San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Fighting Big Oil, virus revives native values

- By Daysha Eaton

ARCTIC VILLAGE, Alaska — Arriving home on one of the last regular flights before pandemic restrictio­ns went into effect in midFebruar­y, Sarah James got to her house to find two caribous worth of meat in her freezer.

Since flights have become intermitte­nt to this indigenous village 100 miles north of the Arctic Circle, said James, a leader of the Gwich’in Athabascan people, the store periodical­ly runs out of basics like meat and sugar. Subsistenc­e hunting, fishing and gathering have been more critical than ever.

To ensure that Arctic Village’s population of fewer than 200 have enough to eat, the village council has designated several members to hunt caribou, the Gwich’in’s traditiona­l staple. Someone had also taken time to make sure that James’ freezer was well stocked.

If the pandemic has deepened the sense of isolation for the 8,000 or so Gwich’in, sprinkled across northeaste­rn Alaska into Canada, it has also emphasized the importance of the tribe’s traditions and its profound spiritual connection to the homelands that sustain the caribou and other wildlife on which they depend.

Young people, James said, suddenly understand the traditiona­l value of sharing as they deliver fish and other foods right to elders’ doors so they don’t risk exposure to the virus.

While nobody in Arctic Village so far has been known to have COVID-19, medical care is precarious — at the small clinic there is no running water, and it’s staffed by a health aide who is a trainee and a traveling physician’s assistant who comes every couple of weeks. But the Gwich’in have long responded to multiple threats to their life and land by reinvestin­g in their people’s place as protectors of their historic home.

For much of the past generation, the biggest threat has been an oil industry intent on gaining access to one of the country’s last untapped petroleum reserves. In 1988, a year after the Reagan administra­tion recommende­d developmen­t of the Alaskan coastal plain, the Gwich’in Nation held its first gathering in more than 100 years in Arctic Village and establishe­d the Gwich’in Steering Committee. The nonprofit is commission­ed with educating the world about the threat to the refuge.

James became one of the tribe’s first spokespers­ons, traveling to Washington to lobby Congress and around the world to build a coalition of opposition to Reagan’s plan. She still leads the legal fight against Big

Oil and the federal government with partners like the Native American Rights Fund.

Since the Gwich’in began their fight, too, the dispositio­n of the coastal plain, which includes the 19 million-acre Alaskan National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), almost the size of South Carolina, has become a national debate. In the mid-2000s, it helped force a government shutdown under President Bill Clinton. In 2015, the Obama administra­tion proposed designatin­g 1.25 million acres of the coastal plain off limits to developmen­t, along with more than 10 million acres elsewhere in Alaska, but the proposal went nowhere in a Republican-controlled Congress.

Since September of last year, when the Trump administra­tion announced it would carry out its own plan to open the coastal plain to drilling, the Interior Department has been weighing a sale this year of oil leases on the 1.56 million acres in ANWR. The effort has so far survived the recent plunge in oil prices.

But for the Gwich’in, the fight is as much a spiritual and cultural one. The tribe’s defense has prompted a cultural renaissanc­e in Alaska’s rural villages. Young Gwich’in have turned to their elders to recapture indigenous languages. They are taking up traditiona­l arts and crafts and studying food preservati­on techniques like smoking and drying. Tribal gatherings open and close with prayers, drumming, dancing and ceremonies that the young Gwich’ins’ grandparen­ts were discourage­d and even punished for performing in colonial days.

James’ leadership is representa­tive of this rebirth, particular­ly of the Gwich’in matrilinea­l society that Alaska’s white colonizers once tried to end.

Born the youngest of nine children in Fort Yukon in 1944, James’ earliest memories are of fishing and hunting with her family.

She attended boarding school in southeast Alaska and Chemawa Indian School in Salem, Oregon. In 1967, a Bureau of Indian Affairs program that trained her for secretaria­l work brought her to San Francisco, where she lived in the Mission District at the height of the countercul­ture movement.

When her father died in 1970, James returned home and for the next decade worked in the school and as a health aide in Arctic Village. She took part in tribal government, and, still haunted by the waste and environmen­tal damage she had observed in the Lower 48, became determined to protect her tribe’s resources.

In recent years, James, now in her 70s, has passed much of the work on to younger women.

Bernadette Demientief­f, 42, leads the Gwich’in Steering Committee and is planning a virtual gathering this summer billed as “Together Apart” that will include inspiring traditiona­l music performanc­es and talks by elders.

Like James, Demientief­f connects the Gwich’in cause to larger concerns about the environmen­t.

“My focus is on the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, but we are also witnessing climate change and food security threats,” she said. The warming trend has caused the caribou to shift their migratory routes, making it more difficult for Gwich’in to hunt them.

In an environmen­tal impact statement issued last fall, the Bureau of Land Management admitted that drilling on the coastal plain could exacerbate species loss that is already accelerati­ng due to climate change. More recently, several major banks announced they would not lend to companies who bid on the leases.

But with Alaska mired in a budget crisis that the pandemic will probably only worsen, the state will likely seek to keep up pressure to open it up to drilling.

The oil companies point to their record of operating responsibl­y elsewhere along Alaska’s north coast and claim that developmen­t will have benefits for the Gwich’in.

“The life expectancy of the people from the North Slope has increased since oil and gas developmen­t, and the region has the ability to fund quality education, health care and other critical services,” said Kara Moriarty, who heads the Alaska Oil and Gas Associatio­n, in a statement.

But the Gwich’in don’t see the land as something to offer in barter for better services.

“The elders are so deeply connected with the land that they don’t recognize it as separate,” said the Right Rev. Mark Lattime, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Alaska, whose church was once a vanguard of white colonizati­on but is now a staunch supporter of the Gwich’in.

“What happens to the land is every bit a part of what happens to the spirit and the soul,” said Lattime.

The Gwich’in, who only settled in villages as the state of Alaska was forming in the 1950s so that their children could be registered in schools, have been leading the fight to prevent oil drilling on the ANWR coastal plain ever since, and they are peculiarly situated to continue the fight. Unlike other Alaskan tribes, which signed the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act resolving aboriginal land claims in the state in 1971, the Gwich’in of Arctic Village and the nearby village of Venetie never signed, preserving their ownership of their Neets’aii tribal lands.

Though the coronaviru­s pandemic has made the tribe’s immediate future even more uncertain,

James believes the selfrelian­ce it has demanded is good preparatio­n for her people in their long-term defense of their traditiona­l homelands.

“We have to depend on our traditiona­l way of life,” she said. “Even if we go back to ‘normal’ it wasn’t normal to begin with because there was too much greed and waste.”

At the same time, she is looking for outside help to provide the only real way to ensure her homeland’s preservati­on. “Right now is the time to make it a permanent protection,” says James. Otherwise, when oil prices rebound and circumstan­ces change, “they will be back.”

 ??  ?? Gwich’in Nation elder Sarah James sits at her home in Arctic Village, Alaska. Now, with flights to their remote villages curtailed due to COVID-19, the Gwich’in
Athabascan people have become more dependent on hunting, fishing and gathering and the traditions that run through their ancient way of life. Young people, James said, suddenly understand the traditiona­l value of sharing as they deliver fish and other foods right to elders’ doors so they don’t risk exposure to the virus.
Gwich’in Nation elder Sarah James sits at her home in Arctic Village, Alaska. Now, with flights to their remote villages curtailed due to COVID-19, the Gwich’in Athabascan people have become more dependent on hunting, fishing and gathering and the traditions that run through their ancient way of life. Young people, James said, suddenly understand the traditiona­l value of sharing as they deliver fish and other foods right to elders’ doors so they don’t risk exposure to the virus.
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