Article courtesy of FOCUS On Victoria

Photo: Pacheedaht leader Kati George-Jim invites you to stand by her and the trees at Ada-Itsx.

With gratitude for “Woodstock” by Joni Mitchell

I came upon a child of God, he was walking along the road
And I asked him, “Where are you going?”, and this he told me
I’m going on down to Fairy Creek, I’m gonna try and save some trees
I’m gonna camp out on the land, I’m gonna try and get my soul free

Christoph called from Vancouver because he wants to bring some friends up to (Ada-Itsx) Fairy Creek. Could I give him the lay of the land? 

“How can I contribute? What should I bring?” 

He likes to cook warm meals in the woods, so I suggested he pack his cooking gear, and hike a few hours past the headwaters, through 2,000 year old yellow cedars to Ridge Camp, which blocks the logging road from punching into Fairy Creek watershed. 

If our Old Growth is protected, what’s the road for? Why haven’t the RCMP been deferred? 

37 SWAT team commandoes broke into Ridge Camp at 5:30 am yesterday, using diamond saws to cut chains, and a backhoe to dig forest defenders out of concrete and rebar reinforced “sleeping dragons”. Imagine a backhoe blade smacking the earth 3 inches from your face! 

Yet every night, more defenders slip out from the forest and chain themselves back in. 

They’re living on gorp and granola bars, so I suggested if Chris made them a warm, savoury stew, it would go down very well! His cookware and skills will be appreciated, but he could show up empty handed. 

The only thing you need to bring to Fairy Creek is your presence. We are stardust, we are golden, and we’ve got to get ourselves back to the garden 

The Pacheedaht Council, by the way, encourages peaceful protest outside the injunction zone of 50 metres from active logging. The Council’s statement was required to fulfil their obligations under a colonial “hush money” contract they had to sign to at least get $300,000 for the destruction of their ancestral forest. 

That’s all they’ll receive from the roughly $400,000,000 street value of TFL 46. A bag of beads and a keg of whiskey all over again.

Meanwhile, at Ada-itsx, people are building true reconciliation with their bare hands, and open hearts, inspired by the leadership of Pacheedahts Kati George-Jim, Granny Rose, and elder Bill Jones. Bill was the first to invite us to come up to the woods.

I love Bill. In my life, he has become my father, and my grandfather. He is a quiet man, but people ask him to talk, because he comes out with wisdom like this: 

“You don’t go up to the forest to cut it down, you go up to ask the Great Mother what she wants you to do.” 

“Camping on the land” is back on. And getting our souls free. 

When can I walk beside you?, I have come here to lose the smog,
and I feel to be a cog in something turning
Well maybe it is just the time of year, or maybe it’s the time of man
I don’t know who I am, but you know life is for learning 

“Walking beside each other” is my favourite part of Fairy Creek. Eyes sparkle. Stories tumble out. Friendships are made and sealed in a moment. 

You don’t need to come to Fairy Creek to spend a week in a tree like Panda and Hummingbird, who were inspired by Julia Butterfly Hill, who sat for two years in a California Redwood. 

Just come to Fairy Creek Blockade HQ, now on Google Maps, at Pacific Marine Road and Granite Main, near Port Renfrew, and it will all start for you. 

Yesterday I met Toucan and her family. Toucan is her “camp name”. Toucan’s sister couldn’t think of another rainforest bird, so she called herself “One-Can”. That, of course, left Mom with “Three-Can”. This lovely family have flocked to Fairy Creek, like planetary T-cells, to help heal a wound. 

We are stardust, we are golden, and we’ve got to get ourselves back to the garden 

They were mulling over getting arrested. I set them at ease. The RCMP will inform  you if you are breaking a law, and give you the opportunity to step back. They actually don’t want to arrest people, because if 1,000 people go to jail, the trees win. 

The only place you risk arrest is within 50 metres of active logging, or machinery, which would place you in violation of Justice Verhoeven’s injunction. 

And that’s a choice you can make when you get here. You don’t need to get arrested to stand with the forest defenders and trees. “Cookie” is a beautiful soul in her 70’s, who came to camp for three days. She says “I like feeding people”. That was 5 months ago.

Toucan was feeling pretty courageous about the whole arrest thing. “I’m nine years old, what can they do to me?” No one knows yet, but I think we’re about to find out! One-Can, at 14, was a little more cautious. Could she get her first job with a criminal record? 

Filmmaker “Egg” reminded her that committing civil disobedience is a civil offence, not criminal, and suggested “it will look good on your resume for Harvard”. 

“The RCMP might tack on a criminal “public mischief” charge, but Justice Verhoeven will dismiss that as mischievous. Always practice non-violence. Satyagraha is “holding firmly to the power of truth”. If you get in a situation, just think, what would Gandhi do? You’ll be fine.” 

Three-Can was quietly mulling all this over in her own way. I think she was wondering why her government would send an RCMP SWAT team to chuck her children in jail for hugging a tree. 

The situation is pretty weird! A lot to think about. 

And that, to me, is the gift waiting for us at Fairy Creek– the soul searching. What is our relationship with our planet? What is our relationship with our government? How can we help? What am I ready to do, today? 

As we think these thoughts, and make our choices, we change inside. In fact, we start to become the change that we want to see. And we are not alone! 

By the time we got to Woodstock, we were half a million strong
And everywhere there was song and celebration
And I dreamed I saw the bombers, riding shotgun in the sky
And they were turning into butterflies, above our nation 

Human history lurches forward in fits and starts, as good ideas percolate up into people’s consciousness. Bruce Cockburn lamented “Why does history take such a long long time?” 

But when a threshold number of us catch fire, change just suddenly happens overnight, like bamboo shooting up 90 feet in five weeks, after germinating underground for five years.

Today, we are ready. At Fairy Creek, Ada-itsx, the dam is breaking. The arrow is leaving the bow. 

Fairy Creek is no longer just a watershed of Old Growth trees, it is our moment to build reconciliation between forests, oceans, the clouds that join them, First Nations, their land, and all the people from around the world who have settled here.

Bill Jones says “when you go to nature, let her enter you”. At Fairy Creek, we’re settling into the land, and she into us. 

The most difficult reconciliation is that with our government. Our democracy has lost its way, and we are taking it by the hand and leading it back to wisdom. 

We are stardust, billion year old carbon.
We are golden, caught in the devil’s bargain
And we’ve got to get ourselves back to the garden 

Joni is so amazing. If Bill Jones is my father, Joni Mitchell is my mother. In 1969, she intuitively grasped the significance of carbon, and that we are carbon. Then she rhymed it with garden. Maybe it was a coincidence, but I don’t think so. 

And even if you can’t come to Fairy Creek right now, imagine this– Joni Mitchell didn’t actually get to Woodstock, she wrote the song that defined it after chatting with her boyfriend Graham Nash, who sang there. 

Even if you can’t make it physically, you can be here.

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