>From my friend, Carmen Mills:

On the surface, Fish Lake is Avatar in real life: the Tsilhqot’in
First Nation vs. Taseko Mines, who want to build a gold mine –
“Prosperity Mine,” no less – on the ancestral land of the Nation. The
plan would drain Teztan Biny (Fish Lake), the sacred lake of the
Tsilqhot’in, and fill it with toxic tailings from the open pit mine.
The natives are righteously pissed, and the townfolk divided.

The short story is, same old, same old: jobs and quick cash vs.
preservation of an ageless treasure. The long story, however, is a new
one – a story of timely awakening and massive shift, with the power to
transcend politics, economics, and history.

We have been called to Fish Lake to receive the story, witness,
interconnect, and to offer back what we can. We have come by
invitation of the Xeni Gwet’in band, in an act of faith that strikes
me as vastly courageous.

Our motley team of media samurai assembles in the airport lounge one
by one, lugging equipment boxes and hockey bags. Pravin the social
web-weaver, Kim the medicine keeper, Mark D. the carpenter
photographer, Mark V. the youth videographer, Chris the globe-spanning
editorial imagemaker, Joe the Wilderness Committee icon. Obi Nine,
tech ninja. And me – writer. Invited in trust; following the drums.

We fly to Williams Lake, where we are picked up in a clean blue van
branded with the gold Xeni Gwet’in logo, and driven three hours from
the roughneck resource town to the shore of Teztan Biny. Bumping down
the muddy single-track road across the Chilcotin Plateau, we cross
cattle guards and weave through forests of silver-gold aspen and rusty
dying pine. Wild horses graze among the trees. A grizzly and three
cubs tumble across the road ahead of the van. At last we reach the
sacred lake, which lies calm in the light drizzle. Rain alternates
with spatterings of hail and splashes of sunshine. But just below the
surface, the lake churns with life. Every now and then one of the
lake’s 90,000 rainbow trout leaps, flashing in the light. A small
island half a km offshore guards ceremonial pit houses, and
surrounding the lake are First Nations burial grounds and a roiling
ecosystem of bear, deer, and edible and medicinal plants. Teztan Biny
lies in the caretaker area of the Xeni Gwet’in and Yunesit’in
communities, but has nourished all the humans and other living
creatures of the region for millenia.

Gilbert Solomon lights a small fire of dry red pine boughs, and he and
Xeni Gwet’in Chief Marilyn Baptiste drum to call the spirits.
Gilbert’s spring salmon song ends in a high shout skimmed over the
drum skin. There is a silent moment before the shout comes back,
echoing over the lake, the spirits returning the song.

In 2007, the Tsilhqot’in won a landmark B.C. Supreme Court victory,
entitling their people to protect their ancestral fishing and hunting
lands. A recent federal environmental review of the Taseko mine
proposal was entirely damning, stating flat out that the mine would
destroy the lake and cause irreparable harm to the Tsilhqot’in people.
Never has the Canadian government disregarded such an assessment.
Nevertheless, the Province of BC staunchly supports the proposal. And
so we are all waiting now, for the federal cabinet to hand down its
ruling. If the mine is quashed it will be a landmark decision for
native sovereignty, which will forever alter the course of development
in this country and beyond. If the mine is given the go-ahead, the
Tsilhqot’in will go to the law courts and to the barricades–with the
unanimous backing of the B.C. Union of Indian Chiefs, the full force
of the Assembly of First Nations, and the support of every awakened
group and individual in the country. It will be a standoff like no
other.

When I ask of the Xeni, “what will you do if the mine is built?”, I am
met with calm assurance – “It’s not going to happen,” says Gilbert,
his mischievious twinkle replaced by a depthless certainty. Gilbert’s
mother Mabel, a small, steely woman in a wheelchair, speaks in melodic
Tsilhqot’in with Gilbert translating – “You [all Canadians] can share
what we are saying. I will be at the front of the blockade, and you
can stand on the blockade with us. They won’t be able to penetrate
that.”

It is the same old story, but the world changes from moment to moment.
And in this moment, for the first time in the history of our species,
the First Nations of this planet are united. They are standing tall,
connected to the land they never forsook, by a mycelial web of
consciousness. And the web does not end with First Nations people; it
extends to all beings whose feet touch the earth, who drink the water
and who breathe the air. The sea change is subtle but tangible,
globally, as our instinct for collective survival moves from theory
into practice.

The web beneath the surface grows wider and denser every day, drawing
strength from our individual experience and our collective wisdom. The
songs, the dances, the technologies and the medicines are being shared
– from the Tibetan chants sung to us in a traditional earth lodge by
an Ontario medicine healer, to the Internet artistry, poetry, imagery
and far-flung connections offered up by our visiting crew. Powerful
healing ceremonies pass hand-to-hand between the nations of north and
south, and are shared with non-natives aligned with the struggle, in
the interests of protecting our native planet. Wisdom draws from the
sky and returns to the roots, to the mycelium layer, and spreads like
wildfire – underground.

“The spirits are having a parliament meeting,” says Gilbert, gazing
out across the lake. “If we let this go through, it is like a prayer
we didn’t do..and it’s gonna kick our butt. We’re all on the same ship
here, cruising through the cosmos…and the mountain spirits are waking
us up.”

And so we wait, as the Federal decision is deferred and delayed yet
again. In faith, following the drums.

*****
WHAT YOU CAN DO – join us!

Sign the petition in support of Teztan Biny
Read the Vancouver Sun article, Sept. 14
Find out more about Fish Lake – Friends of the Nemiah Valley
See Mark Donovan’s photos from Fish Lake (including pic of Gilbert, above)
Check out Mark Vonesch’s awesome video of elder Mabel Solomon!

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