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Undercurrent Page 5


  Snap Lake is “Canada’s first completely underground diamond mine.” after the unsettlers are finished, what legacy will it leave?

  the home of Coney and of Coney-eating Dene for thousands of years, will this short blip of urban disturbance pass as quickly as it began, or will it readjust itself to your icy rhythms?

  medicines abound as the blind walk & dig: some can hear them, many can’t. what will we learn from crowberry, blueberry, elderberry, yarrow, caribou, whitefish, Yamozha?

  what remains

  sleep replenishes

  a tired mind

  birdsong renews

  wild life in city’s midst

  ever evolving

  under abundant sun

  generous rain

  a simple breath

  again & again

  a repeated act

  of faith

  among

  ant crawl

  worm squirm

  snails & slugs

  spider spin

  hemlock hold

  pigeon coo

  baby burble

  raccoon scavenge

  skunk scamper

  antibodies adjust

  paramecium propel

  salal stretch

  #J28

  last year, i never imagined we would be

  round dancing in Glenmore Landing

  round dancing in Chinook Centre

  round dancing in Olympic Plaza

  round dancing in Metrotown

  round dancing in West Edmonton Mall

  round dancing outside the Cayuga courthouse

  round dancing on Akwesasne

  round dancing on Strombo

  hych’ka!

  mahsi cho!

  welalin!

  miigwetch!

  drumming at Waterfront Station

  drumming at the United Nations

  drumming at Columbia University

  drumming at Granville & Georgia

  drumming at Dalhousie University

  drumming at the Peace Arch

  drumming on Wellington Street

  drumming on Lubicon lands

  drumming in Owen Sound

  drumming in Thunder Bay

  drumming in Somba K’e

  drumming in Chicago

  drumming in Chilliwack

  drumming in Kitimat

  taking a much needed pause for thought

  on tarsands Highway 63

  on the 401

  on cn rail tracks

  with Aamjiwnaang courage

  a human river on Ambassador Bridge

  time to stop and respect

  remember we are all treaty people

  unless we live on unceded lands

  where ignorant guests can learn to be better ones

  by repealing C-45, for starters

  we have to stand together in many places all at once

  J11, J16, J28

  Indigenous spring

  Eighth Fire summer

  autumn wisdom

  winter sleep to

  renew Indigenous spring

  again & again

  it is Gandhi we need to align ourselves with

  Gandhi and Gaia and Vandana and Maude & marbled murrelets & mycorrhizal mats

  Winona and Ward and Jaggi and Arundhati & phytoplankton & peregrine falcons

  Naomi and Oren and Toghestiy and Jeannette and Lee & bittermelon & bees

  Percy and Shiv and Jack and Elizabeth & chrysanthemum greens & canola, now radiated

  Yoko and Yes Men and Chrystos and Dionne & dolphins & prairie dogs

  Theresa and Melina and Pamela and Rosa Parks & salmon & cedar

  Wab and Harsha and Clayton and Eriel & eider ducks & water bears

  Takaiya and Roxanna and Glen and David & wolves & whales

  there is a time for pies and there is a time for rocks & beavers & snowy plovers

  there is a time for poems & a time for rifles & coral reefs & caribou

  there is also a time for the Haudenosaunee Wampum Belt

  a time for you

  two rivers running side by side

  (as long as one party doesn’t try to dam, kill the other’s river)

  and a time for spinning wheels

  it is Super Barrio, who stopped 10,000 evictions in Mexico, who i look to

  it is the Zapatistas, the Mohawks, the KI, the Lhe Lin Liyin

  the Mother Earth Water Walkers, the 20-year-olds suddenly in Parliament, the grannies & the grandkids

  it is the children i will never see, but who i hope will live and drink clean, wild water

  with gratitude to Chief Theresa Spence and Idle No More for participatory leadership in the service of lands, waters & all living beings

  holders

  the women hold space like trees do, sweet fresh air between their tender branches. unseen roots draw deep down into dark moist sustenance, making homes for songbirds, windsong and children who puff with asthmatic exertion. the women stand in front of army trucks & policemen, uniforms & riot gear with only their soft skin & clear eyes to protect their beating hearts. the mothers, the sisters, the aunties, the grannies, the daughters crack open the ugly pavement of unjust laws & find old rivers underneath. quietly, firmly, they pray & burn offerings for the four directions to come together in sacred commitment to all of creation: the frogs, the slugs, the hummingbirds, the whales, the mountains, the creeks, the laughing ones & the crying ones, the tough ones & the weak ones, the silly ones & the serious ones, the clowns & the cooks, the farmers & the fishers. the women dig their toes into the generous earth remembering their mothers and their neighbours, their relatives who fly and those who swim. the women have forgotten so much but they are starting to remember. no matter how many of them have been killed, beaten, insulted, the women continue to stand together. the women plant trees & gardens. the women eat fresh peaches & can huckleberries. they compost & compile recipes. the women forage for mushrooms & cultivate stubborn corn. they praise the sun & the night with their toil. they tickle each other and guffaw. the women lick their lips with gusto. they perch on the edge of teetering cities. they jump into organic fields. the women build homes with their beloveds. the women find ways to laugh even when life isn’t funny. the women remain

  References & Influences

  Abuela Grillo. http://vimeo.com/13195764

  Armstrong, Christopher, Matthew Evenden and H.V. Nelles. The River Returns: An Environmental History of the Bow. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2009.

  “Arsenic Trioxide and the Frozen Block Method.” Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada. http://www.aadnc-aandc.gc.ca/eng/1100100027422/1100100027423

  Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation. http://www.acfn.com/

  Berland, Jody. “Walkerton: The Memory of Matter,” Topia 14 (Fall 2005): 93-108.

  “Bernie Krause discusses biophony and music with Sir George Martin” from Rhythms of Life. BBC. 9 May 2012. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=feexRcCHh3k

  Bing Ai. Dir. Yan Feng. 2007.

  Bocking, Richard. Mighty River: A Portrait of the Fraser. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 1997.

  Boyd, Andrew. Beautiful Trouble: A Toolbox for Revolution. OR Books, 2013. http://beautifultrouble.org/

  Bow River Basin Council. http://wsow.brbc.ab.ca/

  Cardinal, Jesse. “The Tar Sands Healing Walk.” A Line in the Tar Sands. Eds. Toban Black et al. Toronto: Between the Lines, 2014.

  Carson, Rachel. The Sea Around Us. Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1991.

  ———. The Sense of Wonder. New York: Harper, 1998.

  Cole, Peter, et al. Speaking for Ourselves: Environmental Justice in Canada. Vancouver: University
of British Columbia Press, 2009.

  Cycle to the Sacred. Beyond Boarding. Summer 2014. http://www.beyondboarding.org/cycle-to-the-sacred

  Dai Qing, qtd. in William Wan, “Amid severe drought, the Chinese government admits mistakes with the Three Gorges Dam,” Washington Post, 4 June 2011. http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia-pacific/chinese-government-confronts-reality-of-three-gorges-dam-mistakes/2011/05/30/AGfXx0IH_story.html

  De Beers. https://www.canada.debeersgroup.com/Mining/

  D’Souza, Radha. Presentation at Keepers of the Water. Lac Brochet, Manitoba. 2011.

  Evaluation of Four Reports on Contamination of the Athabasca River System by Oil Sands Operations. 2011. http://www.assembly.ab.ca/lao/library/egovdocs/2011/alen/156416.pdf

  False Creek Watershed Society. http://www.falsecreekwatershed.org/

  Feld, Steven. “From Ethnomusicology to Echo-Muse-Ecology.” Acoustic Ecology. 2001. http://www.acousticecology.org/writings/echomuseecology.html

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  Gabrielle-Pape, Jada, of the Saanich and Snuneymuxw Nations. Artist talk, 17 Sept 2013.

  George, Chief Dan. “Words to a Grandchild.” Native Poetry in Canada. Eds. Jeannette Armstrong and Lally Grauer. Peterborough, ON: Broadview Press, 2001.

  Goldstick, Miles. Wollaston. Montreal: Black Rose Books, 1987.

  Harding, Jim. “Proposed Uranium Mine Wouldn’t Get Go-Ahead in South.” No Nukes: Go Renewable Canada. 5 Sept. 2010. http://crowsnestecology.wordpress.com/2010/09/05/proposed-uranium-mine-wouldn%E2%80%99t-get-go-ahead-in-south/

  Hillman, Brenda. “Hydrology of California: An Ecopoetical Statement.” Practical Water. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan, 2009.

  Hix, Harvey, ed. Ley Lines. Waterloo, ON: Wilfrid Laurier UP, 2014.

  Hume, Stephen. A Walk with the Rainy Sisters. Madeira Park, BC: Harbour, 2010.

  Hunt, Erica. “Notes for an Oppositional Poetics.” Moving Borders: Three Decades of Innovative Writing by Women. Ed. Mary Margaret Sloan. Jersey City, NJ: Talisman House, 680-87.

  I Ching Online. http://www.ichingonline.net.

  Irland, Basia. Water Library. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2007.

  Jaremko, Gordon. “Pipeline to the Pacific.” 3 Nov 2007. http://www.canada.com/edmontonjournal/news/business/story.html?id=31c8d460-da17-4d52-af2b-a3b134b5c905&k=58903.

  Keepers of the Water. http://keepersofthewater.ca/

  Kinder Morgan. “TMX – Anchor Loop Project Frequently Asked Questions.” http://www.kindermorgan.com/content/docs/FAQ_v7.doc

  Kino-nda-niimi Collective, eds. The Winter We Danced: Voices from the Past, the Future, and the Idle No More Movement. Winnipeg: ARP Books, 2014.

  Klein, Naomi. This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate. Toronto: Alfred Knopf, 2014.

  Laboucan Massimo, Melina, qtd in Nobel Women’s Initiative. 28 Nov. 2012. http://nobelwomensinitiative.org/2012/11/day-4-spotlighting-melina-laboucan-massimo-lubicon-lake-cree-nation-canada/

  Land Is Life: Indigenous Defenders Speak. Featuring Ancestral Pride - Gwaiina and Xhopakelxhit sovereign Ahoushat / Snuneymuxw, Mel Bazil of the Wet’suwet’en and Gitxsan, Jackson Crick of the Tsilhqot’in Nation, Freda Huson - spokesperson of the Unist’ot’en clan of the Wet’suwet’en, Arthur Manuel of the Secwepemc Nation, Kanahus Pelkey of the Secwepemc Nation, Khelsilem Rivers - Skwxwu7mesh-Kwakwaka’wakw, and Toghestiy of the Wet’suwet’en nation. 16 Dec. 2013. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iamLYN8CVBQ

  Leal, Teresa. In Environmental Justice Reader. Eds. Joni Adamson et al. Tucson, AZ, University of Arizona Press, 2002.

  Leclerc, Christine et al. Enpipeline. Smithers, BC: Creekstone Press, 2012.

  Lee, Bruce. Interview by Pierre Berton. The Pierre Berton Show. Dec 9, 1971. Youtube.

  Lilburn, Tim. Living in the World As If It Were Home. Toronto: Cormorant Books, 2002.

  Maathai, Wangari. Taking Root. http://takingrootfilm.com/

  MacEwan, Grant. Watershed: Reflections on Water. Edmonton: NeWest Press, 2000.

  Maracle, Lee. “Water,” forthcoming in Downstream: Reimagining Water. Wilfrid Laurier University Press.

  McAllister, Angus. Life Cycle: Sustaining the Story of Water in BC. 19 Nov. 2012. https://www.freshwateralliance.ca/sites/default/files/resources/bc_freshwater_focus_groups_report.pdf

  McKibben, Bill. “A World That Works.” Written in Water. Ed. Irena Salina. Washington, DC: National Geographic, 2010. 101–106.

  McMenamin, Mark and Dianna McMenamin. Hypersea: Life on Land. New York: Columbia University Press, 1994.

  Merton, Thomas. “Rain and the Rhinoceros.” Raids on the Unspeakable. New York: New Directions, 1966. 9–23.

  Mining Watch. http://www.miningwatch.ca/after-mine-0

  Mitchell, Alanna. Sea Sick: The Global Ocean in Crisis. Toronto: Emblem, 2010.

  Moore, Charles. Plastic Ocean. New York: Avery, 2011.

  Mottainai. http://mottainai.info/english/

  Nahanee, Amanda. “Aboriginal Perspectives on Climate Change.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OwH_0jXYOQU

  Neimanis, Astrida. “We Are All Bodies of Water.” Water. Ed. John Knechtel. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 82-91.

  Nikiforuk, Andrew. Tar Sands. Vancouver: Greystone Books, 2008.

  Pasteur, Louis, qtd in Jessica Sachs. Good Germs, Bad Germs. New York: Hill and Wang, 2007.

  Paulette, Francois, qtd in “Indigenous Peoples of Canada March on Canadian Embassy in Copenhagen to Protest Tar Sands.” Democracy Now. 15 Dec. 2009. http://www.democracynow.org/2009/12/15/indigenous_peoples_of_canada_march_on

  Plath, Sylvia. “The Beekeeper’s Daughter.” Sylvia Plath: The Collected Poems. Ed. Ted Hughes. New York: HarperPerennial, 2008. 118.

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  Tar Sands Healing Walk. http://www.healingwalk.org/

  A Terrible Beauty: Edward Burtynsky. Vancouver Art Gallery. May 2014.

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  Whitehead, Jerry. Artist talk. 17 Sept 2013.

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  epilogue: letter sent back in time from 2115

  here is wonder, despite armies of mistakes. darshan. the heavens still circle us, & we them. from ovum to star orbits, rebalance begins, practical & spiritual. in the great return, toilets don’t flush; they compost. people cease & desist from desecrating water by pissing & shitting in it. other ways to move waste, besides water, prevail. we live in the world as if it were our only home, loving dreamtime & full breath. spontaneous compassion sprouts in the cracks of collapsing systems. as the rampant destruction of drinkable water finally stops, mutual-aid lifeboats emerge. seui dihk sehk chyun. gradual & magical, the syntax of hope percolates into bathrooms & basements, glistens in alleyways turned arbours. city dwellers cultivate gentle water, in the shape of sturdy kale, crisp apples, airy chicken coops. ubuntu. glimpse elders in every school, children in every seniors’ home. organic gardens spread through public grounds, healing lodges & neighbourhoods. treaties mature, deepening respect like old-growth roots. springwater protection, fogcatchers, cedar, all thicken, as does birdsong with the return of habitat & empathy. three sisters sing louder in our guts & muscles. we learn the languages of roots & fungus medicines. dandelion, yarrow, burdock, lingzhi. everyone slows, attends to the waxing & waning moon each lunar cycle. balance quietly returns to the commons, as the solace of night matches the solar feed-in tariffs by day. the sun meets the power of the moon. serious play enters work in a big way. nobody is the boss of anybody but themselves. hemp mostly takes plastic’s place. through cob construction, occupations of empty condos & community sweat equity, everyone who wants a home, has one. indigenous resurgence slows climate instability & deflates apocalyptic fervor. today people live & watch water’s journey the way they used to watch the dow jones, as the flow of tao reaffirms ocean life. hych’ka.