Date: Fri, 24 Jul 1998 15:54:26 -0700 (PDT)
From: Douglass Daley
Subject: The Survival Path
To: WSN <liberty@woodstocknation.org>
The Survival Path:
Cooperation between Indigenous
and Industrial Humanity
Elisabet Sahtouris, Ph.D.
Proceedings of the
UN Policy Meeting on Indigenous
Peoples
Santiago,Chile, May 1992
Introduction:
As a planet
biologist I have studied the entire evolution of Earth as a single living
system, with special attention to the relationship of our relatively new
human species to the rest of this system throughout our known history.
From this extremely broad perspective, the present world crisis and potential
solution came into clearer focus.
The emerging
picture led me to become a co-founder of the Worldwide Indigenous Science
Network, convinced that the knowledge indigenous people have about living
in balance with other living systems is critical to our own species'
survival. In these two capacities,
I have come to the following conclusions:
--Humans are not the first species to threaten its own and others' extinction by way of resource depletion and pollution.
--Ancient
species survived similar crises by reorganizing their
living systems from aggressively
competitive to peacefully cooperative.
--Presently
evolved species can exist only because the Earth
spent billions of years burying
atmospheric carbon in forests and underground, much of it as fossil fuels;
to burn these forests and fuels reverses the planet's system for keeping
atmospheric conditions and climate conducive to species health.
--The Earth's living systems can clean up considerable pollution, but only if they remain healthy; destruction of forests, seashores, water tables, ozone layer, etc. makes it impossible for the Earth to perform the cleanup.
--Industrial hi-tech monoculture agriculture is so destructive in terms of fossil fuel use, pollution and desertification that the human species can no longer be sustained by it; only indigenous, traditional agriculture, demonstrably more productive and sustainable, can meet human food needs in the very near future.
--Small
community societies of indigenous and traditional peoples survived in health
for many thousands of years without overpopulating because they were
composed of living systems in balance
with their environments; industrial society,
by contrast, threatens its own
extinction within a few hundred years of existence because it has created
overpopulation and has violated most principles of living systems.
--Biodiversity is essential in all living systems, including human. Monoculture is as destructive and dangerous in human social systems as in human agriculture; the failure to respect and protect indigenous and traditional cultures in the attempt to industrialize all humanity according to one model actually hastens human extinction.
--Technological production is natural to the human species, but must be reevaluated and revised in a goal-setting context of healthy survival.
--The most
promising survival path for humans is to merge appropriate technology with
the knowledge, wisdom and ecologically sound practice of
indigenous and traditional peoples.
Background:
Within the ancient
Hopi Indian Prophecy is told the history of the Red and White
Brothers, sons of the Earth Mother
and the Great Spirit who gave them different
missions.
The Red Brother was to stay at home and keep the land in sacred trust while
the White Brother went abroad to record things and make inventions. One
day the White Brother was to return and share his inventions in a spirit
of respect for the wisdom his Red Brother had gained. It was told that
his inventions would include cobwebs through which people could speak to
each other from house
to house across mountains, even
with all doors and windows closed; there would be
carriages crossing the sky on invisible
roads, and eventually a gourd of ashes that
when dropped would scorch the earth
and even the fishes in the sea. If the White
Brother's ego grew so large in
making these inventions that he would not listen to the wisdom of the Red
Brother, he would bring this world to an end in the Great Purification
of nature. Only a few would survive to bring forth the next world in which
there would again be abundance and harmony.
The Colombian
Kogi, descendants of the ancient Tairona, have a similar historical scenario
in their creation story. Aluna, the Great Mother, the primeval waters,
is the source of all creation. Even before creating worlds, she lived
through all possibilities for all
worlds and all times through great mental anguish. For this she is known
as Memory and Possibility. The eight worlds previous to this one were not
peopled, but in this ninth world she put humans, including Elder and Younger
Brothers. From the beginning, Younger Brother caused so much trouble that
eventually he was given knowledge of technology and sent far, far away
across the waters. Five hundred years ago, the Kogi say, he found his way
back across the waters and he has been causing trouble ever since. If he
does not listen to the Kogi, to Elder Brother, who is telling him to stop
destroying the Mother, to stop digging out her heart in his mining and
cutting up her liver in his deforestation, he will bring this world to
an end.
The Conquest of Nature:
At present
human existence is dominated by a technological society founded on the
mechanical worldview of western science with its materialistic values--
a worldview, value system and way of life that for all its benefits has
brought us to the brink of disaster. It stands in sharp contrast to the
worldviews, value systems and lifestyles of indigenous and traditional
peoples, which are only now beginning
to be recognized as valid in their
own right and possibly critical for our very
survival as a species. For this
reason the formulation and implementation of knowledgeable, sound, participatory
policy on indigenous peoples is a vital task for the United Nations.
Western/Northern
science and industry from their outset shared the conviction that man is
master of all nature and would bring about a Golden Age for
all humanity by conquering, subduing
and transforming material nature to his own
ends. Nature, according to John
Locke, the principal philosopher architect of
this tradition, has no value in
itself, gaining value only when transformed by
industrial man. This view of nature
still prevails today, notably in genetic engineering and patent discussions
for the GATT.
In the
spirit of Locke's "the negation of nature is the road to happiness," the
European White/Younger Brother seized the lands of the Hopi, the Kogi and
most other indigenous cultures around the world, on grounds dating back
to a
Papal Bull of 1493 stating that
infidels had no land rights, while Christians did.
Indigenous peoples were identified
as part of the "brute nature" the Europeans were to conquer and subdue.
Since
that time, the Euro-American culture has perpetuated the dogma that indigenous
people are backward, ignorant and impoverished without the white
man's intervention.
We now
look back on a tragic history of the White/Younger Brother's destruction
of indigenous cultures to build his technological world. It is a
world in which non-human species
are rapidly extinguished as vast tracts of forest and mineral-rich earth
are transformed into a network of great urban sprawl cities, a
top-heavy world in which seven
percent of the people own sixty percent of the land and use eighty percent
of the available energy. It is a world in which nature has been seen only
as a supply base and a dumping ground, a polluted world which testifies
to the White Brother's failure to respect the Red Brother's sacred Earth
wisdom. It is a world in which we finally recognize that humanity may well
face extinction through its own folly.
Worldviews and Prediction:
The Hopi
of North America and the Kogi of South America are among many indigenous
cultures giving us prophecies from the past as well as present evaluations
of our global crisis. These two in particular foretold not only nature's
destruction at this time, but specifically identified, as we saw above,
the inventive, technological branch of humanity as responsible because
it fails to heed the sacred Earth
knowledge and wisdom of indigenous
peoples.
Neither the Hopi nor the Kogi accounts tells us that technolog is bad in itself, that we should abandon it and "go back to nature." On the contrary, both of them validate technology as an important aspect of humanity, but warn that it must be brought into harmony with the sacred natural world through the deep Earth wisdom of indigenous peoples.
How did these indigenous peoples know what technology would bring, where it would lead humanity? Why is it that the science on which our technological world is based--the science which so prides itself on its ability to predict--failed to predict its own consequences while indigenous cultures saw clearly where it would lead?
The answer
to this question lies in a fundamental difference between the worldviews
of indigenous and industrial peoples. The failure of Euro-American
scientists to predict the consequences
of the technology they spawned is directly related to the fact that their
mechanical worldview is diametrically opposed to the organic worldview
of indigenous peoples.
The mechanical
scientific worldview holds that the universe is fundamentally lifeless,
that life happened by accident on the surface of this planet, that everything
in nature including humans and their societies can be understood as machinery
composed of mechanical parts. In this view, the role of science is to study
nature objectively-- as though
from outside-- by reducing this machinery to its parts; to understand it
so that human society can gain control over it and exploit it for human
purposes.
In the worldview shared by indigenous peoples everywhere, despite differences in its formulation, the universe, nature, is alive and sacred, all beings in it are related and interdependent: the stars, the rocks, the waters, the winds, the creatures, the people, the spirits and so on. The human role within nature is to hold it sacred and to live in a balanced way within it, to give back as much as is taken.
One worldview sees nature as fundamentally alive and sacred; the other sees nature as fundamentally mechanical and exploitable. By understanding the world as a single, interconnected and interdependent living system, indigenous peoples knew that the consequences of the White Brother's destructive ways would necessarily be disastrous.
Indigenous Science:
There can
no more be one true science than there can be one true religion. Native
science (not to mention Arabic, Vedic, Taoist and other) has contributed
enormously to modern knowledge. Mechanist science, in its reductionist
search
for the parts of natural "machinery,"
has failed to see holistically, systemically. Dr.
Greg Cajete of the Santa Clara
Pueblo, author of Look to the Mountain: an Ecology of Indigenous Education,
Kivaki Press) points out that indigenous science is carried out and taught
in "high context" settings, i.e. out in nature itself, rather than in the
"low context" industrial society
settings of laboratories and classrooms isolated from
nature. He points out also that
indigenous science is not something learned in limited years of formal
training, but that it is a lifelong task. The whole enterprise of industrial
society science is based on removing phenomena from their natural context
to "control" them, while the whole concept of indigenous science is teaching
natural phenomena in natural settings in order to integrate yourself with
them. It is not a science that stands apart from nature to look at it objectively;
it does not eliminate the sacred, but integrates it. It fosters dialog
between humans and the rest of nature.
Native science, which by Euro-American scientific categorization includes biology, geology, astronomy, navigation, meteorology, botany, medicine/pharmacology, psychology, agricultural engineering, plant genetics, ecology, social and political sciences is based on thousands of years of observations and experiments in living nature. Jack Weatherford has documented the incredible impact of the fruits of Native American science alone on all the world's cultures (Indian Givers, Crown Publishers, New York 1988).
If we take the single example of agricultural engineering, the modern high-tech Green Revolution cannot hold a candle to the sustainable productivity of highly developed Inca agriculture, or even to that of the traditional "permaculture" farming practiced by the natives of India prior to colonization.
Green Revolution
agriculture uses vast quantities of fossil fuel energy to produce
machinery, fertilizers, pesticides and irrigation systems, all of which
combine to irrevocably destroy soils and water tables, not to mention the
destruction of the traditional
communities of people who formerly owned and farmed the land. These people,
who developed healthy, productive seed and varied crops over thousands
of years on the same land, are now pressed into serfdom on huge mechanized
farms that grow monoculture crops from sterile seed and will remain productive
only for limited time before the ground is reduced to saline desert (see
The Violence of the Green Revolution by Vandana Shiva, Dehra Dun, India
1989).
Green Revolution
statistics show greater yield of, say, rice per hectare than traditional
methods, but they ignore the fact that the same hectares were not
only producing rice, but fish,
pigs, vegetables, fruit, fertilizer and mulch on
soil/water that remained healthy
with no chemical input. A century ago, a British agricultural expert toured
India to see how he could best advise Indian farmers to improve their agricultural
practices. His conclusion was that the Indian farmers had more to give
to the English in the way of advice, because they knew so much about soil
composition and health, pest control, water management, crop breeding,
and all other aspects of agriculture.
Yet in
the present GATT (General Agreements on Trade and Tariffs) discussions,
scientists continue to promote the idea that nature can and must be technologically
transformed by scientific techniques. Seed that was developed over thousands
of years by indigenous peoples or peasants is defined as "primitive
cultivar" until brought into a
laboratory, genetically altered and then patented for ownership (in direct
violation of sacred contract living). If these GATT agreements go through,
the indigenous peoples or peasants who developed seed will be fined for
planting it unless they buy the seed from its new "owners!"
Pre-Inca
and Inca agriculture developed hundreds of varieties of potatoes, high
protein grain and beans, corn and many other carefully bred crops, feeding
millions of people on the same lands without destroying them. Over half
the food eaten in the world today traces its roots to the Andes. Their
mountain agriculture included automatic irrigation systems and climate-control
to prevent freezing. Only minimal
work was required in their plow-free
tabled fields. Freeze dried potatoes were among their inventions.
Indigenous
people without the urban social organization of the Inca were equally
sophisticated
in their agricultural practice (see Darrell Posey's position paper for
this meeting: Indigenous Knowledge in the Conservation and Utilization
of World Forests).
Native
navigational science was especially highly developed in the Pacific and
required no compass. In addition to astronomy (navigation by stars) there
was sophisticated knowledge of currents, weather patterns and fish and
bird migrations to guide the swift, elegant outrigger canoes over vast
stretches of ocean. These
navigators were also trained to
detect magnetic fields in their bodies (giving them
"compass" directions) and to sense
psychically their proximity to land.
Because
we are accustomed to equating science and technology with mechanical
instruments, machinery and all
the material products of our culture, it is difficult for us to grasp the
enormous scientific and technological prowess of peoples who consciously
kept their material goods to a minimum in order to live in ecologically
sound ways. Yet science is the systematic accumulation of knowledge about
our
natural world and technology is
quite literally human artifice. However invisible much indigenous technology
was, it often worked better than the mechanical
technology of the modern world.
Consider
birth control. Native peoples' science of ecology made them sensitive to
how many people their land could support. If populations grew greater or
less than optimal, they adjusted social rules (for example, how long nursing
mothers
were off limits to men) and the
use of herbal birth control accordingly.
Overpopulation is a problem arising
when communities in sound ecological balance with their surrounding
world are destroyed and that balance is lost. Colonialism was devastating
to indigenous communities wherever it was practiced. Mining and monoculture
farming was instituted on indigenous lands wherever possible, destroying
self-sufficient, independent and secure community. Later, this destruction
was compounded by urbanization, which made people totally dependent on
colonial jobs and institutions for their livelihood when their land was
taken.
Populations
were first decimated by diseases the colonizers brought and to which natives
had no resistance; then, in Asia, Africa and parts of South America, they
grew out of bounds. The fact that modern medicine saved lives may
compensate for lives taken by diseases
the white man brought, but it did not cause
overpopulation as we have been
told. Overpopulation is the reaction of insecure people whose former ecologically-sound
community has been destroyed, their only
remaining security lying in having
enough children to hire out in wage slavery. Native North Americans,
having resisted wage slavery, were outright murdered (there is still a
bounty law for killing Indians in Massachusetts!) or pushed onto ever smaller
reservations, deprived of their economic bases, forced to adopt foreign
language, foreign forms of government, housing, education and religion
in the concerted effort to destroy their cultures, then decimated by alcohol
in their despair. As a result, most cultures were wiped out; those that
survived never had a chance to "overpopulate."
Much indigenous
science is extremely sophisticated in what we call "interdisciplinary sciences,"
such as geology/meteorology. The Hopi, for example
discovered that in the Southwest
underground copper deposits draw down lightning,
bringing life-giving rains to the
desert. They know that mining can change weather patterns as surely as
the Kogi know that deforestation and mining are drying the climate around
them so their mountains no longer have adequate snow to feed the rivers
on which their crops and lives depend. Both cultures have observed the
destruction while the white man saw only the copper and the gold that would
bring him wealth.
Survival Conclusions:
Native
science uses the sacredness of nature as its guidepost to what should or
should not be done by humans. To be sacred is to be inviolable, to be treated
with utmost respect. To have a sacred contract with nature, as said above,
is to care for it, protect it, give back to it as much as is taken. When
the White Brother's
inventive genius comes together
with the Red Brother's deep wisdom, we will
develop an appropriate technology
that does not violate the Earth, but restores it and permits all creatures
to live in health.
In terms of United Nations policy on indigenous peoples, it seems to me essential that:
--The UN
sponsor an educational campaign designed to build respect for indigenous
and traditional peoples; that supports them in telling their own
histories and worldviews, and that
makes clear that much land was taken from them by utterly unjustifiable
means.
--The UN
set up a World Council of Indigenous Elders with international media
coverage to advise world leaders
(CEOs, international bankers, politicians, religious
leaders, etc.)
--The UN immediately begin inviting Indigenous Elders, even before formal recognition of their nations, to address the General Assembly on critical world issues.
--The UN
support indigenous peoples who survived the past half millennium of
industrialization in their land
claims, lest the very basis for their existence be denied
them further.
--The UN look very seriously into its policy of not recognizing indigenous nations existing within the borders of member nations, though these member nations have never legitimately acquired title to the aboriginal lands.
--Whenever
indigenous nations have conflicts with industrialized nations, whether
over patents on their intellectual property, independent nation status,
land disputes, or other issues, the negotiations do not take place within
the legal
structure of one disputing party's
culture: e.g. industrial society courts. Fair
negotiations can only be possible
in some compromise structure of discussion agreeable to both sides, possibly
within the UN.
--Ethnobiological
research be supported by the UN in ways that promote the
conservation of indigenous and
traditional cultures and actively
prevent their exploitation.
--Appropriate technology be made available to indigenous peoples upon consultation with them.
In conclusion,
as a western scientist, a planet biologist, I believe that indigenous
peoples are the guardians of our
species; the part of humanity that alone holds the
wisdom to insure our healthy survival.
ALOHA
Michael
Bowen
Nepenthe
Woodstock
Nation Foundation
ãcopyright
1998 EGGINK "a family business"
Material contained on this page is freely shared as
long as you include this copyright information and photo credits

The Woodstock Nation Foundation web site is generously donated by