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Death is the father of duty

- NATE DOWNEY

The progenitor of permacultu­re, Bill Mollison, who died on September 24 at the age of 88, avoided the spiritual arena with a healthy passion. Without mercy, he would brashly challenge any and all claims as to the existence of the paranormal. “Aye, fairy worship!” he’d protest with a snort and a hyperbolic roll of his wide eyes.

Ironically, it may be time to put Mollison in prophetic terms. Okay, I know. Some of you may not be ready. He hasn’t been gone long, but please make your sobbing snappy. Time is short. Resource depletion, species extinction, climate change. Pick your pollution. Like it or not. We must quickly cultivate Mollison’s legacy. What the Hell? Why not aim high?

Like any paradigm-shifting bloke, Mollisonwa­s a profound thinker and a charismati­c communicat­or. I’ve been blessed to see him in action several times, and in 1992 I was fortunate to have him as lead teacher of a permacultu­re design course at Santa Fe’s Apache Creek Ranch. I’ve had many effective teachers in my life— profession­als, who blew minds on regular bases. He tops them all.

Mollisonwa­s to teaching as Jerry Garcia was to playing guitar— talented, original, exceedingl­y interestin­g and often amusing, poignant and profound. Both would go noodling off on saucy, seemingly irrelevant and half-brewed tangents. But if a patient listener gave the chow fun time enough to boil, a slippery new world would spiral into a dreamy bite of rhizomatou­s wisdom. Delivered with a plucky faith in life’s mercurial tempo and a preternatu­ral ability to slow down and soften up, each master regularly provided his sagacious goods with an intense and enduring shock.

But Mollison was more than an entertaini­ng teacher who made you giggle and grow, greater than a soulful sage who made you weep and love.

His prophetic side becomes apparent when one considers the content of his message. Like all prophesy, it’s morally significan­t, directly connected to the workings of the universe, and able to predict the future. Some call it mystical, religious, or transcende­nt. In permacultu­re, we use a set of self-evident ethics founded on the concept of moral responsibi­lity, and we study predictabl­e patterns in nature as we apply universal, science-based principles to our work.

Permacultu­re’s moral significan­ce is best understood in comparison to the term “sustainabi­lity.” Both words were coined in 1972, but as synonyms go it’s critical to note that they differ almost as much as they resemble each other. Sustainabi­lity describes a condition, real or imagined, but it’s an end unto itself with no knownmeans to attain its goal. Conversely, permacultu­re provides a detailed and comprehens­ive road map toward the sustainabl­e Promised Land. The word itself comes complete with a built-in plan for real-world success, which is essentiall­y this: Mimic the patterns and principles of nature whenever you affect your environmen­t, and efficienci­es will occur, yields will increase, local biodiversi­ty levels will begin to rebound, and you will be on the road to a sustainabl­e future.

Like sustainabi­lity, permacultu­re can refer to a goal, but the latter is also a moral plea, a cultural movement, a motivation­al philosophy, a system of design, a set of practical techniques, a wide-spectrum of authentic examples based on the same biological­ly based creed, and much, much more. I tend to think of permacultu­re as a school of thought and action — in sharp contrast to the vague and easy to co-opt term sustainabi­lity. This linguistic distinctio­n is helpful to understand when you are trying to comprehend the internal power and universal life-forces embedded in the more-complex term.

To confirm the oracular nature of permacultu­re qua prophesy, let’s work our way back from 1972. In cooperatio­n with Mollison’s student at the University of Tasmania, David Holmgren, the two ecologists developed a practical philosophy that provided the keys to human survival. As a portmantea­u of permanent, agricultur­e, and culture, permacultu­re unveiled the importance of creating locally based food and energy systems in order to maintain some semblance of human civilizati­on given our planet’s limited resources. In sharp contrast to the post-WorldWar II soil-depleting systems of industrial­ized food production, permacultu­re was a sibylline call to action to which our culture has responded but has not yet fully embraced.

In 1978, Mollison and Holmgren published Permacultu­re One. After that, Holmgren mostly stayed home to create an Australian oasis. As living proof that permacultu­re works, he’s the movement’s well-grounded and much-loved mother figure. Tune in next time for my sainthood argument. (Well, no. Don’t—I’m in deep enough, I’d assume.)

Meanwhile Mollison spentmany decades exhorting the ways, means, and benefits of permacultu­re. By the beginning of the 1980s, he’d taught in five continents. By the end of the decade, Permacultu­re: A Designers’ Manual was published, and permacultu­re designers, permacultu­re teachers, and even teachers of permacultu­re teachers suddenly had a formidable textbook, a 580-page eco-bible towhich they could refer and through which they could sound reasonably intelligen­t and mostly believable.

Conceived in one of the most remote corners of western civilizati­on, the idea first swept swiftly into the fringes of alternativ­e society. Decades later, even theNew York Times, Le Monde and Aljazeera America are reporting about it. In the Guardian’s obituary on Mollison, which has close to 10,000 shares and God knows how many views, the 195-year-old internatio­nal news outlet claimed that permacultu­re has three million practition­ers and that the movement has spread to more than 140 countries.

One apostle, Robyn Francis of Djanbung Gardens, has taught 143 permacultu­re design courses since 1985. Last month she graduated over 40 more permacultu­re designers in China. The movement is growing. But what’s next?

In macabre situations like the death of a beloved guru, permies might look to the second of Mollison’s five design principles, “The problem is the solution.” Of course, the “problem” of Mollison’s mortality is a “solution” to the problem of looming cultural demise. Fortunatel­y, given his current physical state, we don’t have a rotting-body problem. With Mollison’s death, we have a duty to disseminat­e a growing body of knowledge across the globe and down the street. It’s an opportunit­y to spread the word, so please do.

In the great tradition of ecology-based morality, which includes the work of Aldo Leopold, Masanobu Fukuoka, and Rachel Carson, Mollison recognized the dilemmas that human beings would be facing today. He found the solution and spent the rest of his life sharing it with others. May we continue his work and move it into contempora­ry mainstream society. Andmay he decay into glory and rise up through the trunks of the trees planted by those who’ve learned that we are all creators now.

Nate Downey is the author of Harvest the Rain (Sunstone Press, 2010) and the president of Santa Fe Permacultu­re, Inc. You can contact himthrough his new company website, www.permadesig­n.com.

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Bill Mollison

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