By Scott Wright

We live in a world radiant with beauty and one that is also crying out for redemption. The entire Creation is filled with the beauty and colors of the seasons of Creation, at the same time it is groaning under the impact of climate change: extreme weather events, devastating floods and severe droughts, rising sea levels and melting glaciers, disappearing habitats and disappearing species of life. But this drama is not confined to the impact of climate change alone. Transnational mining companies, and hydroelectric dams that provide electricity for their mining ventures, are ravishing the lands and polluting the waters, and indigenous communities across the Americas are making a stand to protect Creation.

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Berta Cáceres, with Fr. Ismael Moreno, SJ, at a mobilization of COPINH to protest the environmental destruction and displacement that would be caused by the Agua Zarca hydroelectric project. Photo by Lucy Edwards.

But something new is happening here; there are new “signs” on the horizon. The stakes – the fate of the Earth and future generations – are higher; the protagonists are new – with indigenous communities and women playing a crucial role; and the spirituality of nonviolence is deeper and more holistic – rooted in the gift of Creation.The recent history of nonviolent resistance is filled with inspiring examples, from Gandhi’s independence struggle in India, to Martin Luther King’s struggle for civil rights and Cesar Chavez’s struggle for farmworker justice in the United States.

Pope Francis pointed to these emerging “signs of the time” when he adopted the name Francis, and pointed to what would become his commitment to poor and indigenous peoples, to peace and nonviolence, and to protecting all of Creation.

One of the more remarkable nonviolent struggles in recent years came to light when a young indigenous leader and mother of four children was assassinated in La Esperanza, Honduras. On the night of March 3, 2016, Honduran environmental and indigenous leader Berta Cáceres was brutally murdered in her home. As co-founder of the Civic Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras (COPINH), Berta had led the Lenca people and other indigenous communities in a non-violent struggle for the integrity of their territories and their sovereignty.

For years, Berta and the Lenca communities fought to block the Agua Zarca hydroelectric project. A series of dams would have flooded large areas of land and cut off the supply of water, food and medicine for the Lenca peoples. In addition, it violated the rights and sovereignty of indigenous people to decide whether such mega-projects be undertaken at all. Berta was persecuted and received numerous death threats for her work to defend the sacred rivers, forests and lands from further desecration. Since the military coup in Honduras in 2009, more than 100 environmental activists have been assassinated, and hundreds of mining concessions in half of the entire country have been offered to transnational mining companies, many of them tied to hydroelectric dams to generate the electricity required by their operations.

What does this mean, then, for the future of Berta’s people, and the future of her land? Is nonviolent resistance an effective means to create peace, democracy and sustainability? I thought about these questions when I was invited to offer a response to the topic, “creating change through nonviolent resistance.” Surely the Lenca people have been faithful to their indigenous values and spirituality, rooted in a reverence for Creation. Surely they have and continue to pay a high cost. They have been faithful, but have they been effective? Does their nonviolent resistance offer any hope? I would answer “Yes”, and here are three reasons why.

First, because the stakes are so high, and the fate of the Earth and of future generations hangs in balance, the witness of Berta Caceres and the nonviolent resistance of the Lenca community of which she was a part, has had an profound impact throughout the world. This is due, in part, because Berta was so well known, the personal recipient of the Goldman Prize for environmental activists, and a personal invitee of Pope Francis to the World Meeting of Popular Movements in Rome in 2014.

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The third continental-wide gathering of the Church and Mining Network, held in Bogota, Colombia in September 2016. Berta Cáceres is pictured on the banner. The author is pictured second from the left in the front row. Photo courtesy of Scott Wright.

Pope Francis’ encyclical Laudato Si’ is just one sign of the impact that indigenous communities defending Creation has had on the Church and on the world, but there are many more. Three years ago, the Catholic Church in Latin America formed the Church and Mining Network to defend the indigenous peoples and the natural resources of the continent. In like manner, the Pan-Amazonic Church Network (REPAM) was formed to defend the Amazon region and has since spread to the Congo Basin in Africa and to Asia as well. On the morning after Berta Cáceres was killed, REPAM joined the Global Catholic Climate Movement (GCCM) to offer this message:

“We join our voices to thousands of people…. Berta Cáceres’ death unites us in a mission in the defense of life, the Earth, and the rights of future generations. This death cries out, rather than silences us. It moves us, and calls us to resist and to demand justice.”

Second, nonviolent resistance is effective and hopeful because people are listening to indigenous peoples and to women as the protectors of the land and the water, and waking up to hear “the cry of the Earth” and the “cry of the poor.” Berta, the Lenca people and countless indigenous peoples around the world are the first defenders and the last protectors of Creation. If we don’t listen to them, the future is gloomy. But people are listening, and beginning to take seriously the fate of the planet and the fate of present and future generations. Many have had and have now, thanks to social media, the good fortune to hear Berta’s voice.

At the 2015 Goldman Prize awards ceremony in San Francisco, Berta spoke briefly, and eloquently. For me, her words evoked memories of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I’ve Been to the Mountaintop” speech and Archbishop Oscar Romero’s “In the name of God, stop the repression” homily, both given on the eve of their assassinations and martyrdoms. Like them, Berta sealed her fate with words of hope and defiance in her acceptance speech that night:

“Let us wake up! Let us wake up, humanity! We’re out of time. We must shake our conscience free of the rapacious capitalism, racism, and patriarchy that will only assure our own self-destruction. The Gualcarque River has called upon us, as have other gravely threatened rivers. We must answer their call. Our Mother Earth – militarized, fenced-in, poisoned, a place where basic rights are systematically violated – demands that we take action. Let us build societies that are able to coexist in a dignified way, in a way that protects life.”

A new spirituality of nonviolence is emerging, one that is deeply tied to the fate of the Earth and the gift of Creation, and that is a third reason why the nonviolent resistance of indigenous communities like the Lenca people protecting Creation is effective and hopeful. We can see that closer to home, in the gathering of Native Americans at Standing Rock, North Dakota. We know, if we do not listen and respond with solidarity, the fate not only of Native Americans but of the lands and waters of our native land are at stake. We desperately need to learn from the wisdom of original peoples. Just listen to Berta’s words at her acceptance speech for the Goldman Prize:

“In our world-views, we are beings who come from the Earth, from the water, and from the corn. The Lenca people are ancestral guardians of the rivers, in turn protected by the spirits of young girls. They teach us that giving our lives in various ways for the protection of the rivers is giving our lives for the well-being of humanity and of this planet. Walking alongside people struggling for their emancipation validates this commitment to continue protecting our waters, the rivers, our shared resources and nature in general, as well as our rights as a people.”

Our spiritual traditions are deeply enriched by the spirituality of indigenous peoples rooted in the gift of Creation. As Christians, we know that the joy of Easter is the victory of Christ over death, and that life, not death, will have the last word. But even as we anticipate and eventually celebrate the joy of Easter, the passion of the Earth and the passion of the poor continues in the drama of these nonviolent struggles of indigenous peoples for life and for all of Creation. In this “in-between” time, it truly is “a matter of the Spirit,” and we pray to the Spirit that unites us all and binds us to Creation: “Come Holy Spirit, and renew the face of the Earth.”

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