Yesterday I read at a poetry event honouring the work of Chief Dan George — the reading was part of the Salish Sea summer gathering hosted by the Tsleil Waututh nation in the Burrard Inlet, not far from where I grew up in Vancouver. The Tsleil Waututh are currently fighting Kinder Morgan’s proposed pipeline expansion in their territory.
I was asked to read some of Chief Dan George’s work and to respond in whatever way I wished. I wrote a poem, which you can read following the photographs. With the environmental disaster at Mount Polley in the news, my poem is also a response to those events.
Wil George of the Tsleil Waututh was part of the reading and reminded all of us before he read that Chief Dan George’s writings are not poems in the Western sense, but are teachings and teaching stories from the ancestors.
Before the reading, the poets were invited to paddle with the Tsleil Waututh across the Inlet to the Kinder Morgan plant as part of a ceremony that preceded the festival. As a non-Aboriginal person who is a lifelong resident of the Lower Mainland, I was honoured to be part of this canoe journey with the original keepers of the waters. For me, the invitation to speak to Chief Dan George’s words felt connected to the invitation to be part of this paddling journey. Thank you to the Tsleil Waututh for being gracious hosts and for giving me the opportunity to contribute my writing to their resistance. The ceremony carried out by a Tsleil Waututh elder during the canoe journey reminded me on the many forms that resistance takes and that these water have their own ways of healing.
Here is the poem I wrote for the event. It’s a response to Chief Dan George’s piece, ‘Words to a Grandchild.’
Dear Rivers
Dear and open misspelled rivers the very blood running
through my veins
waterways radial arteries
fresh to my small salt vessels
Dear and open misspelled rivers your laughter fills the air
Full of yellow machines rolling in your wake
In your depths the old blood has thickened
But darker grittier now, oil in my veins
Dear and open misspelled rivers I’ve swum in a few of you
Quietness and beauty, now my body rises
in my dreams trailing tailings
a bird cannon on each shoulder
Dear and open misspelled rivers according to BC laws
a natural body of water can be “impounded”
to make a tailing pond – how can the law impound
something that is always in motion? A river
cannot be impounded. So you must be choked.
Dear and open misspelled rivers I know my maps
Mining tailing pond flows into the Quesnel River which flows
into the Fraser River which has flowed my entire life
into my throat which flows into my stomach my bowels into
the Pacific which flows into the clouds
which flow into
Dear and open misspelled rivers Chief Dan George wrote
“there is good in everything” – where is the good in this
is it how a creek became a highway
is it how impounding a lake forces a reminder
is it that water always lets itself happen
is there no good in this – is the lesson that we’ve gone too far
made salmon swim out of their own skins
Dear and open misspelled rivers in 2013 at Mount Polley
406 tonnes arsenic and its compounds
177 tonnes lead and its compounds
326 tonnes nickel and its compounds
18, 413 copper and its compounds
3 tones mercury and its compounds:
Disposal only.
Dear and open misspelled rivers
English is a slippery river
A tailings pond can be a landlocked sea
A tailings pond can be a vast desert no human or animal or bird
Can walk across
A tailings pond is a world
That eats worlds
Dear and open misspelled rivers
The elder on the evening TV news tells the journalist
“it’s like a death in the family, what’s happened to the river”
behind her the water walks past
its own dead path
like a stranger to itself
the golem before the holy words
are slipped into its mouth
Dear and open misspelled rivers
How will you heal
Skin and bone
Mercury and arsenic
Fresh and salt
Dear and open misspelled rivers
What are you thirsty for
Now that your salmon
Cannot drink of you
Dear and open misspelled rivers
As Chief Dan George wrote,
“The spoken word
is not enough”
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