Source: In These Times
The Menominee River forms Wisconsinās Northeastern border with Michigan, winding for about 120Ā miles and opening into Lake Michiganās Green Bay. About thirty-five miles from the mouth of the river sits the proposed location of the Back Forty Mine, aĀ project by the Canadian mining company, AquilaĀ Resources.
The open pit mine that the company intends to dig out of land aĀ mere 150Ā feet from the Menominee River in Michigan would be deeper than the height of the tallest building in Wisconsin, at 750Ā feet. The proposed mine will extract gold and sulfide from the banks of theĀ river.
Opponents of the mining project warn that sulfide wastes will pollute the Menominee River, which provides the spawning grounds for one of the largest populations of lake sturgeon in the Lake Michigan basin. Moreover, the proposed mining site sits on the original tribal homeland of the Menominee Nation, whose sacred place of origin lies at the mouth of the Menominee River. Sturgeon also have great cultural significance to the Menominee, whose reservation is currently located about 85Ā miles southwest of the proposed mineĀ site.
And although the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality initially granted Aquila permission to build on that location, the companyās ability to begin mining has been stalledāāāpossibly for good. Ruling in favor of the Menominee Nation, on January 5, aĀ Michigan Administrative Law Judge revoked Aquilaās permit for an open pit mine. The decision was based largely on Aquilaās lack of information on the projected environmental impact of the Back Forty Mine and the dangers of cultural desecration to sacred sites in the homeland of theĀ Menominee.
Guy Reiter, aĀ key player in the Menomineeās opposition to the mine, doesnāt believe the threat is goneĀ forever.
āIāve heard our elders say that as long as there are minerals on the ground ⦠there will always be aĀ threat.ā
However, Reiter added, the specific threat posed by Aquila Resources and the Back Forty Mine may be weakeningĀ substantially.
āRight now, Aquila is on the ropes,ā said Reiter. āāThe administration change is helping [too], and thereās more tribal folks in positions at the EPA. Having Deb Haaland, Laguna Pueblo, as the Interior Secretary helps us,Ā too.ā
I spoke with Guy Reiter, an enrolled member of the Menominee Nation, at an eighty acre farm on hisĀ reservation.
āYou can see our green house over there,ā said Reiter. āāIn the fields back there, weāre growing hemp, all kinds of corn, and everything. We got aĀ small little garden up here. We call this placeĀ MenÄ«kÄnaehkem.ā
Reiter is the Executive Director of MenÄ«kÄnaehkemāpronounced men-ee-KAHN-ah-kem, and meaning community rebuildersāāāan organization that addresses food sovereignty, hosts aĀ youth program, works on revitalizing language and culture, promotes energy sovereignty with solar panels and tiny houses, protects the land and water, and helps bring awareness to the issue of missing and murdered IndigenousĀ women.
Leading up to the latest ruling against the Back Forty Mine, many other groups and individuals joined in opposition to Aquila. Among those organizations was The Front 40 group in Michigan, which was key in informing the public of threats posed by the Back Forty Mine and organizing community members to block its construction. In total, over 2,000 individuals wrote letters to the Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ)āāāwith 98 percent opposing theĀ mine.
In addition, 350 concerned citizens attended aĀ public hearing held by the DEQ in 2016, most speaking against the mine. The Marinette County Board voted 28āāā0 to oppose the mine, citing concerns over long term leaching of acid producing wastes into the groundwater and the river, and risks to human health and the environment in Wisconsin and Michigan. Freshwater Future, an environmentalist organization that advocates for the protection of the great lakes, awarded The Front 40 group aĀ Freshwater Hero Award in 2017 for theirĀ efforts.
Reiter attributes the campaignās success to the fact that it was composed of aĀ coalition of organizations andĀ organizers.
āThereās aĀ lot of sharing amongst groups,ā says Reiter. āāWe do like aĀ bi-weekly call where thereās tribes [and] organizations. Weāve been staying in communication since the beginning of this thing, and weāre still chatting back and forth. IĀ think everybody understands that we can be more effective if weāre all on the same page and workingĀ together.ā
Tina Van Zile, the Environmental Director for the Mole Lake Sokaogon Chippewa Tribe, is one of those collaborators. The Mole Lake reservation is connected to the Menominee reservation by the Wolf River; environmental threats to one necessarily impact the other. AĀ recent threat near Mole Lake by Badger Minerals, aĀ mining company, for example, would have also affected the Menominee Nationāāāin each case, Van Zile and Reiter worked together to protect theĀ land.
āWeāre so connected to our environment,ā says Van Zile. Thatās always first for us. Our culture goes hand and hand with the environment, especially our wildĀ rice.ā
Reiter says that many of the indigenous opponents of the project are trained organizers and possess skills he hopes to share with others. The Native Organizers Alliance training provided tools such as power mapping and meeting facilitation strategies, heĀ explained.
āWeāre eventually going to be branching out and we want to give people the tools to do whatever theyāre working on in their community ⦠All of us have so many things going on in our communities that we need to do something about. We canāt sit around and wait for somebody to save usāāāweāve got to saveĀ ourselves.
āThe Back Forty Mine is what got me involved in all this. We were meeting with people and talking about how we could help our community. We were just trying to figure thingsĀ out.ā
When the Back Forty Mine came up, they started to meet every week. Soon they started to gain traction. More and more people came to their presentations, offering toĀ help.
āWhen we first started to stand against this mine, we were scrambling to think about what to do. āāWhat should we do first?ā And there was this list about aĀ mile long,ā saysĀ Reiter.
āBut then our elders said, āāwell, we should let the River know, and let Spirit know what weāre going to do.ā So we organized the sacred water walk from our beautiful Keshena Falls all the way up to the mine site. It was 126Ā miles, and we did that with the late grandma Josephine Mandamināāāshe was aĀ major supporter and she was my mentor,ā ReiterĀ explains.
In April 2016, they walked from the birthplace of their nation, the mouth of the Menominee River. Sturgeon were migrating at the sameĀ time.
āSometimes [the sturgeon] would breech and look at us, like acknowledge us that we were walking. It was aĀ real momentāāāit was like aĀ confirmation of what we wereĀ doing.
āGrandma Josephine has always told us that this isnāt aĀ protest. āāYouāre not carrying signs. Youāre not being loud even. Youāre supposed to be thinking about why youāre here, and what youāre doing.ā And when we passed the water back and forth, she would tell us to say, āāWe do this for the water.ā It was things like that that made it way more spiritual than just walking. After it was all done, we realized that we had basically rewalked our creation story. We had walked in the footsteps of that creationĀ story.ā
One of the groups the Menominee worked with made effective use of that cultural connection in aĀ successful lawsuit against Aquila. Earthjustice, with headquarters in San Francisco and aĀ network of offices across the United States, represented the Tribe, when they filed suit to challenge the companyās permits. At the heart of that lawsuit was the threat the proposed mine posed to cultural and sacred sites of the Tribe. Said Reiter, āāWhen that Michigan judge denied the Back Forty Project aĀ wetlands permit, he said that the mine would damage nearby cultural and historicĀ resources.
āSulfide mining is the dirtiest of all mining. It pollutes absolutely ⦠You add water and sulfide together, youāre going to get acidic drainageā that stuff just doesnāt go away,ā ReiterĀ says.
āThey try to tout jobs, and they try to say how environmentally friendly they are, because they have investors, and they have to say those things for them to getĀ money.ā
Van Zile adds, āāYou canāt just go to the Aquila resources website for information ⦠They try to make it sound like they are protectors of the environment. The facts just donāt bear thatĀ out.ā
Reiter adds, āāI always think itās important to make sure that weāre operating out of love and that weāre operating from aĀ place of strength, and not of fear. The companies will have fear, and theyāll try to drum up fear and make it seem like youāre the enemy and all that and theyāll get some politicians that will be right on their side and do the exact sameĀ thing.
āBut if you come from aĀ place of centeredness and big heartedness, youāll know exactly what to do and when to do it. And sometimes, you know, if you can be proactive rather than reactive itās very helpful. If you can get out ahead of āāem in aĀ couple different areas, itāll only help you. And always be conscious of burnout too. Youāve always got to be healthy mentally, emotionally, physically, andĀ spiritually.ā
Tina Van ZileĀ agrees.
āWeāre not just here to make noise ⦠You have to ask yourself what kind of place are we leaving for our children. IĀ want to know at the end of the day that Iāve done everything IĀ could. We have what we have because of what our ancestors did hundreds of years ago. Are we going to be proud of what weĀ did?ā
MenÄ«kÄnaehkem is funded through grants and donations. Readers can find out more at wwwā.menomāiāneereābuildersā.org.
Carol Amour is an educator, author, and theatre producer. She is currently Co-Director of the First Nations Traveling Resource Center and aĀ frequent contributor to Love Wisconsin, aĀ digital storytellingĀ project.
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