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Article
LETTER FROM THE ROAD, 27
ELIAS AMIDON
MAE LAN KHAM COMMUNITY FOREST, SAMOENG, THAILAND
MARCH 3, 2004
INDIGENOUS SURVIVAL
Trying to keep our balance in the back of the pickup
truck as it struggles up the rutted dirt road, Father
Wichai and I shout our conversation. He points to the
yellow flowers on the thick stands of bamboo. "Not a
good sign," he yells. "When the bamboo trees make
flowers that means they're about to die. They only
flower at the end of their lives. The Paganyaw don't
know why so many bamboo are flowering this year."
Father Wichai is a Thai Jesuit priest who's been
president of the Catholic Council for Indigenous
People in Thailand for the past 12 years, and knows
the tribes well.
The truck stops suddenly. In front of us rises a
newly-built gateway about 20 feet high spanning the
road. Built of stout logs it is hung with dozens of
painted boards announcing this is the entry into the
Paganyaw community forest of Mae Lan Kham. The gateway
hadn't been there six weeks ago when we last came up
here.
It looks rather haphazard and festive, the boards
sticking out unevenly on each side, lettered in
homemade Thai script describing how many rai are
designated for various purposes within the community
forest - the conserved areas, the ceremonial forests,
the area for villages, and for paddy rice and upland
rice.
"Do not come here please to hunt, or to fish in the
conserved parts of the Mae Lan River."
"We the Paganyaw (Karen) people of the Mae Lan Kham
community forest protect this forest. Do not start
fires. Come see us if you want to walk here."
Nutt, our driver and our former Masters student in the
Environmental Leadership program at Naropa University,
jumps out of the truck and points at the signs.
"That's from the Declaration!" he shouts, referring to
a project we initiated three years ago that inspired
the Paganyaw to declare their "land ethic" in a
written form. The resulting "Declaration of the Rights
and Responsibilities of Forest ommunities" they
created was presented to Forestry Department officials
and sent to the King in an effort to demonstrate the
Paganyaw's commitment to protecting these headwater
forests. The spirit of the ethic had now found its way
to the signs on this new gateway.
There is a history of racism in Thai society toward
the tribal peoples that judges them to be primitive
despoilers of the forests. This is ironic since the
only forests left in Thailand are where the tribal
peoples live. For a number of years there has been a
succession of official policies and economic
seductions aimed at relocating the Paganyaw and
assimilating them into the cheap labor pool of the
cities.
The gateway across the road also showed the Paganyaw's
realization of the need to designate their own
territory, and the sub-zones within it, particularly
in relation to the increasing expansionist pressures
from the outside world. It is this particular vision -
a vision of protective zoning - that brings us back to
the forest this day.
We arrive at the village of Soblan and walk up a path
to one of the larger stilt houses. About 25 village
leaders have already assembled, curious to continue
our earlier discussions about this vision for cultural
survival. Once the initial respectful greetings are
completed, I start by reminding all of us of the grim
situation facing tribal peoples throughout the world -
the rapid decline of indigenous cultures through loss
of land, language, their own forms of education, and
the spread of the money economy and its enticements.
Pau Luang Joni, the most senior and influential leader
present, listens to my description, and then responds,"Yes, this is happening. We see this. We are losing
the battle to modernization. It is like the story of
the man with children whose wife dies. He remarries,
but his new wife tells him he has to get rid of the
children. We are that man. But even though we are
losing, we still want to fight with our hearts."
His statement is a response not only to the
hopelessness of indigenous peoples, but to our own -
the hopelessness of our generation watching the world
we love be exploited and destroyed by greed on such an
unprecedented scale. "We still want to fight with our
hearts."
I describe the vision to the elders - a vision for the
long term safe-guarding of their culture. It is rather
simple. It involves responding to the flood of
modernization by establishing three zones in their
community lands in which they would designate the
varying degrees of modernization and infrastructure
allowed in each zone, stipulating everything from
roads to types of schools, building materials to
electricity use, forms of agriculture to the specifics
of technological innovations permitted. "Zone A" would
be the most pristine and would have the highest
filter, "Zone C" would be the most permissive and open
to outside influence. The current situation allows
almost no filtering of change - as it is now everyone
living in the community is forced to accept all
changes that show up.
In this vision, each zone also would involve a
specified role of cultural stewardship. For the sake
of example, I gave these roles possible names but
stressed the actual definition of the roles would be
up to them. Zone A could be called "The Zone of the
Guardians" in which, having the least contact with
modernity, those choosing to live here would follow
more traditional Paganyaw ceremonies, beliefs, and
subsistence lifestyle in harmony with the forest and
the spirits of the forest they respect.
Zone B, having road access and more contact with the
outside world, might be called "The Zone of the
Teachers." Having more contact with the outside world
they would teach the young both about Paganyaw ways
and the ways of the modern world.
People choosing to live in Zone C would be more
integrated with the Thai money-based economy, but
would not be simply a poor version of it. Inhabitants
of this zone would also be dedicated to maintaining
Paganyaw culture, but perhaps would take the role of
exploring what new technologies and skills might be
appropriate to Paganyaw culture. In general they would
actively interface with the outside, and in this role
might be called "The Zone of the Friends." Here, for
example, the treks and tourists wanting to experience
Paganyaw life would be welcome and would be
encountered with a spirit of self-respect rather than
weakness or money-hunger.
It would be important that each these roles be
understood and honored for their necessary purpose in
sustaining the culture. In this strategy, the members
of the tribe could freely choose to live in whichever
zone they wished at different times in their lives, as
long as they respected the differences and roles of
each zone.
The elders quickly engaged the subject with spirited
discussion, which for the next three hours largely
centered on the issue of education of the young. Since
the Thai government had made modern education
compulsory, Paganyaw children had no time to learn the
traditional stories, songs, ceremonies, and wisdom of
the forest from their elders. Like any living system
denied the ability to self-generate, the culture was
consequently turning into a relic.
I asked what would prevent the village of Soblan from
starting a pilot project right here. The headman, Pati
Dayei, said, "Yes! We can do it!" His friend, Pati
Muso, from the village of Megapu, said, "Yes, we can,
but the problem still will be finding young people
confident enough to do it. We uncles would be glad to
do this, but we have failed to teach the young people.
I myself learned the songs from the grandmothers - I
had to sing on the spot! It was fun!"
A group of young Paganyaw were asked to speak. Were
they aware of the dangers facing their culture? Yes,
they were worried, they said, but understood little
about the consequences of following either the
traditional ways or the modern ways.
Rabia spoke to them. "One way to understand that," she
said, "is to ask the question: Which culture - Thai
culture or Paganyaw culture - makes you feel most like
a man, or a woman?"
"That's it," Pati Muso said. "If we are going to live
in the Paganyaw way it has to be both fun and
honorable. If it is, then the young people will
follow."
"OK," Pau Luang Joni said, "let's get practical. How
many villages are willing to begin a dialogue about
this vision and the issue of education that goes with
it?" The headmen from the five local villages
expressed interest. A visiting Paganyaw elder
representing an association of 21 villages said he was
impressed by the vision and would discuss the model at
their monthly watershed meeting. Father Wichai offered
his agricultural center outside of Bangkok as a place
for young Paganyaw to see how urban Thais are trying
to re-learn sustainable agriculture, as well as for
them to take "exposure trips" into the city's slums to
witness how Paganyaw have to work and live in the
margins of Thai society when they migrate to Bangkok.
Father Wichai concluded the gathering with the words,"We must remember this struggle is a spiritual
struggle. The answers we carry in our hearts already.
That is where we will find them."
I thought of the blossoming of the bamboo trees we
saw, beautiful flowers dignifying the dying of the
old. And yet seeds were being made, and they would
drift on the wind to take root no one knows where.
NOTE: No permission is necessary to forward or reprint
these letters. For more information about us and our
work visit our website www.boulderinstitute.org . If
you would like to be on our list, you can subscribe on
our website.
Elias Amidon is one of the co-founders and co-leaders
of the Interfaith Solidarity Forest Walks.
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