I'm sharing this letter from a friend in West Virginia because she is so 
eloquent and this mining disaster is big in the news right now.

--- On Thu, 4/8/10, Sarah Sunshine <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Sarah Sunshine <[email protected]>
Subject: [seeds] Update from Sarah Vekasi in West Virginia
To: [email protected]
Date: Thursday, April 8, 2010, 2:27 PM




  
  
April 8, 2009 


Dearest friends,


            I am
struggling to write this letter this morning because I feel so
overwhelmed by
the recent events here in West Virginia 
that it is hard to concentrate on writing, but I really value the
responses I
receive from each of you and appreciate the ability to share my
perspective on
events here, so here goes an attempt to communicate. 

             West Virginia 
and the coalfield communities of Appalachia are
currently going through huge highs and lows. Last Thursday the
Environmental
Protection Agency announced new federal guidelines to regulate
mountaintop
removal coal mining!!! This is enormous news and I don’t want to gloss
over it
– it is a major (but certainly not final) step in ending this practice
by
upholding the Clean Water Act. 

            I will write more later about the
impacts of this as the comment period is now open until December,
however, most
of us haven’t had much time to revel in this news or even understand it
properly yet because the guidelines are long and complex and before we
could
finish the leftovers of Easter dinner and process the NCAA final four
defeat, 25 underground coal miners were killed and
4 more are still missing (although the recovery team is searching
underground as I write) in a horrific mining disaster at the Upper Big
Branch
Mine next to the Coal River about an hour from my house. 

We all have come together in grief
and solidarity with the families and friends of these dead and missing
miners.
Losing miners underground is the reoccurring nightmare of everyone in
the
region. The anger and sadness and intensity of emotionality is
noticeable
everywhere I look. 

            At the same time, many of the
community members who have the bravery to really take a stand against
mountaintop removal, many of whom know people or are related to people
who
work/ed in the Upper Big Branch Mine, are laying low right now,
processing grief
with families at home and a little bit in community but not speaking
with all
of the national media camped out in these small towns about all the
various
reasons we have to dislike Massey (many) because tensions are wound up
so tight
it is like a tinderbox waiting for a tiny spark to ignite. The grieving
families have a lot of reasons to be angry at the company they worked
for, and
that is rough in a year where the divisions of company loyalty and
industry-loyalty versus ‘siding with the tree-huggers’ (also their
neighbors
and family) has been fierce. I am guessing that it is confusing as well
as
overwhelming to be angry at Massey after a year of rallying for them in
big and
public situations that sometimes even seemed to me to be like mobs. We
all
search for understanding, and in a big tragedy, no one likes to be
reminded of
the warnings that they’ve heard for years now, embodied by the strong
hearted
women and men of the movement against mountaintop removal and the union
organizers still around, who have been calling out Massey Energy for
years and
talking about how dangerous and hazardous the company’s practices are.
So, for
now, people lay low, but what do we do on Monday when the camera crews
go home?
Can these communities ever unite again?


            This tragedy speaks for itself –
twenty five people dead, four still missing in a severe mine explosion
most
likely caused by company negligence which has routinely put profits
before
people. Massey Energy, the corporation liable in this tragedy, has been
the
focus of the media’s attention, and for good reason. Massey is the
largest coal
company in the region infamously known for busting the United Mine
Workers
Union in the eighties and cutting every corner to turn a profit while
racking
up huge numbers of safety violations and repeatedly failing to comply
with
environmental regulations in the past year. Any time a company
repeatedly
violates environmental and safety codes there needs to be a huge red
flag – and
in this case – a flag as big as the bloody red sky, like the sunsets
we’ve had
all week since this disaster.


            And unfortunately this isn’t the end of
the story. 

            My friend Larry Gibson from Kayford
Mountain often asks people the question – ‘would you rather die quickly
or
slowly – because either way coal will kill you.’ Occasionally something
as
obviously horrific as a mine explosion happens and we lose 25 people
right away.
Most of the time miners start to have a hard time breathing after one,
five,
thirty years on the job and find out that they have black lung disease
which
kills them slowly and painfully. The rest of us living in the
coalfields notice
just how many rare cancers and rashes, cases of asthma and diseases our
neighbors
and families have – and we realize that is from the water which has
been
irreparably polluted from underground and surface mining and the air
which is
hazy with toxins from the blasting of the tops of the mountains, the
refining
of the coal, the dust from trucking the coal and the pollution from
burning it.


            Imagine if
the national press came in and camped out at our local elementary
school every
time we reported that thirty men in our community were diagnosed with
Black
Lung and thirty children have missed an inordinate amount of days of
school due
to unidentifiable illnesses caused by drinking polluted water and
breathing
toxic air? This is a national emergency and the issues reach further
back than
just how this particularly horrible mine explosion happened to how a
single
industry has dominated this region and what we, as a national and
regional
community are going to do to change that.


            Tuesday, the morning after the mine
explosion, I gave a talk about eco-chaplaincy to a senior ethics class
at the University of Charleston .
We began in silence
and reflected together about how this tragedy is impacting us. One of
the key
tasks for the class is to tackle big issues with ethical dilemmas and
learn to
see from all sides of an issue, hence, one of the topics they studied
this
winter was mountaintop removal coal mining. The class attended the
debate I
told y’all about in January which was hosted by their school between
Don
Blankenship, CEO of Massey Energy and Robert Kennedy Jr. from the
Waterkeeper
Alliance. As you can imagine, there were a lot of questions about my
opinion of
the debate – “Who did I think won? Were there any points made that I
particularly appreciated on opposite sides? 

            I told the students that even the
notion of a two-sided debate around mountaintop removal coal mining was
a set
up because there are never just two sides to an issue – just like this
mine
disaster. I said that there are so many perspectives that I have a
suspicion
that we would all end up in a circle for the sake of sanity and to be
able to
hear one another if we ever tried to have a discussion including
someone taking
each view. 

            I know the class was pretty evenly
divided in their opinion about the practice as I received nearly five
pages of
questions from the 40 students ahead of time which helped me get a read
on the
audience. Many of the questions were about how I ended up in West
Virginia and
how Buddhist practice, tree-sitting, and traveling in Asia has informed
my
life, but some of the questions I found very informative when looking
at the
situation West Virginia is in right now.


            The questions I want to share were
all false dichotomies – set up in a polarized worldview where the
answers were
supposed to be either/or answers. (Either jobs or the
environment, health or
livelihood) Two of my favorites were:




  “Given
the tragic mine explosion last night and
the obvious danger involved with underground mining, isn’t it safer to
do
surface mining?” and 
  “Looking
at this issue from a business
perspective, how can you argue that a business shouldn’t minimize costs
while
getting the same results by using mountain top removal? If it is
because of the
health risks to nearby communities, would you rather risk the lives of
underground miners or the health of nearby communities? Who should we
be more
concerned about?” 

I guess we always
do come back to that question about which
came first – the chicken or the egg. Which is better for West Virginia
–
dangerous working conditions present when mining underground which
employ a
high number of people in good paying jobs at the literal expense of
their life
– or surface mining which is also highly dangerous but doesn’t employ
many
people as one seven-story dragline took the job of hundreds of miners,
hence
not showing up statistically as ‘dangerous’ and resulting in killing
people
throughout the entire region by contaminating and filling in
watersheds? Yikes!
No matter how we look at it, these stakes are too high and the
questions
nuanced. We do not live in an either/or
world – this is a both/and world
where it is not possible to separate the health of miners with the
health of
nearby communities – we are interconnected.


            We are in relation so intimately
through the air we all breathe and water we all drink and quality of
communities we seek which relate to livelihood and environment and so
many
factors that it will come to no surprise to you that we are all
grieving with
this mine explosion. 

            Tragedies have a way of helping us
pause and come together in the moment. So why is it, given all of the
hazards
and health impacts and disaster wrought by this mono-industry that most
of the
time issues of coal and how coal is mined and the impact on the
environment and
our health has done the opposite and divided communities so deeply that
many of
my organizing friends are laying low right now? I can not answer the
question
for everyone, but I have a guess that it is precisely because of the
false
dichotomy between jobs and health, livelihood and mountains. 


            There have been moments of unity
through this tragedy, and I am grateful the national media is beginning
to
scrutinize Don Blankenship and the practices of Massey Energy as they
definitely need to be held accountable for all
of the environmental and safety breaches they caused. However, I
fear for
this region. I fear that the aftermath will not be a united front
against greed
and corporate monopoly, but a civil war dividing communities further as
the EPA
decision is more understood, permits are blocked and the industry is
forced to
change. 

            I told the class that my favorite
part of the Blankenship/Kennedy debate was when their University
President Dr.
Welch began moderating the event by expressing his goal of getting both
men
beyond their entrenched views into real dialogue. It didn’t happen
then, and it
wasn’t really a situation which fostered dialogue, but there is so much
local
knowledge and potential for true change in this region that I lift up
the
possibility of true dialogue because we need a culture of civility here
and
that comes when we learn to see each other past our opinions and ask
open
questions about the past and future that do not rely on a false
dichotomy.


            I spent the past few years in
Boulder, before I moved here, working in the field of Restorative
Justice facilitating
dialogue in circles between people impacted by crime and violence –
offenders,
victims, families, community members. I sat in enough circles to know
for
certain that a lot can happen when people are able to sit down together
– but
the premise of that work is voluntary participation in doing the big
work of
being open to opinions and stories different from your own. Can we have
big
listening circles in the Coal 
 River Valley 
to help process this
tragedy? I can help train local people to facilitate… Any takers? 

            I look forward to the day when members
of the impacted communities of Appalachia ’s
coalfields,
the political decision makers, coal industry representatives,
environmentalists
and national stakeholders in the precious Appalachian Mountain range
sit down
voluntarily. I know that these conversations have begun in pockets, so
I hope
the net widens ever more. I like to imagine a culture of civility and
dialogue
– where Appalachians can lead the country in
its new
energy future by developing locally sustainable jobs that will benefit
the
country as much as coal has. Sound good? I know that dialogue can be
facilitated in communities to harvest the vast wealth of local
intelligence and
creativity about how to revive, restore and heal the coalfields of Appalachia 
– the question is – will it? Or will communities continue to fight each
other
while men like Don Blankenship take home over $17,000,000 a year? 

            I pray for my new friends and
neighbors as we go through this tragedy to stay open to the power of
accountability over retribution, and support for all in this time of
grief. I ask for help from all of you to help us
keep Massey Energy accountable for its role in this disaster and the
destruction of communities and watersheds throughout the region. And I
send
gratitude to all of you who have taken the time to think about the big
picture
of these issues and moreover to the many of you that have helped make
it
possible for me to live here through your financial and emotional
support. May
we all find new possibilities to open up to gratitude and compassion
these many
days.


   


In love and solidarity,


Sarah Vekasi, M.Div.


   


www.ecochaplaincy.net


[email protected]


 PO Box 765 , Ansted ,
 WV 25812 


   
 



      
_______________________________________________
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visit:  http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/

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