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10.08.2005


All My Relations: Indigenous Vision
By John Mohawk, PhD.
Excerpted from the 2003 Bioneers Conference

The most foolish thing that the United States government has ever done was to launch a centuries-long campaign to eradicate indigenous cultures. A great deal of profound knowledge and wisdom was lost - wisdom we could desperately use - today.

About 30 years ago, I was attending a meeting at the Onondaga longhouse in New York, and the guests at that longhouse were from Hopi country in Arizona. One of them, Thomas Banyaca, who was a translator for some of the elders who had journeyed to us had a story to tell from the elders. Hisstory was that the world had more or less come to an end a few times, but that some native people had survived, and they'd come to be aware that it was an inattention to and a disrespect for nature that had been at the root of their problems. Life on earth had been threatened and certainly civilization had been threatened because people had abandoned a respect for nature. And now this was happening again.

The elders had sent Thomas forward to try to explain this to the world, to give us all a warning. (At one point he even addressed the United Nations.) The elders also said we should look at the white men's written records to find evidence to support what they were saying. I took that job on and began to do research. I discovered that the anthropologists who looked at the Maya civilization and its very curious collapse in the ninth century have been puzzled. It doesn't seem that the Maya were overwhelmed by invaders or had a devastating internal civil war. It looks as though there had been a huge population, especially living around Tikal, and that suddenly in the space of 100 years, around 900 AD, their civilization collapsed and the people disappeared. There's no evidence that they migrated, because there's no corresponding evidence of increased populations in some surrounding area. It looks as if they simply vanished.

One intriguing hypothesis suggested that sudden climate change might have been to blame. Scientists looked at ice cores from Greenland corresponding to the period around 900 AD and discovered that that century had been extremely cold, far colder than usual. They used computer simulations to look at what the global climate would likely have been under those conditions of extreme cold in the northern latitudes. Drought in Central America was one predicted outcome. It turns out that one of the symbols that comes up a lot in Maya inscriptions at this time of collapse is the symbol for drought. Then core samples of deep layers of mud from lakes in Mexico confirmed that a severe drought had indeed occurred at that time.

When we come to the desert Southwest, we find a lot of evidence of civilizations there that became quite sophisticated in the use of irrigation. They dug canals, made holding ponds, and so on. But there too, several civilizations, simply vanished, leaving behind impressive buildings such as the Mesa Verde complex. Something happened. The Hopi and the other pueblos indeed have stories that say something awful happened that caused their ancient ancestors to go back into the earth and emerge later in a different world.

In South America in Bolivia and Peru, agriculture found its way into the most extreme environments in which humans ever grew plants. For some reason, those people grew food higher up the mountains, further into the desert and deeper into the rainforests than any other human populations ever did. Not only that, but they discovered, cultivated, transformed and changed more species of plants into cultivars [food crops] than any other complex of cultures in the history of the world. Those Andean cultures created more than 3000 varieties of cultivated plants. That is an almost mind-boggling achievement.

These agricultural innovators did amazing research and development. They took a number of plants and adapted them so that they could grow higher and higher up in the mountains in drier and colder conditions. Incan society organized itself to be able to grow food in very different ecosystems under very different conditions to make sure that in the years when food supplies failed in one place, the people in that place didn't starve because someplace else people had a successful growing season. They understood that reciprocity was a survival strategy, and they carried this practice on for centuries. In fact, they were growing more and better food in the Andes then than they are now.

Starting around about the fourth century AD, it seems that the area we now call Central Asia, those huge steppes then populated mostly by nomadic herding cultures, also suffered severe climate changes including droughts and extreme cold weather that began to cause some of these tribes of herdsmen to move en masse, eventually pushing some groups to sweep down from Central Asia into Europe. These massive population movements and invasions ultimately pushed the tribes living north of the Roman Empire (Goths, Visigoths, and Vandals) into Italy to topple Rome. There were other factors in the decline and fall of Rome, but this climate change most likely played a crucial role.

These past episodes may offer us clues about the future of our civilization. They show us, at the very least, that civilizations can be very fragile in the face of climate change.

Later, in the late Middle Ages and beyond, an overcrowded, filthy and highly unsanitary Europe was having to contend constantly with the "Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse" - disease, war, famine and death - while in America the problems were different. The climate kept changing and civilizations were collapsing. But the Indians were learning how to cope with it, discovering how to plant plants that survived through droughts and cold weather. They were creating a version of what some people today call "permaculture," but a permaculture for the ages that understood climate wouldn't necessarily remain stable.

That's why I say the stupidest thing the colonists and their governments ever did was to suppress Indian culture, because guess what? Climate change is coming again, and those cultures had a lot of very practical knowledge about how to adjust and survive in the face of major climate change.

I believe that what is coming will pose a major challenge to world civilization. A high-tech civilization that depends on running water, electricity, bridges and so on is far more fragile than we realize. I think the Hopi were right: Western civilization will face the same kind of challenges the ancient civilizations of this continent faced, but we're not ready to deal with them. The Hopi had some important messages for us, but, so far, we're not listening.
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John Mohawk, a legendary Native American journalist, activist, scholar, farmer (and Bioneers board member), is a Turtle Clan Seneca from Cattaraugus, and also a Professor of American Studies at the State University of New York in Buffalo.