Friday, January 24, 2014

View from the rearview: on gardening, environment, health and remembering Grandfather Bob from the Elders' Lodge in St. Paul

  
      Cone Flower
Squash blossom
Ahsayma



… as I stooped over wiping salty sweat from my brow, a grandfather sauntered over, assessing my work, and engaging me in banter:  “So you think you know something about gardening, eh?  You think you know something about growing tobacco?”  With a smile, I denied knowing anything about anything, and replied that I was doing my best to tackle the task at hand, pulling weeds.  Kindly, the grandfather shared a little bit of his personal history as he instructed me to be sure to pull the weeds out by the root, so they don’t come back.  He shared that he had grown tobacco “about forty years ago” and recounted how indigenous gardeners would always weed from the root.  He contrasted that with the gardening techniques used by European settlers, which require much more repeat weeding as well as the use of herbicides and fertilizers.  By pulling the weeds out by the root, and letting them dry around the garden, the naturally occurring vegetation provides a natural source for fertilizing the soil once the garden’s productive season has come to completion.  “Burn all the weeds and other plants once the growing season is over, and then turn it all into the soil.  That will make the plants more healthy the next season,” he instructed. 

There were other things as well.  “Mound up the earth around each plant to protect the roots.  Do this each time you weed, before you water.  That way, the nutrients in the soil stay with the plant.”  Grandfather Bob brought the tradition of gardening that he learned as a young man growing up on the reservation to the urban youth of today and shared that knowledge again with a mom and her toddler at the Elders Lodge garden planted and tended by multi generational members of the community who are working to ensure that our methods of subsistence, physically, mentally and spiritually are remembered, practiced and maintained for the generations of the future.
  
 
Grandmother Emma Gurneau
Grandmother Eileen Hudon and her helpers

The Indigenous Peoples Task Force (IPTF) started out as a task force to monitor and take action against the growing epidemic of HIV and AIDS that is rapidly plaguing the American Indian community in Minnesota (American Indian heterosexual women represent one of the fastest growing demographic groups in acquiring new HIV cases, slightly more cases per population are being reported in the African American and Latino/a communities).

In the first few years, IPTF’s activities were centered largely around issues of HIV transmission reduction, and counseling people living with HIV about dealing with a terminal illness.  There were many losses of family, friends and colleagues in those early years.  Then the medical establishment released new regimes of chemicalized plants, animal parts and minerals which have resulted in huge increases in the lifespans of people living with HIV and AIDS.

Consequently, there are more clients, living longer lives, despite their immuno-compromised state.  A longer lifespan has given rise to a host of new community needs and desires in this post HIV antiviral drug era.  People living with HIV/ AIDS now live long enough to notice that smoking has a drastic negative impact on their health.  And because the life expectancy is longer, though still much more fragile than the average non-immunocompromised individual, health impacts such as environmental toxins, air pollution, soil contamination and water quality and safety have become a major factor in discussions and daily decision making surrounding lifestyle choices for optimal healthy living.

The acceptable safe levels or TMDL’s of toxic and carcinogen substances that are allowed by government regulatory agencies cannot be accurately measured for people living with HIV.  Nor can the impacts of unregulated toxic emissions and unsafe disposal of harmful chemicals into the air, soil or water.  Hence the City of Minneapolis Drinking Water Quality Report notice that “Immuno-compromised people such as people undergoing chemotherapy, …organ transplants, … HIV/ AIDS… elderly, and infants….should seek advice about drinking water from their health care providers.” (2005 & 2006)

As indigenous people, we are still struggling for our very survival, still seeking to ensure that there will be a place and a way for our future generations to emerge and take root in the rocky soil that is our world today.  So we seek out the elders, and do our best to tease out the helpful teachings, guidance and snippets of useful wisdom that they may offer.  We use our technology and our teachings to try to ask the questions that our children will need answered years hence.  And we ask for information to be forthcoming from the scientists and policy analysts who know by measure what is happening, but are too often reverted to silence or unintelligibility.

As we engage in this game of strategy, of wits or apathy, we find that our many paths do, in fact converge and cross at many places, not just one.  Our health department warns us, do not drink this water, while our traditional teachers remind us how to make our own filters.  Our surgeon general proclaims smoking a health hazard; our elders tell us to snip  the flowers off three times and let the fourth set of buds go to seed.  The environmental government agency tells us that our soil is contaminated so much that playing in it poisons our children; our traditional gardeners show us how to mound up the soil around plants that will form new soil and burn the pulled weeds at the end of the growing season to fertilize in a way that protects our children from harm.

As we struggle to live our lives, however long or short they may turn out to be, in a way that is consistent with the values and instructions that we each maintain out of our desire and free will as independent human beings, we learn by our experience, and we remember just how pitifully interdependent we are with everything that lives, breaths or moves.

As our water becomes more and more contaminated through the air, on the land and under the earth; as we search the databases for lakes whose fish are not contaminated with mercury and pcb’s; as we wonder what to feed our children with every new outbreak of mad cow, brucellosis and avian flu; we know that we must pray, and that praying alone is not enough.  We must learn, we must know and we must act.

Our surgeon general reminded us that smoking causes premature death.  We remembered the Onkwehowe tobacco growers and sought out 600 year old seeds that had been passed down from generations through our history of migration, trade and commerce.  We were warned that it is our responsibility alone to ensure the health and vitality of our water.  Our grandmothers are beginning to stand up and teach all of the women whose mothers were not able to teach them about the relationship of women to water.  Our food is being altered by scientific experiments that have yet to be proven into laws.  Our children are reminding us how to reduce our household waste by choosing what we buy carefully, composting at our homes or apartments and using the new soil to grow healthy greens, herbs and vegetables.  And, of course, tobacco.  Sacred tobacco.  Planted next to the tomatoes and peppers who are their family members in the world of zuyawgikeeg.  Hang them to dry before the first frost so the leaves don’t get mushy.  And don’t forget that the seeds will fall out of their little cases, so collect them ever so carefully for post-winter planting once the sun warms enough to heat a southern window for the whole afternoon.

Whatever happens, we will always have the knowledge, the wisdom and the technology to do what we need to; as long as we make sure we have the faith, the desire and the discipline to seek and carry out tasks and instructions that we receive.

Bawshkeeng Wabigun
text c. 2006
photos c. 2011


Epilogue:  Grandfather Bob left us some years ago, and the text only version of this post originally appeared on the IPTF website when I was working there back in 2006, but after finding and reading it again today, this piece seems to have gained a new currency in light of the recent chemical and oil spills.





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