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Robert Koehler

Robert Koehler

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The Sacred and the Dead

Posted: 04/28/11 09:41 PM ET

How do values enter politics?

The Bolivian national legislature, pressured by a movement of indigenous people and small farmers, may be about to birth a stunning global precedent in the creation of an environmentally sane future: establishing legal rights for Mother Earth.

On the one hand, huh? How can we reduce nature itself -- the entirety of the universe beyond humanity's small outpost of self-importance -- to an entity that requires bureaucratic recognition? On the other hand, Mother Earth -- Pachamama, in indigenous Andean parlance -- is humanity's vulnerable context, without which, though the universe will go on, we will not. As Bron Taylor, author of Dark Green Religion: Nature, Spirituality and the Planetary Future, put it: "Ecologically maladaptive cultural systems... eventually kill their hosts."

The Bolivian legislation, in essence, establishes a legal right for our own future. As such, it is a stunning juncture of two worlds: the modern world of science, technology, geopolitics, corporate dominance, despoliation and war; and the indigenous world, under assault for the last 500 years, of connection to nature and reverent respect for the circle of life.

These are not worlds that are going to meet seamlessly, but if they don't meet -- if the latter is simply chewed up by Western growth and dominance, sacrificed along with the rainforest on the altar of the Big Mac and unlimited corporate growth -- we will have lost our chance, I fear, to pull out of our downward ecological spiral. Without reclaiming the indigenous wisdom we have abandoned, we will have no way to limit our own resource-devouring, cancer-like economic growth.

What strikes me, therefore, as most remarkable about the Bolivian legislation is that it is steeped not just in the clarion warnings of environmental science but also in what can only be called a sense of sacredness and reverence for the planet. Such a sense begins with the term "Mother Earth," vibrantly discordant in the context of legislation, which we expect to be delivered to us in the dead prose of legalese.

"Mother Earth," the Bolivian bill declares, as reported by Nick Buxton in a recent issue Yes! Magazine, "is a living, dynamic system made up of the undivided community of all living beings, who are all interconnected, interdependent and complementary, sharing a common destiny."

The legislation, Buxton writes, grants Mother Earth "the rights to life and regeneration, biodiversity, water, clean air, balance and restoration. Bolivia's law mandates a fundamental ecological reorientation of Bolivia's economy and society, requiring all existing and future laws to adapt to the Mother Earth law and accept the ecological limits set by nature."

He goes on to note that the legislation would require national policy to be "guided by Sumaj Kawsay," an indigenous concept meaning "living in harmony with nature and people... rather than the current focus on producing more goods and stimulating consumption."

The law's specific requirements, Buxton writes, include: a transition from non-renewable to renewable energy; the regulation and reduction of greenhouse gas emissions; research and investment of resources in energy efficiency, ecological practices and organic agriculture; and the development of new economic indicators that would assess the environmental impact of economic activities. Under the law, companies and individuals would be held accountable for any environmental contamination they cause and be required to repair the damage.

Not surprisingly, the country's mining and large-scale agricultural industries have little enthusiasm for this legislation, which would, they fear, threaten their sacred profits. Their allies in the government, Buxton writes, would like to ensure that the law has no real power behind it and remains "nothing more than a visionary but ultimately meaningless statement."

Beyond places such as Bolivia and Ecuador -- which two years ago incorporated the rights of nature into its new constitution -- and other Third and Fourth World nations, indigenous people have little or no political power and their way of life and the consciousness behind it are part of natural history museums, not present-day reality. The "sacredness" of Mother Earth is not something that would be taken seriously, by which I mean, entertained politically. It would be a joke.

In the world in which most of us are used to, sacredness is a relic of antiquity, and nature itself is hardly more than a theme park, protected in specially designated locales ($12 individual admission), but otherwise up for grabs. The planet that sustains us may be "pretty" (in spots) but is hardly a living organism. Such consciousness -- that the universe is inert, that our will is all that matters -- is no less a religion than the belief that Mother Earth is sacred, but it's unacknowledged as such by its proponents.

I repeat the words of the Bolivian legislation: "Mother Earth is a living, dynamic system made up of the undivided community of all living beings, who are all interconnected, interdependent and complementary, sharing a common destiny."

Can we rebuild the world on such a foundation?

- - -
Robert Koehler is an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist, contributor to One World, Many Peaces and nationally syndicated writer. His new book, Courage Grows Strong at the Wound (Xenos Press) is now available. Contact him at koehlercw@gmail.com or visit his website at commonwonders.com.

© 2011 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 
How do values enter politics? The Bolivian national legislature, pressured by a movement of indigenous people and small farmers, may be about to birth a stunning global precedent in the creation of a...
How do values enter politics? The Bolivian national legislature, pressured by a movement of indigenous people and small farmers, may be about to birth a stunning global precedent in the creation of a...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aligatorhardt
Cut on the bias
06:50 PM on 05/02/2011
I am constantly impressed with Evo Morales and his philosophy. The great wisdom of indigenous populations and their reverence for all life is the essence of truth. Most of the people lived with very low impact. Their responsibility to their descendants is unmatched by western societies. Yes the Capitalists make fun of human virtues and consider empathy a weakness. It is their own inadequacies that they fear.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
08:19 PM on 05/01/2011
Very glad to see this on page one on Huff Post.  Thumbs up.  Do you think it's an accident such enlightened legislation appears in Bolivia, which has a Native American President?  No accident.
03:21 AM on 05/01/2011
After the global warming scam jumping this shark will hopefully put an end to this ridiculously absurd and dangerous movement.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aligatorhardt
Cut on the bias
06:52 PM on 05/02/2011
And what do you offer that is superior?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:48 PM on 04/30/2011
If we don't follow the path that equates the health of the biosphere with our own, our species will make the planet fundamentally uninhabitable within the next fifty years. I'm not sure why some think caring for the Earth means we have to go back to walking on all fours, except that they cherish and glorify violence, like our anonymous friends kwyang and banana republican. Violence, and insatiability, as defining principles.

www.offthegridmpls.blogspot.com
06:44 PM on 04/29/2011
Yeah, it's still just plants and dirt. No matter how hard you hug it, it won't hug you back. We're not going to eat the biosphere bare and burn out the atmosphere. The Earth has survived meteors, supervolcanos, and multiple Ice Ages. It'll be fine without us abandoning all our technology to embrace a life expectancy of thirty and an infant mortality rate of 75% again.

Progress is beautiful. Life in a state of nature is nasty, brutish, and short. You can go back to Mother Earth if you like, I'll be waving goodbye from my well lit, air conditioned house while sipping some clean drinking water thanks to indoor plumbing. Feel free to disagree using your computers powered by electricity generated mostly with fossil fuels.
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banana republican
Next in line for crumbs from the King's Table
08:28 PM on 04/29/2011
I'd be happy to join you for an evening. Is there room for me to park my SUV?
09:14 PM on 04/29/2011
I will roll out the clubbed baby seal fur carpet and use ivory plates to serve you my specialty dish: panda cordon bleu with a side of veal (made from only the most adorable little cows). If I can find time in my busy schedule of hunting wolves from helicopters using special bullets tipped with the finest endangered African rhino horn, that is. You understand.
07:21 PM on 04/30/2011
Didn't get that anyone wanted to return to the Bronze Age. The article talks about renewable energy and protecting the environment on which all of our lives depend.

I agree that none of us want to go back to the pre-science and technology world. But does science and technology dictate that we destroy the very means of our own sustenance? Surely that isn't an either/or proposition.
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Deep Thinking Man
Always Remember, A Wet Bird Never Flies At Night !
04:15 PM on 04/29/2011
i respect Mother Earth !!!!!...yes, i said MOTHER Earth !!!!!...if it weren't for Her...we wouldn't be here as a civilazation !!!!!...She continually gives us our needs...but what have we done to respect HER...we have repeatedly and continually raped her !!!!!...the more She gives...the MORE we TAKE !!!!!

I APPLAUD Bolivia for what they are doing, and yes, we can do the same thing !!!!!...Mother Earth has finally had enough of our exploitation and She is trying to re-vitalize herself with all of the storms, valcanos and ther weather-related activities !!!!!...i am Indian, and i applaud Her as well !!!!!
07:32 PM on 05/01/2011
I totally agree with you!!
Way to go Bolivia!!
Curious as to which countries will legislate similar laws for the planet we inhabit.
Clock is ticking, hope they move quickly.
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Deep Thinking Man
Always Remember, A Wet Bird Never Flies At Night !
09:00 PM on 05/01/2011
thrift,
you have just been...fanned
03:29 PM on 04/29/2011
"the indigenous world, under assault for the last 500 years" - try the last 6000 years. All of civilization has swept it's indigenous roots under the rug, calling their ancestors barbarians. The above quote illustrates this. The author doesn't even acknowledge indigenosity before the new world.Have we really progressed? Or are we just more comfortable in trashing our home?
03:05 PM on 04/29/2011
This concept is stunning, in its stupidity. "Nature" is not a sentient, or even a defined being. It is perfectly acceptable to argue environmentalism on any number of rational bases. This is not one of them.
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03:55 PM on 04/29/2011
Your post is stunning in its error. Are "sentient" creatures the only one's that are entitled to protections? I saw no claim of sentience for the planet as a whole; why did you go there?
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Bron Taylor
02:04 PM on 04/29/2011
For an earlier Huffington Post article that discussed this law see 'It's International Mother Earth Day, Ready or Not' at http://goo.gl/9aLIF
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Deep Thinking Man
Always Remember, A Wet Bird Never Flies At Night !
01:55 PM on 04/30/2011
Bron,
thanks for posting this link !!!!!...fanned !!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yvetter
10:56 PM on 04/29/2011
~joining and two thumbs up.
AlPal3
Had Enough? Vote Democratic
10:45 PM on 04/28/2011
They deserve a Nobel Prize.