of the problem, part of the problem)

How do I keep myself from fallin’ apart
When I ain’t never felt part of a whole?
Somewhere along the line I got disconnected
Started losin’ perspective, I know
I’ll admit that I am part of the problem
Part of the problem (part of the problem)
I’ll admit that I am part of the problem
So I’m learnin’ to soften my soul


One of Nahko’s most moving and disturbing videos is Love Letters to God

Standing Rock is a dream. The epicenter for our morality and dignity. A place where dark and light communicate and they work it out.

Standing Rock is a vision. The wildest manifestation of our ancestors. The heart of humanity and the blood of the Earth. Water.

An elder said a true warrior always guards the heart of the women and for so long now we’ve forgotten about our mother. Earth is us, we are it. The ones that can heal a relationship that is wounded. The ones that pray over and over. Protect.

Our oral history is vital for our survival and when we blend it with visual art it creates a bond, a prayer. This video is a sacred offering to those that are hurting. Because we must remember that love is the root of all good. Because by giving we open up to receiving. Healing

We offer this timepiece on a day that ushers in a new era for all protectors and people alike. An era that will need music to act as the thread between front lines and front doors.

Stay in the prayer.
We stand with you.
For all our relations.

Our support goes out to the independent media that has been on the ground at Standing Rock. Without them we would have been in a total black out. Their sacrifice allows us to see the truth.

Thank you Unicorn Riot Desiree Kane AdaMedia Med Mera Dr0ne2bwild Photography & Video Indigenous Rising Media Dylan McLaughlin Tomas Karmelo Amaya Josué Rivas Fotographer

Nahko

Posted in #NDAPL, Arts, Uncategorized | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Learnin' to soften my soul

I have long appreciated Nahko and Medicine for the People. I like the idea of music as medicine.

The only time I’ve seen Nahko in person, I didn’t know who he was. The photo below was taken during one of our Dakota Access pipeline gatherings in Indianapolis. I was there with my friends Joshua Taflinger and Brandi Herron (2016). You might be able to make out Nahko & Medicine for the People on the marquee.

As we were standing there, shivering, several members of the band walked past us and gave us big smiles and fist bumps. The person I later discovered was Nahko Bear opened the theater door then went back inside. I have regretted that I didn’t attend the performance that evening.

I enjoy his spiritual musings as much as his music. I’ve often written of those things on this blog: https://kislingjeff.wordpress.com/?s=nahko

P A R T   P R O B L E M

“Part Problem” reflects on the fact that no matter our circumstances or origins, we’re each ultimately responsible for our own path in life. 

Admitting you’re part of the problem can be difficult, but raising your hand and asking for help when you need it is essential. It’s the only way you can learn to love yourself and forgive yourself.

The song is released in tandem with the New Moon, as per our tradition of releasing singles with thoughtful intention, coinciding with the lunar calendar throughout the album campaign for Take Your Power Back. During this time of great sacrifice and uncertainty, we may naturally get drawn into the harsh edges of fear, chaos, and hysteria, but we have a unique opportunity to ground in and soften amongst it all.

What if during this isolation we broke bread with other fears we’ve been harboring? My intentions this New Moon are pretty straight forward: stay grounded, meditate on the manifestation of immediate global healing, and take responsibility for my part in creating a solution.

– Nahko

“Part Problem”
Nahko and Medicine for the People

What did you think this would be, easy love?
There ain’t no easy love, no, no
Oh, beloved, what did I do to us?
How could’ve I lost touch? I was

Fightin’ with my shadow
That is somethin’ I am good at
Givin’ me the power that is
Provin’ to have backlash
Good heart
Off to a bad start

How do I keep myself from fallin’ apart
When I ain’t never felt part of a whole?
Somewhere along the line I got disconnected
Started losin’ perspective, I know
I’ll admit that I am part of the problem
Part of the problem (part of the problem)
I’ll admit that I am part of the problem
Part of the problem

What about all that shit I did for love?
Maybe it wasn’t love, no, no
Who’s in charge here, is it really me?
A face you rarely see

I was lookin’ for connection
But is this just a mixed message?
Come a little closer
Maybe you can make some sense
Of my good heart
Off to a bad start
That is my good heart
Off to a bad start

How do I keep myself from fallin’ apart
When I ain’t never felt part of a whole?
Somewhere along the line I got disconnected
Started losin’ perspective, I know
I’ll admit that I am part of the problem
Part of the problem (part of the problem)
I’ll admit that I am part of the problem
Part of the problem

So I’ll learnin’ to soften my soul
(Part of the problem, part of the problem)
Soul
(Part of the problem, part of the problem)
Soul
(Part of the problem, part of the problem)
Soul
(Part of the problem, part of the problem)

How do I keep myself from fallin’ apart
When I ain’t never felt part of a whole?
Somewhere along the line I got disconnected
Started losin’ perspective, I know
I’ll admit that I am part of the problem
Part of the problem (part of the problem)
I’ll admit that I am part of the problem
So I’m learnin’ to soften my soul


One of Nahko’s most moving and disturbing videos is Love Letters to God

Standing Rock is a dream. The epicenter for our morality and dignity. A place where dark and light communicate and they work it out.

Standing Rock is a vision. The wildest manifestation of our ancestors. The heart of humanity and the blood of the Earth. Water.

An elder said a true warrior always guards the heart of the women and for so long now we’ve forgotten about our mother. Earth is us, we are it. The ones that can heal a relationship that is wounded. The ones that pray over and over. Protect.

Our oral history is vital for our survival and when we blend it with visual art it creates a bond, a prayer. This video is a sacred offering to those that are hurting. Because we must remember that love is the root of all good. Because by giving we open up to receiving. Healing

We offer this timepiece on a day that ushers in a new era for all protectors and people alike. An era that will need music to act as the thread between front lines and front doors.

Stay in the prayer.
We stand with you.
For all our relations.

Our support goes out to the independent media that has been on the ground at Standing Rock. Without them we would have been in a total black out. Their sacrifice allows us to see the truth.

Thank you Unicorn Riot Desiree Kane AdaMedia Med Mera Dr0ne2bwild Photography & Video Indigenous Rising Media Dylan McLaughlin Tomas Karmelo Amaya Josué Rivas Fotographer

Nahko

Posted in #NDAPL, Arts, Uncategorized | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Medical Ignorance

Despite whether you approve of the current president or not, there is no excuse for him to use the power of his office to promote his own medical advice. It has already been proven to be lethal.

A Phoenix-area man has died and his wife was in critical condition after the couple took chloroquine phosphate, CBS affiliate KPHO reported. The additive used to clean fish tanks that is also found in an anti-malaria medication that’s been touted by President Donald Trump as a treatment for COVID-19.

Banner Health said Monday that the couple in their 60s got sick within half an hour of ingesting the additive. The man couldn’t be resuscitated when he arrived at a hospital, but the woman was able to throw up much of the chemical, Banner said.

Arizona man dies, wife ill after taking drug touted as virus treatment: “Trump kept saying it was basically pretty much a cure” MARCH 24, 2020, CBS/AP

Past presidents have urged the public to follow the advice of medical experts. That is not what this president did. He said he “believed” chloroquine would be an effective treatment for COVID-19. This is a transparent attempt to try to make himself look better in the face of mounting evidence that his administration’s failures to prepare for the coronavirus pandemic have resulted in the rapid spread of disease in the United States. And has put the lives of medical personnel at great risk due to the lack of personal protective equipment because manufacturing wasn’t ramped up as it should have been. And now is overwhelming healthcare systems across the nation.

I spent my career doing medical research. Assuring patients won’t suffer from one’s proposed study is an essential part of approving and monitoring medical research projects. An independent board of medical experts and the public evaluates the safety of the proposed research study. The study can’t start until that board is convinced it will not harm the study subjects. And that appropriate monitoring for adverse effects is included.

All medical personnel involved in research are required to pass research medical certifications periodically (usually once a year) to review the guidelines for participating in research. Much of that is related to patient safety considerations.

I’ve appreciated director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Dr. Anthony Fauci’s clear statements about the coronavirus and what is needed to try to treat people and constrain the spread of the disease as best we can. I admire how he has refused to go along with the president’s ignorant statements. It is disconcerting to see he wasn’t at the last coronavirus task force presentation.

Probably not many people remember the horrible side effects of the use of Thalidomide in the early 1960’s. The drug was believed to be safe for use in pregnancy, to treat anxiety and morning sickness. But severe birth defects occurred and the drug was removed from the marked in Europe. Fortunately the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had not approved its use in the United States.

When first released, thalidomide was promoted for anxietytrouble sleeping, “tension”, and morning sickness.[6][9] While initially deemed to be safe in pregnancy, concerns regarding birth defects were noted in 1961 and the medication was removed from the market in Europe that year.[6][5] The total number of people affected by use during pregnancy is estimated at 10,000, of which about 40% died around the time of birth.[6][3] Those who survived had limb, eye, urinary tract, and heart problems.[5] Its initial entry into the US market was prevented by Frances Kelsey at the FDA.[9] The birth defects of thalidomide led to the development of greater drug regulation and monitoring in many countries.[9][5]

Thalidomide

This became a textbook example of the potential risks of inadequate attention to safety. That is why I am horrified by the president’s uninformed idea to simply see if chloroquine works, i.e. to introduce it into the market with no study of its safety and efficacy.

But there is another potential medical disaster that will result in many, many more deaths if the president forces a loosening of social distancing and other restrictions in place to reduce the spread of the coronavirus. It is clear that his administration wants to reduce the negative impact these measures are having on the economy. Any competent medical expert would strongly oppose such a move.

Beyond the medical ignorance, or simply disregard, the president and his party have a history of putting corporate profits ahead of the welfare of the people. The current negotiations of a multi-trillion dollar bill clearly show the divide between a party that once again wants to enrich corporations at the same time not addressing the urgent needs of the people.


Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Online Film Screening & Discussion of The Condor & The Eagle

Unitarian Universalist Ministry for Earth

RSVP Here

WHAT: Join the UU Ministry for Earth (UUMFE) & UUA Green Sanctuary Program’s Environmental Justice Practitioners Network webinar series for an online screening & film discussion of the award-winning feature documentary, The Condor & The Eagle.

WHEN: Thursday, March 26th. The film screening will begin at 9:30 AM Pacific / 12:30 PM Eastern (USA) / 5:30 PM Central European — and the discussion with filmmaker Clement Guerra & protagonist Bryan Parras will begin at 11 AM Pacific / 2 PM Eastern (USA) / 7 PM Central European.

WHERE: online through Zoom video conference services

SUGGESTED DONATION: sliding scale, $10-50 (USA) collected now, during, or after the event

Donations will benefit (1) the film’s community impact campaign, (2) UU-Indigenous partnerships for Earth/Climate Justice in 2020, & (3) the Sarayaku and other Indigenous Ecuadorian Amazonian communities recovering from a recent horrendous flood (note: please donate through this link and not the “flood” link for the film screening donation; we will “split the plate” and donate a lump sum to the GoFundMe page; the link is for context).

ABOUT THE FILM: Indigenous environmental leaders embark on an extraordinary trans-continental adventure from the Canadian plains to deep into the heart of the Amazonian jungle to unite the peoples of North and South America and deepen the meaning of “Climate Justice”.

Posted in Arts, climate change, Indigenous, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

#ShutDownKKR day of online action

Putting pressure on banks and investment firms like KKR has sometimes been successful in stopping the funding for fossil fuel projects. Often this pressure is applied by scheduling a specific date to coordinate actions across the country or world. There are several stories below about about other actions to defund fossil fuel projects that I was involved in.

Maybe you are usually at work now, but are instead at home because of the coronavirus. This is an opportunity to take advantage of this time, and help us #ShutDownKKR.

Today, March 23rd is the day (#ShutDownKKR) for online action targeting KKR.

KKR has plans to purchase 65% of the Coastal GasLink pipeline with Alberta Investment Management Corp (AIMCo). It’s a US-based private equity firm with an atrocious record of putting profits over employees, people, and the environment.
Over the past five years, TC Energy (formally Trans Canada) has tried to build the Coastal GasLink pipeline on Wet’suwet’en land, defiantly ignoring assertions from the hereditary chiefs of their rights and title and their lack of consent for the project.
The Coastal GasLink pipeline threatens Wet’suwet’en land, water, air, and people.
If we #ShutDownKKR, we can stop the financing of the Coastal GasLink Pipeline — but we need to mobilize online together right now.

Here’s what you can do to join the KKR communications blockade TODAY and #ShutDownKKR:

  • Email KKR today by using our easy messaging tool by clicking here.
  • Call KKR by dialing 1-888-593-5407 and following the instructions you hear from us. Need some talking points for your call? No problemo. See below.
  • Tweet at @KKR_Co and tell them just how awful they are for ignoring Wet’suwet’en concerns about their rights, the climate, land air and water. Need some tweet inspiration? See below!

Why is this important right now? Well, this fight got even worse last week.
Despite the COVID-19 crisis, TC Energy is still going ahead with Coastal GasLink pipeline construction and sending more workers and federal police officers onto Wet’suwet’en territories, putting communities at even more risk. Billionaire oil and gas CEOs see the COVID-19 crisis as an opportunity to push through whatever they can when the world is looking the other way.
KKR must be held accountable for ignoring the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs, putting Indigenous land and people at risk, endangering Indigenous women by building man camps along the route, and fueling the climate crisis.


#ShutDownKKR Call Script

1-888-593-5407

“Hello KKR, I am calling to demand you respect Indigenous rights and the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs, and drop the risky Coastal GasLink pipeline immediately. The Coastal GasLink project would lock us into decades of increased fracked gas, disregarding the lack of consent by Wet’suwet’en community and the impacts to climate, air, water and the risks posed to indigenous women by man camps built along the route.”

#ShutDownKKR Sample Tweets

  • Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs are being removed from their land so @TCEnergy can build the Coastal GasLink pipeline, despite having rights and title to the land since time immemorial! @KKR_Co, is it typically your policy to invest in Indigenous rights violations..? #ShutDownKKR
  • Hey @KKR_Co, your Environmental, Social, Governance (ESG) Responsible Investment Policy, and commitment to the @UN_SDG goals doesn’t seem to fit with kicking the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs off their territory by investing in @CoastalGasLink’s pipeline. Care to explain? #KKRGlobalImpact
  • .@KKR_Co, why are you funding the Coastal GasLink pipeline? Terminate your pending purchase with @TCEnergy and respect the land rights of the Wet’suwet’en Nation!

Following are a few of the other pipeline divestment campaigns I’ve been involved in.

November 19, 2015
Today is the national day of action against Morgan Stanley, with people all across the country calling their offices to try to get them to stop financing fossil fuel development, especially mountain top removal.  More information, including phone numbers for the Indianapolis office, can be found here.  Please call, thank you.
https://kislingjeff.wordpress.com/2015/11/19/morgan-stanley-day-of-action/

MorganStanleyCoal
DSC00658
November 19, 2015 at MorganStanley offices in Indianapolis

(SAN FRANCISCO, November 30, 2015) — Today, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo released new commitments to cut financing for the global coal industry. Wells Fargo’s policy committed to reduce the bank’s lending to coal mining companies. Morgan Stanley’s policy went further, covering both lending and underwriting, and committing to end financing for coal-fired power plant construction in developed countries.

Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo Cut Coal Financing, Join Growing Movement by Banks in U.S. and Europe

UPDATED 12/1/2015:  I called the Indianapolis Morgan Stanley offices and left a message for Joseph Kelley, the branch manager who met with us, thanking him for meeting with us, and Morgan Stanley for changing their policy. https://kislingjeff.wordpress.com/2015/11/30/morgan-stanley-stops-financing-coal/


Following is another story about defunding fossil fuel projects that was published in Befriending Creation, the publication of Quaker Earthcare Witness. https://www.quakerearthcare.org/article/one-dollar-time-defunding-dapl


One Dollar at a Time: Defunding DAPL

Jeff Kisling

Jeff at Chase Bank

IN INDIANAPOLIS we have been working on defunding the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) for several months. On November 15, 2016, a crowd of about 200 of us alongside Native Americans in traditional dress marched through downtown Indianapolis with our signs about defunding the pipeline. We stopped in front of two of the banks involved with funding the pipeline, Chase and PNC Bank. The crowd stood in silence as people went in to close their accounts. That day the group withdrew $110,000 dollars.

Yet my own effort to close my account was much more difficult than I thought it would be. 

 Because of administrative changes, I first had a lot of trouble getting the forms to change my paycheck to direct deposit. It took time to set up paying bills. Also, I realized that I had initially chosen Chase bank because they had the most ATM locations. This was important because I don’t own a car. There can be major inconveniences from defunding. I did it anyway.

I went down to the Circle in the center of downtown Indianapolis where the Chase Tower dominates the Indianapolis skyline. I spent about an hour walking around the Circle with my sign, looking to see if anyone else had shown up from my local group. It is a little nerve wracking to be walking around by yourself like that, but, for better or worse, no one looks directly at you or engages you, for the most part.

I had finally worked up the courage to enter the Chase Bank Tower to close my account.  I had no idea what the reaction to entering with my sign would be. I just held it at my side, and then placed it next to my chair as I waited.  The bank officer greeted me with a smile and said someone would be with me shortly. He came back after about ten minutes to say he appreciated my patience—it was a busy time.

Mostly people coming into the bank ignored me, but there were a number of glances in my direction.

When I was shown into the banker’s office, she saw my sign, smiled, put her hands together and bowed to me, and said, “We are on the same page with this.” She put her finger to her lips with a smile indicating she shouldn’t be saying that, officially. She was very pleasant and helpful. When I left, she took my hand in both of hers.

As I was walking past the lobby officer when I left, I reached out my hand, which he took in both of his hands, giving me a big smile and a little bow as well. I told him I appreciated his patience with my freedom of speech, and he smiled and said, “Of course.”

My little bit was added to the total amount of personal money divested so far: $72,944,005.39 dollars according to defunddapl.org.

I felt a transfer of goodwill between me and those in the bank to such an extent that I returned later in the week to drop off three copies of the blog article I had written describing how well they had treated me and the whole defunding process. When the banker I had dealt with previously glanced up, she gave me a big smile and waved me in. She got up and again took my hand in hers and asked what she could do for me. She told me she and her husband had talked about our visit and the pipeline.

This is how our stories spread.

During meeting for business in February at North Meadow Circle of Friends, the meeting approved closing its Chase Bank account in solidarity with the #noDAPL movement.   

Jeff was born into the Bear Creek meeting community in rural Iowa, which is part of Iowa Yearly Meeting (Conservative), where he currently serves as clerk of the Yearly Meeting’s Peace and Social Concerns Committee.  He attended Scattergood Friends School and Farm and currently attends North Meadow Circle of Friends in Indianapolis.


I recently wrote about US Bank saying they were going to stop funding fossil fuel projects, but who then extended further credit to Energy Transfer Partners (ETP), the company behind the Dakota Access Pipeline. They justified that by saying that loan was NOT to fund a specific project.

US Bancorp is the parent company of US Bank.  Since US Bancorp’s headquarters are in Minneapolis, and the Super Bowl was going to be held in the US Bank stadium there, environmental and social justice groups realized the opportunities to reach large numbers of people during the Super Bowl weekend.

I traveled to Minneapolis the day before the game with a group organized by Ed Fallon of Bold Iowa.  We left Des Moines at 7:00 am and arrived at the MN350 (Minnesota branch of 350.org) at 11:30.

Here is the link to the rest of the story: https://kislingjeff.wordpress.com/2018/02/05/super-bowl-and-justice/

Posted in #NDAPL, climate change, Quaker, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

#LISTEN: A Letter from the Virus

This morning I’m thinking about listening. As a Quaker, our worship is to gather on Sunday mornings, to sit together in silence for an hour. This time of group prayer or mediation with a minimum of distraction is intended to create the opportunity to listen for spiritual guidance, sometimes described as listening to the Inner Light, or Spirit, or communion with God. Doing this as a group can add another dimension to individual prayer. Sometimes someone in the Quaker meeting is moved to share by speaking into the silence. Often others find that message relates to what they are hearing from within.

One of the many ways the coronavirus is affecting us is many Quaker meetings are not being held in meetinghouses on Sunday mornings. Instead, individuals in a meeting might decide to have an hour of silence at the same time, with everyone in their own home instead of together. Several Quaker meetings have been experimenting with Internet applications to connect people with audio and sometimes also visual sharing, like ZOOM or Skype. People who don’t have computers or Internet service can connect using their telephone. Here is an link to an excellent guide for a group to gather using ZOOM: https://www.woodbrooke.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/A-Quakers-guide-to-online-worship-and-meetings-19-03-2020.pdf

I’ve always thought that if we can connect to the spirit of God, which is everywhere, we should also be able to connect with others who aren’t physically near us. That this connection with God that doesn’t use what we consider our senses (vision, hearing, taste, touch, smell) means we might be able to connect with other people across distances in a similar way, that may or may not involve those senses.


What triggered the above about listening was this powerful video I came across titled #LISTEN. Many people are recognizing both the changes brought by the pandemic, and the many positive things happening as a result. The producers of this video are encouraging us to share this with others. “Our voice needs to be one now, the one of silence, and understanding, the one of change.


A Letter from the Virus: #LISTEN

An Imagined Letter from Covid-19 to Humans

Stop. Just stop.
It is no longer a request. It is a mandate.
We will help you.

We will bring the supersonic, high speed merry-go-round to a halt
We will stop
the planes
the trains
the schools
the malls
the meetings
the frenetic, furied rush of illusions and “obligations” that keep you from hearing our
single and shared beating heart,
the way we breathe together, in unison.
Our obligation is to each other,
As it has always been, even if, even though, you have forgotten.

We will interrupt this broadcast, the endless cacophonous broadcast of divisions and distractions,
to bring you this long-breaking news:
We are not well.
None of us; all of us are suffering.
Last year, the firestorms that scorched the lungs of the earth
did not give you pause.
Nor the typhoons in Africa, China, Japan.
Nor the fevered climates in Japan and India.
You have not been listening.
It is hard to listen when you are so busy all the time, hustling to uphold the comforts and conveniences that scaffold your lives.
But the foundation is giving way,
buckling under the weight of your needs and desires.
We will help you.
We will bring the firestorms to your body
We will bring the fever to your body
We will bring the burning, searing, and flooding to your lungs
that you might hear:
We are not well.

Despite what you might think or feel, we are not the enemy.
We are Messenger. We are Ally. We are a balancing force.
We are asking you:
To stop, to be still, to listen;
To move beyond your individual concerns and consider the concerns of all;
To be with your ignorance, to find your humility, to relinquish your thinking minds and travel deep into the mind of the heart;
To look up into the sky, streaked with fewer planes, and see it, to notice its condition: clear, smoky, smoggy, rainy? How much do you need it to be healthy so that you may also be healthy?
To look at a tree, and see it, to notice its condition: how does its health contribute to the health of the sky, to the air you need to be healthy?
To visit a river, and see it, to notice its condition: clear, clean, murky, polluted? How much do you need it to be healthy so that you may also be healthy? How does its health contribute to the health of the tree, who contributes to the health of the sky, so that you may also be healthy?

Many are afraid now.
Do not demonize your fear, and also, do not let it rule you. Instead, let it speak to you—in your stillness,
listen for its wisdom.
What might it be telling you about what is at work, at issue, at risk, beyond the threats of personal inconvenience and illness?
As the health of a tree, a river, the sky tells you about quality of your own health, what might the quality of your health tell you about the health of the rivers, the trees, the sky, and all of us who share this planet with you?

Stop.
Notice if you are resisting.
Notice what you are resisting.
Ask why.

Stop. Just stop.
Be still.
Listen.

Ask us what we might teach you about illness and healing, about what might be required so that all may be well.
We will help you, if you listen.

-Kristin Flyntz 3.12.2020

Video made by: Darinka Montico Written by: Kristin Flyntz Music: Cold Isolation · David Fesliyan

#coronovirus #planetearth #climatechange #pandemic

#LISTEN

Text adaptation and video by Darinka Montico Voice: Giulia Chianese
Inspired by “An Imagined Letter from Covid-19 to Humans” by K. Flyntz.
We don’t need to “save the planet”.
We need to save the planet from ourselves.
We are destroying the necessary conditions for human life to continue existing on earth.
Earth will outlive us.
We have a choice.
CHANGE NOW.

THE VIDEO IS OPENED FOR COMMUNITY SUBS CONTRIBUTIONS.
This video is CC BY-NC 4.0.
PLEASE SHARE!
Our voice needs to be one now, the one of silence, and understanding, the one of change.

#LISTEN
Video credits:’”Man vs earth” prince Ea
“POWERFUL VIDEO: Why we need to stop plastic pollution in our oceans for good” Oceana “Cities From Around The World Timelapse” Michael Shainblum, Floria Sigismondi- Sigur ros “Untitled #1” “Alive”-“ climate change” Philip kapadia
Music : “Cold Isolation”, David Fesliyan


Posted in climate change, Quaker, Quaker Meetings, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

COVID-19 and Wet’suwet’en

Image may contain: text
https://www.facebook.com/IIYCFamily

#covid_19 #MotherNature #takecare #AnotherWorldisPossible #ProtectTheSacred


This is the perfect time to enact the reprieve we have received on pollution and climate destruction. There is Beautiful evidence of a fossil free world exemplified in China who could finally see blue sky or the canals in Venice experiencing clearer water and the return of fish. Miracles. That COVID 19
Has given us…if we are wise enough to recognize it. This. This is how we transition to a greener future without polluting devices.

Take your time during social distancing and reflect on this. Think deep about your priorities and the future that will come for your kids you do not embrace this opportunity and time to “figure it out”

Laurie Johansen
Image may contain: possible text that says 'Calling All water keepers World water vay Collective water March 22 Ceremony @ the waters Edge nearest you When: 8am PST 9am MST 10am CST Mam CST 12pm AST'

Sovereign Likhts’amisyu March 18 at 11:19 PM

March 18 2020
While in the interest of public safety, individuals are prohibited from gathering in groups or in close proximity, the Coastal Gas Link man-camps that are on our unceded sovereign territory seem to exist outside of this massive Pandemic-panic.
RCMP and CGL workers continue to violate Wet’suwet’en law pushing their way through the territory while harassing land defenders. This violation of respect comes while the two governments have tried to enter into some sort of “Memorandum of Understanding”.
We are looking for donations –
A big thank you to everyone who has supported the Wet’suwet’en either physically, financially or in your acts of solidarity.

To donate:
https://www.gofundme.com/f/likhtsamisyu2019


Na'Moks Wet'suwet'en
Hereditary chief Na’Moks is seen leaving the Wet’suwet’en offices in Smithers, B.C., Thursday, February 27, 2020. Na’Moks along with other hereditary chiefs met with Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relation, Carolyn Bennet along with Provincial Ministers to discuss the ending blockades happening across the country. The blockades are set up by those opposed to the LNG pipeline in northern British Columbia. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward

A Wet’suwet’en hereditary chief says all meetings and discussions about a draft deal that centres on Indigenous rights and land titles have been postponed because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Hereditary Chief Na’moks says it is a precaution to ensure the safety and health of their elders.
He says they have no set date for continuation of the discussions.

Wet’suwet’en hereditary chief in self-isolation says meetings have been postponed. VANCOUVER ISLAND | News The Canadian Press Staff, Wednesday, March 18, 2020


Kaley M. Reuben uploaded a file.

March 20/2020

Effective immediately:

We, the Haudenosaunee of the Grand River, continue to stand strong in solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en to protect their unceded land from colonial invasion. As a united collective and as a sign of good faith, we have agreed to remove the barricades on the bypass and relocate to Kahnonstaton – the protected place.

We are committed to protecting our lands, water and resources from the ongoing extraction by industries and the canadian government. Despite the dispossession from our lands, the Haudenosaunee will remain at Kahnonstaton. With this action, we are not ending our solidarity with Wet’suwet’en, as we are still ready to act with our brothers and sisters across the territories.

We would like to thank the countless community members and allies that supported us and continue to stand with us. Many thanks to the local businesses of Six Nations and Caledonia that provided meals and services during the highway six bypass solidarity action.

In peace and solidarity,
Haudenosaunee of the Grand River


Native American Women Warriors will be dancing Saturday March 21st from wherever they are at. The time is 1200 PST, so depending on the time zone is when each one participating will dance.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/832568190487520/permalink/834635230280816/


Image may contain: fire, possible text that says 'I TRIED TO KEEP QUIET BUT MY ANCESTORS WOULDN'T LET ΜΕ And the Water Protectors taught me the'
Crystal Scrimmshaw https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10163226239015582
Image may contain: text
https://www.facebook.com/unify/photos/gm.242320346805782/3116738398337730/?type=3

**New Musicians Announced!

Elijah Ray
Das Record
Mikey Pauker
Shantala, The Music of Heather and Benjy Wertheimer
Andrew Love (Tubby Love)

We’re going to be on a 4 hour livestream of LOVE, from guided meditations, wisdom from elders, prayers from our heart-leader musicians and more!

Also we have just announced these leaders who will be sharing:

Raamayan Ananda
Randy Jones
Satyen Raja

We are in times of intense crisis. Fear is rippling across the planet and it is in these times where we need to come together and unify.

We are all unified through water. The rivers and the streams are our veins and arteries; our health and water’s health are one. By healing the waters in our bodies through positive prayers, intentions and commitments to care for others, we begin to heal the water in all bodies.

This year, UNIFY is hosting a Global Synchronized Meditation, Prayer and Action on March 22nd.

MEDITATION: To counteract the fear being spread around the world regarding everything from climate to oceans to viruses, it is time for us to UNITE in the frequency of LOVE and GRATITUDE.

PRAYER: As we usher in a global unified prayer for water, we recognize that what we call “water” is truly the divine operating system that builds all forms of life.

ACTION: We also take direct action to support all waterborne causes – from those who desperately need freshwater to the WHO’s Covid-19 relief!

MUSIC: Is the unifying force.. we bring together heart-led musicians to share their dharma and message and soothe our souls.

JOIN US: Join us on March 22nd at 11am PST on our Unify Livestream for the Global Meditation led by Raamayan Ananda followed by a whole schedule of beauty below.

You can by donating to the UNIFY Water Campaign, which supports charities such as CAWST and Charity Water, providing filtration and water education to vulnerable communities.

We have the ability, for the price of an almond milk latte, to give someone fresh water FOR THE REST OF THEIR LIVES. Literally, you can save a life for the cost of a coffee.

Will you pray with us, and give a small amount to save a life? Please meditate, pray and take direct action with us this World Water Day. Link to give: https://www.facebook.com/donate/933623710426240/

Share this widely


Ahousaht, BC —  In the darkness of all the ever-updating COVID-19 news comes a ray of brightness from community banding together to take care of one another.

For more than a week grocery shelves have been stripped of staples like toilet paper, disinfectant cleaner, flour, rice, pasta, canned goods and meat. More and more, people are heeding the warning to limit travel and not congregate in crowded places. People in isolated villages like Ahousaht wonder if it’s worth the expensive trip to Tofino or beyond to search for essentials.

And then there’s people like Luke Swan Jr. and Tom Campbell, who put out a call for anyone wishing to volunteer to fish for the community.

“We do this all the time, even without COVID-19 we still go fishing,” said Tom Campbell, adding that the weather is nice so it is a good time to fish. “I been doing this for years, basically all my life, sharing with community.”

Luke Swan Jr., Ahousaht fisheries manager, concurred.

“Just now it needs to be done more than ever, for ones who can’t get out (fishing),” he said.

And so, a few boats with about 15 volunteers left the village for a day of fishing. They loaded up with cod and red snapper. Along the way some sea urchins and crab were harvested.

Campbell says they stopped in at Hot Springs Cove to drop off about 30 pieces of fish for the Hesquiaht people before making their way home to Ahousaht.

He went on to say that he was raised on these teachings, of taking care of others and has lived by these values all his life.

“I remember doing these kinds of trips with my late uncles and other relatives; my friend Rocky and others who [are] not so fortunate anymore,” Campbell said.

Ahousaht turns to the ocean to support its people during COVID-19 pandemic
ShareSave
by Denise Titian, Ha-Shilth-Sa, March 18, 2020


No photo description available.

Johnny Moore
We Support the Unist’ot’en and the Wet’suwet’en Grassroots Movement
22 hrs ·  
Wet’suwet’en “STRONGHOLD”
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
We must keep bringing the awareness that we are still against and stopping CGL and other Govt and Corporate transgressions and broken Treaties with First Nations in Canada. We acknowledge our sisters and brothers that are Still Standing in defence Indigenous Nations and our StewardShip of all Environments Globally 🙏🏼
SACRED FIRE SOLIDARITY
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Friday, March 20, 2020
Etienne Brulé ParkToronto, Ontario, KKKanata


Posted in Indigenous, Uncategorized, Unist'ot'en, Wet’suwet’en | Leave a comment

COVID-19 and Wet'suwet'en

Image may contain: text
https://www.facebook.com/IIYCFamily

#covid_19 #MotherNature #takecare #AnotherWorldisPossible #ProtectTheSacred


This is the perfect time to enact the reprieve we have received on pollution and climate destruction. There is Beautiful evidence of a fossil free world exemplified in China who could finally see blue sky or the canals in Venice experiencing clearer water and the return of fish. Miracles. That COVID 19
Has given us…if we are wise enough to recognize it. This. This is how we transition to a greener future without polluting devices.

Take your time during social distancing and reflect on this. Think deep about your priorities and the future that will come for your kids you do not embrace this opportunity and time to “figure it out”

Laurie Johansen
Image may contain: possible text that says 'Calling All water keepers World water vay Collective water March 22 Ceremony @ the waters Edge nearest you When: 8am PST 9am MST 10am CST Mam CST 12pm AST'

Sovereign Likhts’amisyu March 18 at 11:19 PM

March 18 2020
While in the interest of public safety, individuals are prohibited from gathering in groups or in close proximity, the Coastal Gas Link man-camps that are on our unceded sovereign territory seem to exist outside of this massive Pandemic-panic.
RCMP and CGL workers continue to violate Wet’suwet’en law pushing their way through the territory while harassing land defenders. This violation of respect comes while the two governments have tried to enter into some sort of “Memorandum of Understanding”.
We are looking for donations –
A big thank you to everyone who has supported the Wet’suwet’en either physically, financially or in your acts of solidarity.

To donate:
https://www.gofundme.com/f/likhtsamisyu2019


Na'Moks Wet'suwet'en
Hereditary chief Na’Moks is seen leaving the Wet’suwet’en offices in Smithers, B.C., Thursday, February 27, 2020. Na’Moks along with other hereditary chiefs met with Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relation, Carolyn Bennet along with Provincial Ministers to discuss the ending blockades happening across the country. The blockades are set up by those opposed to the LNG pipeline in northern British Columbia. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward

A Wet’suwet’en hereditary chief says all meetings and discussions about a draft deal that centres on Indigenous rights and land titles have been postponed because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Hereditary Chief Na’moks says it is a precaution to ensure the safety and health of their elders.
He says they have no set date for continuation of the discussions.

Wet’suwet’en hereditary chief in self-isolation says meetings have been postponed. VANCOUVER ISLAND | News The Canadian Press Staff, Wednesday, March 18, 2020


Kaley M. Reuben uploaded a file.

March 20/2020

Effective immediately:

We, the Haudenosaunee of the Grand River, continue to stand strong in solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en to protect their unceded land from colonial invasion. As a united collective and as a sign of good faith, we have agreed to remove the barricades on the bypass and relocate to Kahnonstaton – the protected place.

We are committed to protecting our lands, water and resources from the ongoing extraction by industries and the canadian government. Despite the dispossession from our lands, the Haudenosaunee will remain at Kahnonstaton. With this action, we are not ending our solidarity with Wet’suwet’en, as we are still ready to act with our brothers and sisters across the territories.

We would like to thank the countless community members and allies that supported us and continue to stand with us. Many thanks to the local businesses of Six Nations and Caledonia that provided meals and services during the highway six bypass solidarity action.

In peace and solidarity,
Haudenosaunee of the Grand River


Native American Women Warriors will be dancing Saturday March 21st from wherever they are at. The time is 1200 PST, so depending on the time zone is when each one participating will dance.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/832568190487520/permalink/834635230280816/


Image may contain: fire, possible text that says 'I TRIED TO KEEP QUIET BUT MY ANCESTORS WOULDN'T LET ΜΕ And the Water Protectors taught me the'
Crystal Scrimmshaw https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10163226239015582
Image may contain: text
https://www.facebook.com/unify/photos/gm.242320346805782/3116738398337730/?type=3

**New Musicians Announced!

Elijah Ray
Das Record
Mikey Pauker
Shantala, The Music of Heather and Benjy Wertheimer
Andrew Love (Tubby Love)

We’re going to be on a 4 hour livestream of LOVE, from guided meditations, wisdom from elders, prayers from our heart-leader musicians and more!

Also we have just announced these leaders who will be sharing:

Raamayan Ananda
Randy Jones
Satyen Raja

We are in times of intense crisis. Fear is rippling across the planet and it is in these times where we need to come together and unify.

We are all unified through water. The rivers and the streams are our veins and arteries; our health and water’s health are one. By healing the waters in our bodies through positive prayers, intentions and commitments to care for others, we begin to heal the water in all bodies.

This year, UNIFY is hosting a Global Synchronized Meditation, Prayer and Action on March 22nd.

MEDITATION: To counteract the fear being spread around the world regarding everything from climate to oceans to viruses, it is time for us to UNITE in the frequency of LOVE and GRATITUDE.

PRAYER: As we usher in a global unified prayer for water, we recognize that what we call “water” is truly the divine operating system that builds all forms of life.

ACTION: We also take direct action to support all waterborne causes – from those who desperately need freshwater to the WHO’s Covid-19 relief!

MUSIC: Is the unifying force.. we bring together heart-led musicians to share their dharma and message and soothe our souls.

JOIN US: Join us on March 22nd at 11am PST on our Unify Livestream for the Global Meditation led by Raamayan Ananda followed by a whole schedule of beauty below.

You can by donating to the UNIFY Water Campaign, which supports charities such as CAWST and Charity Water, providing filtration and water education to vulnerable communities.

We have the ability, for the price of an almond milk latte, to give someone fresh water FOR THE REST OF THEIR LIVES. Literally, you can save a life for the cost of a coffee.

Will you pray with us, and give a small amount to save a life? Please meditate, pray and take direct action with us this World Water Day. Link to give: https://www.facebook.com/donate/933623710426240/

Share this widely


Ahousaht, BC —  In the darkness of all the ever-updating COVID-19 news comes a ray of brightness from community banding together to take care of one another.

For more than a week grocery shelves have been stripped of staples like toilet paper, disinfectant cleaner, flour, rice, pasta, canned goods and meat. More and more, people are heeding the warning to limit travel and not congregate in crowded places. People in isolated villages like Ahousaht wonder if it’s worth the expensive trip to Tofino or beyond to search for essentials.

And then there’s people like Luke Swan Jr. and Tom Campbell, who put out a call for anyone wishing to volunteer to fish for the community.

“We do this all the time, even without COVID-19 we still go fishing,” said Tom Campbell, adding that the weather is nice so it is a good time to fish. “I been doing this for years, basically all my life, sharing with community.”

Luke Swan Jr., Ahousaht fisheries manager, concurred.

“Just now it needs to be done more than ever, for ones who can’t get out (fishing),” he said.

And so, a few boats with about 15 volunteers left the village for a day of fishing. They loaded up with cod and red snapper. Along the way some sea urchins and crab were harvested.

Campbell says they stopped in at Hot Springs Cove to drop off about 30 pieces of fish for the Hesquiaht people before making their way home to Ahousaht.

He went on to say that he was raised on these teachings, of taking care of others and has lived by these values all his life.

“I remember doing these kinds of trips with my late uncles and other relatives; my friend Rocky and others who [are] not so fortunate anymore,” Campbell said.

Ahousaht turns to the ocean to support its people during COVID-19 pandemic
ShareSave
by Denise Titian, Ha-Shilth-Sa, March 18, 2020


No photo description available.

Johnny Moore
We Support the Unist’ot’en and the Wet’suwet’en Grassroots Movement
22 hrs ·  
Wet’suwet’en “STRONGHOLD”
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
We must keep bringing the awareness that we are still against and stopping CGL and other Govt and Corporate transgressions and broken Treaties with First Nations in Canada. We acknowledge our sisters and brothers that are Still Standing in defence Indigenous Nations and our StewardShip of all Environments Globally 🙏🏼
SACRED FIRE SOLIDARITY
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Friday, March 20, 2020
Etienne Brulé ParkToronto, Ontario, KKKanata


Posted in Indigenous, Uncategorized, Unist'ot'en, Wet’suwet’en | Leave a comment

Uncompromising Racism

The economic and social meltdown from the COVID-19 pandemic exposes how successful the White, wealthy, and privileged in the United States have been in subverting the government for their purposes. A process that began the moment European explorers arrived.

A friend of mine recently summarized it this way:

I’m of the firm opinion that a system that was built by stolen bodies on stolen land for the benefit of a few is a system that is not repairable. It is operating as designed, and small changes (which are the result of huge efforts) to lessen the blow on those it was not designed for are merely half measures that can’t ever fully succeed.

Ronnie James

To this day we have not come to grips with fundamental injustices our country was built on, the cultural genocide and theft of land from Native Americans, the enslavement of African Americans and the legal justifications of bestowing rights and privileges on white land-owning men. The consequences of these injustices continue to plague our society today. And will continue to impact us until we do what is necessary to bring these injustices to light and find ways to heal these wounds. 

An article in the New York Times last Sunday uses the term uncompromising racism.

So far, the debate around these ideas has focused on the fiscal and political obstacles (Mitch McConnell, ahem). But there’s a bigger problem. Americans have repeatedly rejected expansions of the social safety net because it inevitably collides with one of the most powerful forces shaping the American experience: uncompromising racism.

Racism has forever been a forbidding obstacle to the development of a welfare state, at least of the sort that Europe enjoys and many Americans aspire to. By standing in the way of solidarity, it has produced an exceptional country that accepts without flinching the most extreme wealth alongside deprivation that has no place in the industrialized world.

Why does the United States suffer the highest poverty rate among wealthy nations? Why does it have the highest teen pregnancy rate? Why are so many Americans addled by opioids?

The United States alone has crumpled because it showed no interest in building the safeguards erected in other advanced countries to protect those on the wrong side of these changes. Why? Because we couldn’t be moved to build a safety net that cut across our divisions of ethnicity and race.

Why America Will Never Get Medicare for All. Forget politics or money. Racism explains why the country lacks the safety net its citizens deserve by Eduardo Porter, New York Times, March 14, 2020

I avoid using labels. But the the Republican party and administration’s policies and pronouncements are unapologetically racist. They revel in the designation. The current president was voted into office by those who want this racism to continue, to expand.

This administration’s long delay in recognizing the COVID-19 pandemic has put the country at great risk because for months people who didn’t know they were infected were going about their daily lives, infecting others in the process.

The economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic have finally gotten the attention of the administration. But their concern is how the fall in the stock market affects their chances for re-election.

Their response is to bail out large corporations, and send a small check to the general public to try to damp down their discontent. Even that will not reach people most in need, people who don’t have an address to send a check to. Likewise extending unemployment benefits, while good for those who once had work, again doesn’t apply to those who haven’t been able to find employment.


…the idea of a takeover by the numbers is troublesome. The goal is not a future in which people of color bully white Americans. What this country needs is to overcome racial hostility and develop a comprehensive sense of society in which everybody fits.

While minorities might eventually reshape American politics into something more inclusive, until that happens politics will be determined by the efforts of freaked-out whites to resist this change.

Ask yourself why the United States, alone among the world’s richest nations, still doesn’t provide its citizens comprehensive, universal health care. Ponder why Obamacare is being so relentlessly whittled down by Republican governors, the courts and the Trump administration. Racial animosity is at the root of all this — and until America finally grapples with it, even the grandest plans will amount to nothing.

Why America Will Never Get Medicare for All. Forget politics or money. Racism explains why the country lacks the safety net its citizens deserve by Eduardo Porter, New York Times, March 14, 2020

Social safety nets have been targeted by the Republicans because they don’t believe they have an obligation to “support” those who aren’t like them. Because of uncompromising racism. In the face of the pandemic, social safety nets have to be strengthened tremendously and immediately or the consequences will be dire.

So the question is now, where do we go from here? Do we continue to make incremental changes while the wealthy hoard more wealth and the climate crisis deepens, or do we do something drastic that has never been done before? Can we envision and create a world where a class war from above isn’t a reality anymore? 

Ronnie James

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | Leave a comment

Quaker Indian Residential/Boarding Schools

For the past five or six years I’ve searched for and found opportunities to be engaged with and learn from Indigenous peoples. This grew out of working together to bring attention to the Dakota Access pipeline (DAPL) in Indianapolis, beginning in 2016. I felt a deep spiritual connection from the beginning of these interactions.

I’ve struggled my whole life to try to bring attention to the dangers of fossil fuels and greenhouse gases. As a Quaker I had been taught the way we create social change is by living according to our beliefs. To be an example to others. For the past forty years living without a car was my example. Much to my dismay, that didn’t convince anyone else to give up their car. So I was very grateful for opportunities to spend time with Native people, whose lives are examples of living within the ecological boundaries of Mother Earth.

I wanted to strengthen spiritual bonds between Native people and myself. Which meant trying to find appropriate ways to share my Quaker faith. I use writing on this blog as a way to explore my spirituality. But that wasn’t something Native people read, at first.

In the fall of 2018 I was blessed to participate on the First Nation-Farmer Climate Unity March. As the name implies, the idea was for a group of Native and non-native people to get to know each other, so we could work on things of common concern. It was a small group of about 15 Native and 15 non-native people. We walked and camped together over eight days, along the path of the Dakota Access pipeline, 94 miles from Des Moines to Fort Dodge, Iowa. During the hours walking together, mainly on quiet, rural roads, we shared our stories with each other. That, and the challenges of physical exertion, blisters, and walking through pouring rain, standing in a circle and offering prayers every time we crossed the pipeline, was a really effective way to create community among us. We became friends, and there have been multiple occasions since when we’ve worked together. As one example, several of us spent an hour with Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley’s staff in Des Moines, talking about legislation related to native concerns.

Another result of becoming friends has been the opportunity to share my blog posts on Facebook groups that some of my new friends do read. Likewise, now I know where to find their writings. Seeding Sovereignty is one. These became one way to continue to remain in touch with each other.

I hope it gives you some context for the subject of this blog post, the Quaker Indian Residential/Boarding Schools. The schools are referred to as either residential or boarding schools. Not all of those schools were run by Quakers, but for several reasons many were. If you haven’t looked into this yourself, I imagine you think, as I did, that these schools were helping Indian children learn how to adapt to the White society that had taken over their lands. Unfortunately the truth was quite different.

Quaker Indian Boarding Schools

More than 100,000 Native children suffered the direct consequences of the federal government’s policy of forced assimilation by means of Indian boarding schools during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Their bereft parents, grandparents, siblings, and entire communities also suffered. As adults, when the former boarding school students had children, their children suffered, too. Now, through painful testimony and scientific research, we know how trauma can be passed from generation to generation. The multigenerational trauma of the boarding school experience is an open wound in Native communities today.

What does this history mean to us, as Friends, today?

This question is not for me to answer, but to pose to Friends for individual and collective discernment. It is clear that Quakers were instrumental in promoting and implementing the forced assimilation of Native children. Through a lens of European Christian superiority, Quakers tried to remake Native children in their own image. In their writings, I found no appreciation for what the children would lose in this process. “For their own good,” the children would be raised by Quaker teachers (removed from their own families and kinship relationships), receive English names (lose their family lineage), speak English (lose their Native languages), wear “citizens’ dress” (lose the beautiful and skillful art and handiwork of their tribes), become farmers and homemakers (lose the hunting and gathering knowledge of the land and ecology), and aspire to European lifestyles (lose competence in their own cultures and pride in their Native identities).

From our twenty‐first‐century vantage point, we know (or can learn) how Native people suffered and continue to suffer the consequences of actions that Friends committed 150 ago with the best of intentions. Can we hold those good intentions tenderly in one hand, and in the other hold the anguish, fear, loss, alienation, and despair borne by generations of Native Americans?

Native organizations are not asking us to judge our Quaker ancestors. They are asking, “Who are Friends today? Knowing what we know now, will Quakers join us in honest dialogue? Will they acknowledge the harm that was done? Will they seek ways to contribute toward healing processes that are desperately needed in Native communities?” These are my questions, too.

Paula Palmer, Facing Our History and Ourselves, Friends Journal, October 1, 2016

So what do we do as 21st-century American Quakers? How do we bring our values of peace, community, and equality to the truth of what our ancestors did? Palmer is working on that, too.  Learning our part is surely the first step; owning it, the second.  And after that, we must work to make sure we aren’t doing it again with our missions and projects on reservations and elsewhere in the US and beyond in South America and the Great Lakes region of Africa. And more to the question of what do we do in our everyday lives; we each seek the Light of God in our prayer and meditation and in the silent expectant waiting of worship with Friends.  And then we bravely do as we are led.

Quaker Indian Schools: A Legacy We Need to Heal,  AUGUST 8, 2016 BY MOLLY WINGATE, Patheos.com

Hopefully that explains why I felt there was one thing I had to do as I began to develop these friendships. I had to confront, within myself and then with my new friends, Quaker history related to Native peoples. Quakers were among those who taught at the Indian boarding schools that were created to assimilate native children into White culture. Forced assimilation, since these children were often forcibly removed from their families. All kinds of significant trauma occurred. Trauma to the children and to their families and communities. And that trauma has been passed from generation to generation. Examples below illustrate what Paula Palmer said above, that the “multigenerational trauma of the boarding school experience is an open wound in Native communities today.”

Many Quakers are very uncomfortable about examining this history. One reason is it doesn’t fit with the idea of Quakers doing good in the world. But that is the reason I’m bringing this up now. Too many times Quakers and other social justice people have used the approach of implementing a solution they have come up with, often with little or no input from those they want to help. And they think they should lead the implementation their solution. That approach never works, and the Indian residential school is an example of the grave dangers of that approach.

At first I wasn’t sure how much my Native friends knew about the Indian boarding schools. It was tempting hope they didn’t know, and to not bring this up.

Which shows my ignorance because they not only knew about those schools, but had their own experiences today related to the trauma that originated in the past. So there was no way we could get to know and trust each other if I didn’t acknowledge that somhow.

The following story occurred during the First Nation-Farmer Climate Unity March that I mentioned above.

It didn’t take too many hours of getting to know Matthew when the Spirit led me to say to him, “I know about Quakers’ involvement in the Indian boarding schools. I’m sorry they did that.” I was apprehensive about whether I should have said that, whether that was appropriate or could pull up bad memories. We continued to walk side by side. All I noticed was a slight nod of his head. He always smiles, and that didn’t change.

One of the next times we walked together, Matthew shared a story with me. He had been living at Standing Rock for about six months, when he learned a new rope was needed to ferry people back and forth across a narrow channel of water. He offered a rope so the ferry’s operation could continue. He went on to say his mother called him after she recognized the rope while watching a TV news story. She was very upset because that brought back terrifying memories of how the Native families would try to help their children escape when white men came to kidnap them and take them to a boarding school.

After the March I realized there were several other Native friends who knew I was a Quaker, but with whom I had not shared an apology like the one above with Matthew. I felt I needed to do so because we continued to work on things together, and I sometimes shared a Quaker perspective with them.

One of my friends said “Awww Jeff… as long as you acknowledge it and learning how to be an ally then that’s all we can ask.”

Another told me, “thank you. My grandmother grandfather and aunt were in boarding schools. The trauma is horrific and it still resonates within the generations afterwards. Because, as you know, the institutionalized racism and frontier culture still exist.”


One of the reasons this is so much on my mind now is because I’ve been hearing Indigenous Youth for the Wet’suwet’en speak very eloquently in their public gatherings. For the past several months I’ve been learning all I can, and writing about the Wet’suwet’en peoples and their courageous actions to keep pipelines like the Coastal GasLink pipeline from being built on their incredibly beautiful lands. And I have been surprised at how often the Indian residential schools, and forced assimilation, have been spoken about.

We’ve had to fight for over a hundred years. And despite the residential schools despite the epidemics of smallpox, tuberculosis. Despite the enfranchisement. Despite the reserve. Despite all the assimilatory policies of Canada that have existed up until the modern day, our system of governance and the Wet’suwet’en system of governance has persevered and they have remained strong as is demonstrated by the five clans of the Wet’suwet’en when they evicted Coastal GasLink from their territories.

Kolin Sutherland-Wilson

Victoria Redsun says it is difficult to be a young, Indigenous person in an urban environment right now.

“We see our people on the streets and hurting,” says Redsun who adds that residential schools are still fresh in her memory and the issues around violence and genocide against Indigenous women is still happening.


I am “inconvenienced” by the Wet’suwet’en protests. I live close to Clark and Hastings , am dependent on public transit, walk slowly, and use a cane. So when the buses are rerouted it is quite inconvenient for me. But , I need to talk about scale and proportionality here. Yes it is a drag and inconvenient for me, but it is far more “inconvenient” to have a pipeline you did not agree to traversing your land. It is far more inconvenient to have to live with boil water advisories. It was far more inconvenient to have your children forcibly removed and sent to residential schools, and it is totally inconvenient to have your unceded land stolen.
So while walking the extra way to or from the bus stop (and finding it) is inconvenient and not easy for me it is nothing in comparison to what Indigenous peoples and especially the We’tsuwe’ten are facing.
And, the courage of the protestors give me convenient hope.

MArion Pollack February 25 at 3:48 PM

Posted in #NDAPL, decolonize, Indigenous, Indigenous Youth for Wet'suwet'en, Quaker, Toward Right Relationship with Native Peoples, Uncategorized, Wet’suwet’en | Leave a comment