Are National Parks OneEarth or MultiEarth?
Wednesday, August 10, 2016 at 5:35PM
Lee Van Ham in Ahwahneechee, First Peoples, Thoreau, Yosemite National Park, civilizing, taming, national parks

Henry David Thoreau: Public Domain photo from WikipediaWe will not succeed on our journey into the larger topographies of OneEarth consciousness without increased connections with the Wild. Henry David Thoreau opened others’ eyes to this essential connection when he structured his life to include experiences of wilderness. Far from escapism, his connection with Nature kept fresh his Call to a OneEarth world. Nature often elicited eloquent words from Thoreau as he explained why we humans cannot develop fully within the consciousness of civilization. In his essay Simply Walking,  Thoreau wrote: “I wish to speak a word for Nature, for absolute Freedom and Wildness, as contrasted with a Freedom and Culture merely civil—to regard man as an inhabitant, or a part and parcel of Nature, rather than a member of society.” Such a sentence distinguishes how MultiEarth civilization seeks civil “members of society” over the “absolute Freedom and Wildness” of OneEarth living. In the same essay, and in another strong claim for the priceless value of the Wild, Thoreau wrote, “In Wildness is the preservation of the world.” Wildness, far more than civilized prowess, has the capacity to reverse climate change and keep Earth livable. 

Our national and state parks can arouse and animate these wild energies that Thoreau recognized we need for preservation, but only to a degree. Despite all there is to love about them, the parks also reinforce a chronic pathology of the MultiEarth paradigm: they separate humans from other species. 

I came to understand this about our national parks after Juanita and I delighted in watching the six-episode PBS special, “The National Parks: America’s Best Idea,” produced by documentarian Ken Burns and collaborator Dayton Duncan. It’s a rhapsody of Nature and urges viewers to a conscious recognition of the sacred in the Wild. It praises the embodiment of democracy in Nature. But it falls significantly short of the OneEarth paradigm’s understanding of our full relationship with Nature. I had missed this shortcoming until Scott Klinger, contributor to this book’s Chapter Seven, sent me an eye-opening email that included these words:

The national parks are a creation of the MultiEarth worldview. The MultiEarthers have divided the world into two pieces—the one to rape and pillage, and the other to maintain as pristine as possible. In the case of the national parks, “pristine” means without permanent human habitation. Most Indigenous Peoples I know have as negative a feeling about the parks as we white folks have a positive feeling for them. Not only were they displaced from the land which became the parks, but the U.S. government also turned the spaces sterile—banning the human species. There are not many places on earth where wilderness exists without human beings in it. Wilderness is not a place where humans don’t live; wilderness is a place where humans live in harmony with the earth. 

First Peoples acted consistent with their worldview of shared relationship with Nature in 2014, when Yosemite National Park celebrated the 150th year since the signing of the Yosemite Grant Act, the precursor to its becoming a national park. Les James (Ahwahneechee), 79, and a tribal elder, said a blessing at an official ceremony in the Mariposa grove of sequoias, but he wasn’t celebrating. He had worked in the park most of his life, being among those determined to keep a First Peoples’ presence on that sacred land. But he also spoke candidly to the Sacramento Bee newspaper: “The changes, the destruction, that’s what I don’t like about it. You destroyed something that we preserved for thousands of years. In 150 years, you’ve ruined it.”

Helen Coats (Ahwahneechee) is descended from the First Peoples who were living in Yosemite Valley the day the U.S. Mariposa Battalion drove them out and burned their village. She now lives along Highway 140, just outside the park, and feels sad as she sees busloads of tourists heading into the park every day. Words from her wounded heart tell us bluntly: “They are just trampling my home to death.” Can the pain of MultiEarth’s approach to the Wild, or the wounds it inflicts, be stated any more poignantly? 

The Price of Taming the Wild: Our Wound of Disconnection

Les James and Helen Coats feel the pain of disconnection all the more keenly because they know how different interconnection feels. Their OneEarth traditions make them conscious of the wound whereas MultiEarth thinking has repressed the wound’s pain into the unconscious world. From there it contributes to MultiEarth actions that cut Earth up into parts. Some parts are to be kept wild, meaning, free of human residences and certain other human activities. The rest is for human ownership, extraction of resources for gain, and pushing out whatever wildlife interferes with human purposes. But in all the parts under MultiEarth management, the pain from the wound of disconnection continues. 

(Excerpt from my book, From Egos to Eden, to be released February 6, 2017)
Article originally appeared on OneEarth sustainability amid climate change (http://www.theoneearthproject.org/).
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