By Jane Brunette
[Editor: We welcome author Jane Brunette, a teacher of Buddhism and Indigenous spirituality, to Engage!. Please visit her site at http://flamingseed.com]
HOW DOES SPIRITUAL PRACTICE leave the meditation cushion and truly enter our lives as a collective? The whole point of sitting — listening inside, watching and feeling — is to build a container of awareness that allows us to distinguish between the conditioned wants and fears of ego and the deeper movements of intuition that come from the heart and lead to right action. For me, it led me out of my comfort zone, into a remote Borneo forest inhabited by an indigenous tribe.
A Borneo tribe is losing their forest. What would love do?
I have long lived with a haunted sense of exile and displacement that I attribute to my own ancestral loss of forest. My maternal grandmother was a member of the Menominee Tribe in central Wisconsin, who lost all but a small portion of their forest and then had their culture devastated by tactics meant to assimilate them. My grandmother was one casualty, taken from her family at age 10 and put in a compulsory boarding school where the children were brutally punished for speaking Menominee. My paternal grandmother’s family immigrated to the US from a tiny village in Alsace, Germany, fleeing war and the economic difficulties that resulted when their forest was taken from them in a similar vein to the Menominee and the Dayak. Undoubtedly, my visceral pain over the loss of forest and land-based culture is connected to these ancestral traumas. After the conference, I immediately wrote Ruwi a heartfelt email. I was hungry to find some way to offer support not just to the Dayak tribe as they lost their forest, but to him as well. I felt such profound gratitude for his efforts on behalf of the forest and its guardians, and it troubled me to sense the deep sadness in him over what he saw as a failure. Together I thought we could find a way to turn this terrible situation into a life-affirming story rather than just another distant, depressing victim story. How we would do that, I had no idea, but I wanted to try. We first met face-to-face when he ducked out of a retreat for environmentalists that he was attending to meet me outside of a temple in Bali. We sat on a platform in a leafy area to talk, and our conversation was urgent, full of hope. At one point, our wet eyes met in profound recognition and it was clear that we were feeling the same deep heartbreak. Then he told me that the Dayak Benuaq tribe was in the process of deciding whether to give up on their last bit of ancestral forest and move. I felt it as a pain in my chest. I couldn’t stand that they would be alone with that terrible choice. It had to be shared – to be witnessed. However small this would be in the face of this loss, I wanted them to know that someone cared. “Let’s go to Borneo,” I blurted out, and he immediately agreed.
We sat on benches around the wooden table in the kitchen of Asuy’s long house and with Ruwi translating, I learned about the vow ceremony that the elders said was the last real hope for the forest, where the shaky faith of the tribe could be renewed and balance restored by the ancestors. The 64-day ceremony would invite over 1000 people from five villages, plus companies and government officials, to address disputes and iniquities, reconnecting all involved to their purpose of caring for the health of the forest and people. At stake was not just the life of the Dayak people and their homeland, but the balance of life on earth: The rainforest has been called the lungs of the planet and here was a fast-spreading tuberculosis of great concern to all of us – not just in Indonesia, but everywhere. “What happens to Muara Tae happens to the world,” Asuy said. I felt a chill at the truth of this statement, and it was clear to all of us that we had to somehow invite the world to join the ceremony, as traditionally, all concerned needed to be invited. While those of us living in the industrial world may not know anything of Muara Tae or other villages like it, we are nevertheless intimately connected to them. The trees that are fast being clearcut supply our oxygen, as the rainforest of Indonesia is the earth’s Eastern lung, second only in size to the Amazon. Our supply of packaged cookies, cleaning products and organic microwave popcorn comes from the palm oil now growing where the forest used to be. And our desire for the latest model smartphone or laptop requires ever more precious metals, and so companies scrambling for new sources of gold want to dig right under Muara Tae village to find it.
And so on behalf of the Dyak Benuaq tribe, Ruwi, Asuy, Layain and I invite you to join us in this deep, cross-paradigm inquiry by making a donation of any size – $1 will do it – and enter this circle of allies built by connecting heart-to-heart in friendship and shared purpose. You’ll be sent regular updates from Borneo for the duration of the ceremony, invited into virtual ceremonial space online, supported to create your own experiments in ceremony and inquiry, and welcomed to ask questions of the tribal leaders, shamans and elders as the ceremony progresses. The paradigm we live in – the one that makes bulldozers and mines – right now seems opposed to the indigenous way, but it doesn’t have to be. A creative inquiry into integrating the best of these world views holds great promise for the future of our forests and all of us beings who depend on them. __________________________________ |




Reblogged this on Totally Inspired Mind… and commented:
I would love to see human beings understand one day that we are not only interconnected beings but also connected to the universe, which we need to respect and hold sacred. This touched my heart and I wish super companies like Monsanto would understand that our food is sacred and devising it in a test tube or creating hybrids that grow faster and are less resistant to disease, don’t prevent disease in human beings, but show in testing that they can be harmful to us.
Paulette Le Pore Motzko