Editorial

This issue of Reckoning is devoted to works about war and conflict viewed through the lens of environmental justice. What is seen through that lens is, by turns, grim and hopeful.

It is through writing that we remember freedom, as Le Guin puts it. Writers are capable of probing into the heart of the crises of our time: extinction, genocide, climate catastrophe. Diagnosing the rot at the source: violence, imperialism, and fascism. In a sense, these works may lean a little more into the mode of detailing the war that is ravaging our planet and communities, rather than than offering a restorative view of how the world could be healed. There is much value in this, especially in societies where we are kept so distracted and tired, over-worked and always busy, that we hardly have the resources to stop and say “this isn’t right.”

The title for this volume, ‘It Was Paradise,’ comes from a collection of poetry by Palestinian icon Mahmoud Darwish. The full quote is ‘Unfortunately, it was paradise.’ The reference is to Palestine and its decades-long colonization and occupation. Today, Zionist forces have left the land desolate, a truly bleak example of how genocide and ecocide are intertwined.

I believe that the power of the writer is in imagining what the world could be, that it doesn’t need to be this way. We can live in harmony with our communities and with nature, valuing all life on this world that we share in common. Without the role of imagination in remembering freedom, and prefiguring a future where there is truly justice, there can be no coherent and lasting change. I do not hope for a revolution to spring up spontaneously, but rather that we can all take actions, right now, toward a just future, together, cooperatively. I hope that this belief has informed my decisions as guest editor, and that you find this volume to be sincere and salutary.

I could not have done this without the unwavering support of the staff and editors at Reckoning. They have my thanks for their support, belief, and patience through this long process. I hope that the reader will find their experience of these dreadful times represented, but not in a pessimistic mirror. I hope you find courage and motivation to act in whatever way possible to create a better world for us all.

Editorial: Circle of Life

“Everything’s environmental justice” is something I used to say around the shop back during Reckoning 2 or thereabouts, a way of indicating what kinds of environmental writing should go in the magazine: all kinds, from everywhere and everyone.

Ten years in, I stand by that statement, even as I acknowledge that “everywhere” for our purposes refers, with far too few exceptions, to the English-speaking world, and “everyone” means specifically those in earnest about enacting environmental justice, large-scale or small.

Let me put the lens of environmental justice over this book or device you’re gazing into, Reckoning X, our collectively edited communication issue. This lens is many-leaved. Perhaps a very, very thin leaf is made from cobalt mined by children. Accessibility, access to information, access to services, education, cost, economic situation, race, nationality, sexuality, and ethnicity: these are all leaves of the environmental justice lens, as are the physical ones inside our heads made for us by some billions of years of evolution and, depending who you are and how you look, God.

Everything’s communication, too. All behavior is communication. Mycelial networks, spores, the chemical interactions of root systems, birds dancing, orcas wearing salmon hats, cephalopod color displays, cat hackles, pheromones, ant chemical highways, ultraviolet floral pigmentation, and pretty much everything humans do, for better or worse. Communication is at the heart of environmental justice, and it’s the heart of Reckoning. Who gets justice, who is even allowed to work for it, is a matter of who’s allowed to communicate their need and who is able to receive and understand that communication. Everything’s a circle, everything’s interconnected.

Here in Reckoning X, Jaime McGhee’s “The Over-Sea”—a story about emigrating to the land of the colonizer—denotes speech by indentation, but renders speech within a colonized mindset using quotation marks. It’s a deliberate, deeply meaningful choice by the author, calling attention to the textual and linguistic violence inherent in a literary medium like this one. Luis Rafael Moya’s textual art piece “Agujero Negro” speaks to the same point.

Ten years into making Reckoning, I’ve become we, and we’ve learned so much. We can see so much more of that interconnectedness than ever before, even as the intersecting crises grow more acute with every year that’s passed. And though at times I dread what another ten years might teach me about humanity, where I’d have failed, we keep going.

Reckoning started with a staff of one. After ten years, our editorial staff has included upwards of thirty people from ten countries, speaking eight languages, each of whose lives and minds are completely their own, unlike any other, and each of whom has contributed something indelible to what Reckoning has become and is becoming.

We start out not knowing, then we learn from each other. I think that’s as good an encapsulation as any of what these past ten years have taught me, about environmental justice, about what it is to be alive, struggling to survive, perceive, communicate, and understand. This issue is packed full of all kinds of different ways of communicating about environmental justice—some soothing, some shocking—from all kinds of different people. Some of it, I very much hope, will blow your mind right open.

Editorial: Everything’s Environmental Justice

As Michael says, “Everything is environmental justice”, and well “everything” is a lot, but it’s also true. Take fair elections. They may not seem at first glance to be connected to environmental justice, but in places without fair and equal representation, those who stand to suffer the most have the least power to protect themselves from environmental injustices like climate change vulnerabilities, pollution, and displacement.

In red-lined and gerrymandered states across the US, privileged political and economic elites vote against clean energy and line their pockets with money from oil and coal lobbyists, but coal ash doesn’t wind up in their water supplies. They invite and encourage pollution hotspots like data centers, power plants, and refineries to build or dump in poor, rural, disproportionately racialized communities with willful disregard for the health and welfare of the people, the surrounding land, and the water supply. Because dumping—both literal and metaphorical—always occurs downstream.

We’ve seen this kind of inequality before in places like Flint, Michigan, where it’s been twenty years and the primarily Black community is still only beginning to see justice. We see it continuing in climate-vulnerable communities, especially along the coasts where rising sea levels threaten those who can’t afford to leave. We see it across Appalachia, where mountain top removal mining contaminates water, air, and creates ever-worsening health crises. Now, maybe more than ever, we need free elections. To move the scales towards justice everyone must have a voice, and those voices must be represented equally.

In this way, environmental justice is connected to gender equality, to disability rights, to fair lending practices, to immigration and labor laws, to education, and communication. The list is endless because, ultimately, environmental justice challenges unequal and failing systems; it demands new ways of thinking, of communicating, of being.

Environmental justice reminds us, more than anything, that we are all (and always) connected. I hope the works collected here in our beautiful tenth issue show how much those connections matter.

Thanks to all of you for an amazing decade.

How to Get Away with Chaining Myself to my Friends in Front of Heavy Duty Machinery

“If we ever wanted to, our friend group could transition nicely into a BDSM circle,” I announce to my friend George as we stare at nearly $1,000 worth of locks and chains in a pile on the living room floor.

“Is that a thing? A BDSM circle?” he asks, looking up from his project of color-coding keys to locks with iridescent nail polish.

“I don’t know.” I shrug. “You can ask the cops about it.”

“Probably not the best strategy . . . .” he says as he sets up a stopwatch.

“Ok! Let’s try Pancakes with Blueberries.” The code name for the position we’ve chosen doesn’t sound like the sexiest of moves, but we haven’t chosen it to be sexy. After all, we are not (as of now) a BDSM circle. We are just friends, with a lot of locks, a lot of chains, and a plan to shut down a natural gas pipeline.

I got involved in activism my senior year of high school. For my first act of civil disobedience, I skipped school to attend a rally in Washington, DC against the Keystone XL pipeline. High school tyrant Mr. Maxfield told me that if I went, he’d give me detention. As an anxious teen whose identity hinged on straight As and approving nods from adults, I cried about the decision beforehand to no less than three teachers and two administrators. But the next Saturday, wearing my homemade No Tar Sands shirt in the no phone zone cafeteria with all the other adolescent miscreants, I felt like a complete badass. Four years and many protests later, here I am searching under the couch for missing adult diapers as I prepare for my second arrest for direct action.

Today, there are six of us planning to block construction of the West Roxbury pipeline with our bodies. Ian, Amy, and I will jump in a pit where the pipeline will go and lock ourselves in a triangle with our backs together. This arrangement is ‘Pancakes with Blueberries’. In a pit across town Max, Sam, and Angus will fold themselves into a complicated tangle of arms and legs, with people lying down and sitting on top of each other. This we call, somewhat less whimsically, Shit Pit Yoga.

George is driving the getaway car. We have planned to do one loop around the block to scope. The second drive-by is the real deal.

“Oh my G-d I can’t do it!” Amy panics.

“No no! We’re doing it!” I cheer and lunge for the door, “Oh shit. Can we do another loop?”

“Come on,” says Ian, hopping out. Nothing fazes Ian.

Once we’re out of the car, we must act fast. The workers and security on site are used to activists. If we don’t get into formation, they’ll get us out much more quickly, meaning the whole thing will have been a big waste of time and money.

The July sun is already hot at eight in the morning. I look over the edge of the pit, then close my eyes and jump, like it’s a swimming pool, like it’s a normal summer day and I have nothing to worry about. Like I am young and fearless.

I lock my feet together first so that even if we don’t get our waists locked together I will not be able to walk away if the police try to make me. More specifically, if the police try to make me, my ankles will break. This fact that previously seemed merely strategic is suddenly anxiety-inducing. The chains have been custom tailored for my ankles by an engineering major friend. They are tight, requiring the lock to be just so to close. I close it.

For our waists, each person is in charge of the lock to their left. (Always go left.) I reach around and my clammy fingers fumble with the bolt between Ian and me. Shit. How much time has passed? 20 seconds? A month? I scoot backward to get a better angle and the lock slams shut.

“I’ve got pancakes!” I call out.

I wipe my hands on my pants, which are long despite the 90 degree weather because I’ve been told that jail is cold. I’m fighting global warming, but I still hate the cold. I wipe my hands so I’ll be ready for what’s next: super glue.

“It never really works,” George told us weeks before in a prep meeting. “Your hands will be too sweaty from heat and nerves, but it confuses the cops and looks good in a headline.”

I spread it across my palm and up my arm then pass the bottle off to Ian before we grasp hands. He passes it to Amy, and Amy throws it aside hoping we don’t accrue an additional littering charge for this detritus. All hands together and no one has even noticed the commotion. We’ve got blueberries.

Climate change is bad. Really bad. Most of the time, even I am a climate denier. I will lay my body down in the sand, but I don’t know how to grapple with the voice in my head, with the numbers in the news, with the knowledge that my country has condemned hundreds of thousands to death. People will lose their homes. People will lose their livelihoods. People will die. It’s started already. And the people who will bear this burden first and hardest are communities of color, low-income, and indigenous communities. I don’t know how to feel this, I mean really feel this, and still wake up in the morning. I get the urge to ignore. I get the desire to look away. Of course I deny.

In the pit, we clutch each other’s hands as if they aren’t already glued together.

“I’m nervous,” Amy tells me. We do the only reasonable thing there is to do; we sing.

“The tide is rising, and so are we.” The song comes from Rabbi Shoshana Freedman and singing it I have never felt more powerful. Shouting and sirens begin to drown our voices. We sing louder. The construction workers, police, and firemen circle us, looking down over the sandy drop off. They grumble about how to cleanse what is, for this morning, a money-losing pit of filthy activists.

Over the radio, we hear: “Wait, they’re in your pit too!?”

Oh yeah we are! We are everywhere.

The fireman throws his jacket over my head to protect my eyes from flying sparks. It’s heavy and I have a vague memory of elementary school field trips from back when I had a simpler understanding of what it meant to be a civil servant. Without warning, I am sprayed with a hose. This is also, in theory, to protect me, but sitting in a puddle of mud in darkness beneath a fireman’s jacket, warm metal against my bruised ankles, all I can think is, How did I get here? Why do my friends, my beautiful friends who are in their early twenties, who navigate depression, and grad school, and dinner, and dating, why must they put themselves in situations like this? What a totally absurd thing to do with a Monday morning.

The moment I am free from my ankle chains, I am bound at the wrists.

“You’re under arrest for trespassing and disturbing the peace.”

Personally, I thought our music was perfectly peaceful, but the National Lawyers Guild, who provides legal aid to activists, says arguments based on the quality of the singing will not hold up in a court of law.

As I am led past two fire trucks and an ambulance to the police wagon, I call out to my jail support an important message, “Please bring pizza!”

In the first holding cell, we cheer as Max, Angus, and Sam are led in.

“We love you!” Max, whose baby will be born within the week, has a towel wrapped around his waist.

“What happened to your pants??” we ask.

“Well . . . .” Max monotones, “Sam was screaming because of the superglue and they poured acetone on my dick.”

“What??”

But Max is led to the back to be fingerprinted.

“I guess it’s good he’s already having his baby.” Ian shrugs. Nothing fazes Ian.

Here is the truth. The sacrifices we will have to make are going to be bigger than $40 and a day in jail. Change is happening, but not fast enough. At this point we are not fighting to stop climate change. Our fight is for degrees. Degrees of warming. Degrees of deaths.

To those who would call young activists idealistic I would say, yeah. The criminal justice system is racist, and cruel, and life-ruining. But because I am white, young, college-educated, and protesting climate change in a liberal-leaning region, I am free to pass through its tendrils relatively unscathed. And I would be lying to say it’s not partially for selfish reasons that I engage in civil disobedience. I am terrified by the thought that the fires, storms, droughts, and hostility to immigrants and refugees we see now may not in fact be “the new normal”. The new normal will, in all likelihood, be a lot worse.

There’s kind of a relief in jail that at this moment, there’s nothing more I can do. In my cell, with nothing but my tired mind, receding adrenaline, and wet clothes, I can finally accept that this is out of my control. It is unacceptable to live resigned to the reality that we will not be able to do enough. It’s self-sustaining to acknowledge this truth. People will lose their homes, communities, and livelihoods. People will die. Hopefully fewer because of us, but there’s really no way to know. We will keep fighting anyway. We will sing louder. We sing to be heard, but also to say, “We hear you. We have not, and we will not, forget you.”

The marches and rallies, the meetings and pits have all taught me how to love. This is the way I have to say “I have your back” to Amy and Ian and George and Sam and Max, to our unborn (or soon to be born) children, to my sisters, to the fighters everywhere. There is no winning in a world where people will die needlessly, but there is still loving. There is still believing in a world worth fighting for. When we are singing, when we are laughing, this is when I find the strength, trust, and commitment to lay my body down.

Outside the jail, my hands oily with pizza grease, I hug my friends as they’re released. On Sunday, we’ll debrief the action in our normal meeting and eat home-cooked chili from a comically large pot. We will think about how we can confuse the police for longer, how we can maintain pressure, how we can engage more people in West Roxbury. We’ll break out the ukulele and play John Prine crooners. For now, I run and jump on Angus as he walks from the precinct.

“Angus!!!!! We did it!” I cheer.

“Oh my G-d did you actually get us pizza? I’m so happy!” he says to George, who is without a doubt the best jail support a grimy activist could ask for.

“Of course!” George smiles. He yells to the precinct as we walk to the car, “See you next week!”

Next week, there will be a new pit to fill with new songs. Next week, we will be everywhere.

The X That Means Both Death and Hope

This story begins and ends with the X that means both death and hope.

Three Xs, two strikes, one message: Solidarity.

 

26 November, 2017.

 

The Australian government would prefer that we forget this crime against humanity, this X in flesh in the air.

It’s a humid, sweaty, overcast day at a protest at Federation Square in the centre of Melbourne. Shen Narayanasamy of the progressive activist group GetUp! tells us that the police are beating with batons the refugee men who have spent 21 days in peaceful protest against their detention on Manus Island, Australia’s refugee detention centre in Papua New Guinea. SHAME read the signs in the square. FOUR YEARS TOO LONG. We’re doing this today at the request of the men, to rise to the dignity of their example. Natasha Blucher of the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre tells us whistleblowers’ accounts of the Nauru camp, another offshore Australian refugee detention centre. Amazing locals put themselves at risk to get us, journalists, food, and water into the camp. The smell: There was two weeks’ worth of garbage that the men had tried to collect and contain. Pulling water from a well with an oily film on top. Ingenious fresh-water catchment, bed sheets tied up with bottles at the bottom. Every cubicle in the toilets was full to the brim with diarrhoea. The men were so sick and had serious illnesses from three or four years locked up. Even in that toxic place, the refugees’ culture of hospitality prevailed. We ate biscuits that somebody had baked in the middle of a siege. They brought tea for us and added sugar. They’d saved it for guests. HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSE A CRIME spake the signs. STOP VILIFYING REFUGEES. In the crowd I see Hijabi Muslim women of colour, young white guys in shorts, and many seniors holding photos of the refugees who have died in Australian camps. There have been 14 known refugee deaths in offshore detention since 2014, including 7 by suicide. Senior women with purple shirts saying Grandmothers against children in detention.

The crowd is asked to kneel, or sit if we can’t kneel, for four minutes, with our hands crossed above our heads, which is the way that the men of Manus had been protesting for 21 days. We squat or sit with difficulty for four minutes, hearing the words of Kurdish-Iranian asylum seeker Behrouz Boochani’s statement, his dignity, his gratitude for our support. There is the hideous dissonance of a Wallace & Gromit exhibition ad in huge letters behind the crowd squatting with their hands crossed. The ad silently blares It’s hard to wipe the smile off your face! Behrooz’s statement is haunting: despite having not enough food themselves, the refugees had been feeding their dogs, and the police had killed one out of spite.

The sun breaks through the clouds and is thanked for it by a grateful speaker. Activists who used to teach at Victoria University speak with admiration of their migrant and refugee students’ resourcefulness. The small moments of humour are some of the most striking. Leading us in the squat, a speaker says It’s okay to sit if you can’t squat, if your knees aren’t, you know, pilates. The crowd chuckles, and I think about those small moments of levity, not because we’re having fun, but because we recognise our shared humanity, our vulnerability.

This X is in flesh in the air, arms crossed in solidarity, the X of the refugee men’s arms iconic of their captivity. The X that represents the deaths from which they flee and to which our policies have driven them. But their X is the hope of protest too, of shackles to be broken, and ours a tribute to their dignity and their deep humanity, unassailable.

Australia’s federal government would prefer that we forget this crime against humanity, this X in flesh in the air. Will you let them?

 

13 November, 2019.

 

This X is the target that Aboriginal people have had on them in this colonised country for over 230 years. It is the X in the scope of a gun, too often turned on Black men, women, and gender-diverse people by police in this colony.

It is a grey day at the snap rally Justice for Kumanjayi Walker, a 19-year-old Warlpiri Aboriginal man who was shot by police in his home in Yuendumu, 300 km north-west of Alice Springs, in central Australia, on Saturday 9 November, 2019. A crowd begins to gather at the intersection of Bourke and Elizabeth Streets. A man with a sad expression, lines on his forehead, and a streak of rich red hair licking up from the right of his forehead addresses a circle of orange-and-yellow high-vis supporters. No microphone, but I see him mouth They say it’ll be a rally in the rain, well it’ll rain. Those of you who’ve done this before… A fat Black man with a clipped beard and red Indigenous-design dots across a red sports-style vest leans his face into the chest and over the left shoulder of a thin man in front of him, taking comfort from him. Two little Black girls huddle together under their Aboriginal flag to protect them from the beginning rain. A sign rises over the crowd. THE FUTURE IS BLACK. A chill wind blows down Elizabeth St and through the pillars I stand between at the top of the Bourke St post office steps.

The signs are heartbreaking. I see women looking desolate under hand-written and printed signs KILLED IN CUSTODY, the red and yellow letters stark against the black background. A fierce, articulate Black man gestures with his right hand as a bank of cameras point at him, Terra Nullius is a legal fiction! (Terra Nullius, Latin for “nobody’s land,” was the legal principle used by British settler-colonists to justify stealing the territory of Australia from its Aboriginal Traditional Owners during British colonisation in the late eighteenth century.) A woman with short white hair nods during the speeches, an Aboriginal flag rises above the lowered zip of her open black hoodie. Her mouth wobbles, she bends her head down to her left hand to wipe a tear, never putting down her sign End the brutality! Stop the killings! Justice for Wayne! Her stricken face resonates between the placards and I can’t look away from her grief. The sacred smoke of burning eucalyptus leaves rises over the crowd in a wind that blows down Bourke St. An Aboriginal Elder raises his voice and a smooth dark brown staff and projects to us his name and his Country, and that he is from the Stolen Generations. He raises his hands to the sky and describes the spirits he is connected with—I have been blessed. A ripped cardboard sign rises before me, BLACK LIVES MATTER with strong strokes in yellow and red. The crowd has swelled and fills the tram tracks. I see the kind eyes of Aunty Tanya Day smiling from a poster.

Jaeden Williams, a Yalukit Willam man of the Boon Wurrung people, speaks. My family have been here for 4,000 generations, for 100,000 years. This land has a story that is a lot longer than 150 years. According to the Boon Wurrung, this land was created by Bunjil, who travels as an eagle. He taught us to welcome all friends and guests. Bunjil’s Laws are two promises, and these promises have been the essence of the land since time began. He asks the crowd to speak after him, and we join our voices to say,

 

We promise

to look after the land

and the water

and we promise

to look after the children

 

That’s been the spirit of this land, of Melbourne, of my culture, since time began.

 

A sign, white text on a black background:

 

16 . 03 . 2019

Veronica Baxter 34

IDENTIFIED AS A WOMAN

THROWN IN A MALE PRISON

FOUND HANGING IN CELL

 

Does anyone have clapsticks? asks a speaker. The powerful Elder raises his staff and says, I’ve got a weapon of mass destruction! and the crowd laughs along with him. A woman speaker asks us to put a hand over our hearts—Breath in from our ancestors. The crowd is silent, stricken faces, the pulse-pulse of our hands tapping a heartbeat on the cloth over our hearts. After finishing, I think our ancestors heard us. A tram leaves the intersection toward Queen St.

A speaker reads statements from Elders in the area, later published in The Saturday Paper.

From Marly Wells Naparngardi, a Warlpiri woman: We came on Sunday morning to stand together in our grief and were presented with smirking police officers and no answers. Two mounted police attempted to bring their horses closer, an intimidation tactic. Someone requested them to leave and I heard one of the officers say, “If you had any respect for the horse’s life you would stop waving the cardboard in its face. He doesn’t like it. You’re intimidating him.” If you had any respect for human beings, if you had any respect for the Traditional Owners of this land, if you had any respect at all, you would be questioning the systems in place—the systems you benefit from, the systems that keep Aboriginal people down. “SHAME!” breaks out and spreads across the crowd.

A person of colour in a white knit jumper and navy headscarf holds a sign spray-painted on the back, beneath three inverted triangles in the queer anarchist movement’s pink and black,

 

QUEERS

AGAINST

COLONIAL

-ISM!

 

A man sings a Warlpiri song, a sad melody, and translates after every line—He’s missing his kids. Signs are held over heads as the rain begins. Police must not investigate police! A woman with a rainbow beanie asks to take a little boy with pale short hair past me down the steps to see the speakers. The crowd cheers a speaker and the boy turns around in his bright giraffe-print coat to give her the thumbs-up. The boy explains to her that he’s giving the thumbs-up to the speakers when the crowd claps to show his support. Use of bush medicine, cultural practices, and Law. Between speakers, a quiet descends over the crowd. A baby cries to my left and a motor idles on Elizabeth St.

The wind changes direction and blows up the steps towards me and I smell the sacred smoke of the eucalyptus. The women behind me are trying to find their friends in the crowd. “He’s running.” “Is he a super fitness nut?” The march begins and I join the back of the crowd and remember the enthusiasm and solidarity. A man and woman’s voices begin the chant behind me, Too many coppers: Not enough justice! A person with short hair and intricate spiderweb and flower tattoos emerging from their sleeves holds a sign lettered in black, yellow, and red,

 

TELL

THE

TRUTH

 

The red of TRUTH drips in the rain down their left wrist off the bottom of the sign, ominous. Too many coppers! begins the chant and breaks off into giggles as Too many coppers! rolls back from the front of the crowd and confuses the rhythm. We cross Swanston St and bank up, the roar of the crowd swells. A Black woman with short black curls holding her takeaway dinner with a tiny sauce tub on top rests on a short plinth and smiles, and I recognise her expression—gratitude and pride.

 

19 . 11 . 2004

MULRUNJI 36

DIED IN CELL WITHOUT TREATMENT

 

Too many cop-pers! Not enough—the crowd breaks off and a woman in yellow next to me adds hesitantly, Justice?

The crowd banks and turns to the left and a woman behind me asks, Are we stopping here? and it’s because there is a line of police in yellow high-vis in front of the Melbourne East Police Station, the letters of the sign booming towards us in 3D. I realise that the high-vis people I saw at the beginning are there to physically stand between us and the police, to protect us from their potential violence. Our guardians. They wear paper gas masks loose at the side of their necks, just in case, water bottles in their backpacks. The police watch uncomfortably.

We cross Russell St and a woman walking a shopping trolley and carrying a silver walking stick pipes up No justice, no peace! as she walks through the intersection. A woman with braids in a short, fluffy, red-lined jumper wheels her wheelchair with the march in front of us. I see two Eureka flags and the Torres Strait Islands flag flicking in the wind of the intersection ahead. A woman with a cane has an Aldi shopping bag and thongs—her feet look cold! She turns and laughs at her friend, a generous smile that rises from her cheeks under ginger bangs and hair trailing her shoulders and spilling out of a knitted beanie. A man with a sign, “Do ya want some water, Schazz?” “Yes please.” A silver-haired man in a red beanie and a worn leather jacket with a small gum branch tucked over his ear grins and embraces a friend. I see the two rows of guardians bringing up the rear of our march. Water trickles down the tram tracks. I see the boy with the giraffe-print jacket in fluoro pink gumboots at the edge of the crowd.

The crowd banks up at the Parliament steps.

In 2017, Aunty Tanya Day fell asleep on a train after drinking and was woken up and arrested by police under an archaic law for public drunkenness that has been historically disproportionately used to incarcerate Aboriginal people. During her four hours in a cell, she fell and injured her head, unsupervised. When she was discovered, it took an ambulance one hour to arrive. She never awoke and died in hospital.

At the protest, Tanya’s daughter Apryl Watson speaks, her voice struggling from the emotion: We’ve seen again and again deaths in custody, straight-up murder. Her voice is exhausted. Can you tell me how many people went to the Melbourne Cup, got blind drunk—How many whitefellas died in a cell? How many white women had ambulances? They didn’t give a shit about mum. Her voice breaks down at the end of her line. I’ve got my daughter at home, I can’t even have her sitting next to me when I get breathalysed, she’s crying because she doesn’t know what’s gonna happen to me, because she knows what happened to mum.

The sinking sun illuminates the stone-faced pillars and the tiny gold sphere is a dot in the inscrutable sunglassed eyes of every cop on the steps of Parliament.

We hear the righteous anger of a speaker. 12 years ago my nephew was found handcuffed in an alley and do you think anything happened to them police? The look of ’em, looking at us like we’re dickheads. They’re racists, they’re murderers! Every year this is happening! This Victorian government here was the first Constitution—Terra Nullius began here. If we had sovereignty recognised in this country, would we be in their jails? Would they be stealing our children? His voice rises to a sharp growl. They don’t give a fuck about us!

A line of Black women at the front hold up red-painted palms to the police line as we in the crowd chant Blood on your hands! Apryl Watson, her palms reddened, wipes her face with the back of her hand and, looking exhausted, walks down the steps.

Since her death, Aunty Tanya Day’s family fought for the Victorian state public drunkenness law to be abolished, and the law is set to be abolished on Melbourne Cup Day in November 2023.

Constable Zachary Rolfe faced a murder trial for the shooting of Kumanjayi Walker. He was acquitted of all criminal charges by an entirely non-Indigenous jury. It was the first time a Northern Territory police officer was charged with an Aboriginal death in custody since the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody in 1991. There have been at least 517 Aboriginal deaths in custody since the release of the Commission’s report. No Australian police officer has ever been convicted of an Aboriginal death in custody.

 

9 May, 2018.

 

This X is the axis along which wages crawl in economic graphs, with productivity and profits soaring upwards together into the corner like a banker’s hollow smile. This X means an early death for those who can no longer afford to live in Australia.

Lots of morning coffee is being clutched at the Australian Council of Trade Union’s first Change the Rules strike. The sun is bright on Lygon St and the crowd smells of aftershave, perfume, and cigarettes. People hand out socialist newspapers reading “Corporate Greed is Bleeding Australia Dry!” I overhear conversation between guys in hoodies and boots, They’re saying $85 billion in tax cuts. The union initialisms on every side—NIW AEU NIMF MUA CFMEU—teachers, nurses, midwives, maritime and construction workers and more. The Greens triangle marches around above the crowd on invisible arms. A woman laughs on the way past, I’ve got the wrong shoes, the wrong shoes. I see fierce veteran Boomer activists with grey-streaked hair. The union’s Eureka flag in Indigenous colours flicks in the wind among the Australian Services Union (clerical workers). Big white blokes welcome each other with big handshakes. How are ya, mate? Where you bin workin’? I hear the growing boom of a helicopter, the first of the day. The socialist red flag flying high atop Trades Hall. An Indigenous man in a knitted beanie wears his nation’s flag proudly as a cape. Luke Hilakari, Trades Hall Secretary, tells us that we are 60,000 people strong on the streets of Melbourne. We do not wanna be a country of the working poor. For so long, big business have been feeding us crumbs, like we’re pigeons. We’re not pigeons. When the 1% have as much as 70%, the system is broken. Inequality is at a 70-year high. It hasn’t been this high since the Great Depression. Luke booms, Do you want equal pay for women? The crowd roars YES!

A speaker introduces Mahani, who is here representing 100,000 farm workers with the National Union of Workers. Overwhelmingly casual. No penalty rates. Paid cash-in-hand well below the legal minimum wage. Mahani introduces herself as a migrant farm worker from Malaysia. She has a high woman’s voice and a Malaysian accent. She sounds a little shrill through the speakers—who doesn’t when they have to project?—but her message is clear. We need work rights! We need better future! Speaking of undocumented migrant workers’ harsh black-market labour conditions, she says, We need amnesty now! White blokes who’d roared their support for Luke now stand around scoffing and laughing, wincing at her voice through the speakers. These moments don’t make it into the press coverage, but they’re some of the most important to remember. I am reminded that solidarity is not a status we achieve, but a horizon we work towards, and that our movements regularly fail people of colour. Mahani, migrant woman of colour, activist and union leader, braves our crowd’s bullshit and our country’s hostility to stand up to speak for 100,000 farm workers being exploited all over Australia.

A speaker booms, What does the government think when they think that they can turn around and tell youse who you can elect as union leaders? I say to all of you, people from all unions, when they came after them, they come for all of us! Sally McManus, Secretary of the Australian Council of Trade Unions, the peak trade union body, tells the crowd that 40% of Australian workers are in insecure work. 732 corporations paid not one cent of tax. 62 people who earned more than $1 million in a year paid not one cent of tax, not even the Medicare levy. Guys giggle about the difficulty of holding signs in the wind. Nah I’m good holding the flag here, might swap when I need a cigarette. Won’t have one yet though, might burn the flag! A tune starts up from a brassy marching band behind us. I first heard the tune as a kid in country Queensland, knowing it by the earlier folk song lyrics, John Brown’s body lies a-mouldering in the grave overlaid with the union movement’s 1915 lyrics to become their rallying song, “Solidarity Forever.” But I still hear John Brown’s body in the melody, and it only makes the union’s version more urgent—the failure of the union is a body in the grave.

The National Tertiary Education Union, my crew, in purple shirts and whistles. Education Not Exploitation! Casuals Against Casualisation! There are lots of young women among us. Postgrads and casuals on strike! No more unpaid work! Pink-scarfed, purple-haired, chatty, checking phones. Someone starts up a snare drum. A woman unionist tells us that the stereotype of a unionist is a man with a hard hat, but in Australia but the average unionist is a woman with a degree. Among the union’s contingent at a later rally, I hear Nic Kimberly, a casual academic, address the crowd. The Australian Catholic University threatened Nic with revoking his PhD scholarship for criticising casualisation in progressive national newspaper The Age. His voice gets stronger and more defiant as he says, So what did I do to respond? I became the union branch President! In the crowd, the conversation continues around me. It’s not about someone coming to uni to have that transformative experience anymore. It’s about getting bums on seats, and not long while we’re making money. Elsewhere, I hear, we’ve got a problem with homeless students. A silver-haired union woman waves to kids in the windows on Lygon St. The chilly winds of late Autumn blow down Victoria St as we walk through the intersection. Bystanders bop to the brass band as we slowly march. A first degree shouldn’t cost a mortgage! Onlookers grin, take phone videos. Flyers, flags and protesters have filled the street as far as the eye can see from Swanston to Queen St. A woman of colour wears leopard-print, sunnies and huge heart earrings with Militant in curvy script inside. The other side, I later see, reads Feminist. A flag flicks across the back of my neck, a surprising intimacy. A red-and-black jester-clothed trumpet player is cheered by the crowd. A sign says I’m young and insecure and so is my work! There is a crisp wind from behind and welcome pockets of sunshine and the slow spin of autumn leaves lifted on winds between skyscrapers. Smiling women in office windows wave invisible flags with us in solidarity. Photographers perch on every tram stop and plinth along our way to capture our march’s glorious sprawl.

Flyers paper the fancy cars parked in the middle of Bourke St. A kid in blue gumboots and a Superman shirt is wheeled through the march—despite chants, clappers, trumpets, and drums—completely asleep.

We pick up marchers, chants and energy as we make our way down Swanston St. A guy faceplants on the tram island and is helped by everyone. You right, brother? A voice reads out a news update behind me, City streets shut down as 50,000 march. A grumpy skinny corporate guy in a tight blue suit cuts through the crowd at an intersection. A speaker says, It’s about the young people we work with every day. They are ripped off in their jobs. They’re forced to jump through hoops to access inadequate Newstart (the unemployment welfare payment). We don’t want them to become the working poor of the future. Troy Carter tells the crowd about the Esso (ExxonMobil) workers: Sacked, then offered their jobs back at up to 40% less. It would be 742 days before the strike ended in a deal. Troy speaks about the effect on his family, on his children being bullied at school. My children have forced themselves into a shell to avoid being rejected. When I stood outside UGL (the contractor for Esso), their Payroll Officer yelled, “How’s your kids, Troy?” and laughed. Colin Long speaks, Secretary of the Victorian National Tertiary Education Union: 50% of undergraduate teaching is performed by casuals, many working casually for 5, 10, 15 years. Low super, no leave. It should be a scandal that one of our members found herself unable to leave an abusive relationship because of being totally financially dependent. Our researchers find cures for cancer, we develop renewable energy. We write to chart the course of the history we are living. Are you ready to change the rules? The farm workers’ signs, stark and true: NO PICKERS NO FOOD NO FUTURE.

This X means early death for the workers whose wages have flatlined along the X axes of economics graphs. But while the union movement lives there is always hope for a better future.

 

15 March, 2019.

 

It’s a clear day, sunshine, with a cool breeze outside the Old Treasury Building on Spring St as the crowd gathers for the global School Strike 4 Climate. An old woman with a walker, moving slowly, sunnies and a straw hat, makes her way through the intersection, a sign on her walker saying 1.5 to stay alive, stop climate change! Indigenous men in white paint clack clapsticks from atop a plinth, gum branches held to their comrades. A teenage girl’s voice rises above the crowd. My name’s Gaia, I’m a 17-year-old school striker and I’m here because I want a future on this planet. We acknowledge that we meet on the stolen lands of the Boon Wurrung people and there is no climate justice without First Nations justice. The men raise their arms from the plinth and roar their strength. Two choppers hover over the intersection. Striking for our future, says a sign covered in sparkly writing and kids’ drawings. Stop giving us an excuse to skip school! The speaker continues, Make some noise if this is your first protest! I hear a roar reaching down the hill past Treasury Gardens that warms my heart. Grey-haired activists look on and smile. The sign pun/meme game at this protest is exquisite. My friends see me writing down slogans and make sure that I’ve noted the choicest quotes: There was one earlier, a picture of Tony Abbott (the ultra-conservative former Prime Minister filmed eating a raw onion like an apple), said “No onions on a dead planet.” Kids wouldn’t have to act like politicians if politicians didn’t act like kids! Prime Minister has a pet rock—He’s so coal. A handful of girls and a woman appear on the balcony of the Old Treasury building before being shooed off. A young woman’s voice across the crowd: 20,000 people are here, 20,000! and we roar. An Indigenous speaker says: We need to listen to my Country, to the Law of my ancestors. A sign says, I came here because I hate Melbourne weather. Climate change is not an elective! I hear, There’s a drone! and I see it, tiny creature hovering smoothly with its black legs. Grumpy old man who supports students. Don’t frack the future alongside the Midwives’ Union. Teachers for Climate Justice. A speaker says that 100 companies cause 71% of climate change. An Aboriginal woman is walking with her kids, something written in the elegant rhythms of an Indigenous language over an illustration of the Aboriginal flag and the earth. A translation on the back of the sign says Little faces, powerful hearts, we stand together. I ask her, What language is that? She replies Gunnai! with pride. It’s beautiful. My queer community are here: Gay for Renewables!

We listen to the urgent speeches of teenage girls in the microphone, Everyone who’s an activist and also a student, get everyone at your school, the crowd cheers, whistles and kazoos trumpet from all around. Keep the Earth clean, it’s not Uranus. I see the rainbow sheen of fresh-blown bubbles rising from the corner near the Treasury Gardens and floating away. We cluster in the shade of the buildings at the edge of the crowd. A baby in a sling on her mum’s front is holding a cardboard sign saying Nap strike for climate. Kids are front and centre on the steps of Old Treasury. The crowd is happy, energetic, diverse, loud, and dynamic. Climate change is union business on the black shirt of a charismatic fat lady with red lipstick who’s walking a little girl by the hand. Coal: Drop it coz it’s HOT. Marchers have brought a massive rainbow flag, silky and tall as two people. I notice later that it says WE ARE UNION. Proud teacher! Scared human. Kids’ fresh chalk drawings fade between the tram lines on the street, trees and earth in pinks and greens. Kids in school uniforms sit on the curb, grinning into their milkshakes. I’d rather be at school than telling you to do your job. A sign says My kids are revolting—proud dad. Tourists and businesspeople and shoppers look on happily from the street. I love the way the kids’ use of pop culture fuels their activism. Every disaster movie starts with scientists being ignored.

The crowd has poured into Treasury Gardens, and there are dogs barking, picnics, kids cheering, a speaker announcing solidarity with the Standing Rock Sioux water protectors. White women in yellow high-vis security vests, Where’s the baaand, Jenny, I thought you said there was gonna be a band?! A speaker passionately exclaims, We are not your enemy! Farming communities are not your enemy! We are the ones being hit worst by climate change. A woman’s voice in the mic: I’m glad to know I’m not the only one who goes home every night who thinks, what is going to happen to my kids when I’m dead and gone? A speaker says My dad is a farmer. His dad is a farmer. I wanted to be a farmer but there won’t be anything left to FARM. The police estimate 50,000 people in Melbourne alone.

Attending the Melbourne protest of Donald Trump’s inauguration on 21 January 2017, a friend asks me, What’s the point? I say, We have to do something, we have to let them know that this is not okay. Critiquing the dismissal of activist events as “preaching to the choir,” Rebecca Solnit writes:

 

[Researcher Erica Chenoweth] concluded that only around 3.5 percent of a population was needed to successfully resist or even topple a regime non-violently. In other words, to create change, you don’t need everyone to agree with you; you just need some people to agree so passionately that they will donate, campaign, march, risk arrest or injury, possibly prison or death. Their passionate conviction may influence others. Ideas originate at the margins and migrate inwards to succeed; insisting that your idea must have arrived rather than be traveling is to miss how change works.

 

This X is the death of all life, what awaits us if we do nothing, if we don’t do enough, the X for extinction in the centre of Extinction Rebellion’s hourglass logo. But this X also means hope. Our hope lies in the fight not yet over, in the leadership of young people and Elders who show us the way. The hourglass is not finished, but time is running out.

This story begins and ends with the X that means both death and hope.

Three Xs, two strikes, one message: Solidarity forever.

 

 

“The X That Means Both Death and Life” originally appeared in Unlikely Stories in July 2023.

Editorial

In the US this year, we neurodivergent folks have heard a lot about what we cannot do or will never do. Our differences have been increasingly pathologized, demonized, and used to deny us basic respect and decency. Our diagnoses have been dismissed, our personal autonomy, access to medications, and medical care threatened. All because we will never write a poem? That is true for some of us, but poetry is hardly a standard skill set among neurotypicals. It is, after all, uncommon experiences and mindsets that shape creativity. What is poetry, after all, but the manifestation of uncommon wonder?

I began this editorial back in May, when we here at Reckoning first decided to produce this special reprint collection. This was seven drafts ago. Each time I sat down to write, I found myself wanting to avoid vulnerability and to explain . . . well, everything. I wanted to be certain we all understood that neurodivergence is more than ADHD and Autism Spectrum Disorder; that the face of neurodivergence is neither white nor male nor USAmerican. Neurodivergence is complex and intersectional, and what is considered neurodivergent can vary greatly with cultural norms. I wanted to define terms and provide helpful links. I was drafting a rebuttal to a certain US public official’s list, both scholarly and emotional. Then I realized that I was coming perilously close to defending our existence. 

We should not need this kind of defence (though too often we do). We do, however, need acknowledgement, and we deserve celebration. Neurodivergent folks live with differences and difficulties that shouldn’t be dismissed, but likewise, with determination and daring that cannot be disregarded. We are out here, every day, doing the deep, meaningful work of living.  And there is much work to do. There are voices to find, voices to lift, especially among the most vulnerable of us. There is art to create. There are discoveries to be made, policies to change, and stereotypes to dismantle. We’ll get to all of those, and more, because 

We have been doing, all along, the very things we continue to be told we can’t.

If we must speak in generalities (because this is apparently what we do, /irato/), let us speak instead of neurodivergent curiosity and creativity, of the many artists, writers, and, yes, poets among us. Let us speak our devotion to making sense of life’s chaos, and not ignore the ongoing contributions of neurodivergent scientists and scholars.  Let us speak of our strong sensitivity to injustice, of the many neurodivergent individuals who pursue careers in social work and activism. We should also speak of our determination to connect with others, to understand and to be understood. There are communication deficits among many of us (this is also a cultural malady affecting neurotypicals, but never mind that), and yet we persist. We listen for words unspoken; we acknowledge the silenced. We continue, despite so many obstacles, to find our voices, to speak for ourselves and for those who cannot.

Among the works collected from Reckoning’s first decade, you’ll find these refrains. Short stories like T.K. Rex’s “SQUAWKER AND DOLPHIN SWIMMING TOGETHER” and Taylor Jones’s “Possession” build communication bridges between disparate communities and species. Powerful works like Mari Ness’s poem “Green Leaves Against the Wind” and Ariadne Starling‘s essay “The X That Means Both Death and Hope” remind us that justice is both personal and political, inextricably intertwined. Jacob Coffin beautifully imagines a greener, more tenable, infinitely possible future, repurposed from an unsustainable present. We meet our current uncertainties with actionable hope.

This special neurodivergent reprint collection is for us—to celebrate, to encourage, and to fortify our neurodivergent contributors, readers, and supporters. However, it is shared in hope and gratitude with everyone, wherever you might fit within humanity’s sprawling neurodiversity. If you have found yourself a little lost in reading this editorial, please know that I did, in fact, find a way to over-explain. In the back pages of this issue you’ll find definitions, explanations, and resources.

When I consider the struggles of this present moment, and the voices that seek to drown out those of neurodivergent individuals and communities, I am reminded of nature’s song. Cacophony seems an overused word, and yet it is filled with breath, with the rise and fall of syllables, notes dulcet and discordant. It embraces every cadence of birdcall, every splash and screech, scurry and slither; it holds within it the dissonance of the chase, the flee, the sweet stench of decay, the quiet flights, and the screaming iridescence. There is room for the consonance and dissonance of humanity’s harmony, though many of us would rather not consider ourselves a part of it, and some of us try too hard to decide who gets to sing at all. We forget that the chorus has always been divergent, that the moth’s silence is not unspeaking.

There is poetry in its wings.

We didn’t start the fire.

The smell of burning wood is pouring in the open window over my bed, filling my nostrils before I even have the chance to open my eyes. The last time I smelled smoke this strong was two summers ago when the corner of my trailer was on fire. I don’t jump out of bed, though. These fires are an emergency of a different kind. The winds have been blowing from the northeast for five days; the sky is hazy, and the sun looks like a lens flare from the wildfires in Quebec. It’s hard to say if the smell will disappear if the wind shifts because the province of Ontario is also on fire. The bush behind my house has yet to catch, but the nearby community has.

Last night my Elder’s husband was driving around the rez with tobacco pouches to find a firekeeper for his brother-in-law’s funerary arrangements. He joked that they didn’t have to do this because the presence of the Catholic Church had prevented them from practicing their ways. It was illegal. Over here, the people light and tend a sacred fire when someone walks on to aid them in their journey to the spirit world. It feels ironic to be lighting fires in the middle of wildfire season, and the bitterness I am feeling is matched only by the acrid smell of smoke wafting through my trailer.

I remember my father shouting at the tv screen during the evening news one day that he didn’t understand why people who live in Tornado Alley in the US don’t just move. Why do they continue to live in places where they know their homes will be destroyed? Before I understood the world, I’d agree with him. Now I know. In the 50s and 60s there was a lot of uranium mining around here, and corporations in charge had promised economic development to the reserve if they would host an acid plant for processing the mineral. Having barely survived generations of poverty and having been promised that it was safe, the people agreed. Three generations later, they’re still waiting for the government to make good on a grant to clean up the site. The chiefs have signed another bad faith deal for a quarry up the highway in the wetlands that threatens to disturb the uranium tailings. I want to scream at them, ‘Don’t you remember what happened last time?’ And remind them of when they had to move the pow-wow grounds because the dancers were getting holes in their moccasins from the acid that had seeped into the earth.

Now I know why people stay. Even if I could afford to move somewhere else, my adoptive family is elderly, and I can’t leave them to haul their water if the watershed becomes poisoned again. I also can’t abandon the land; she has welcomed me and loved and nurtured me in emotional health. If I leave to go somewhere else, the destruction will follow. I cry for the land and the people who have forgotten that all the wealth we need around us comes from the surface we stand and rest our bodies on. ‘The bush has everything we need,’ I had said at a meeting of native and non-native grassroots people for the protection of the Blanding’s Turtles. ‘If the water becomes poisoned, we won’t be able to hunt or harvest; then we will know true poverty,’ I said with vibrato, my voice shaking so much.

I have long suspected that the ‘proposed quarry,’ the one that has already been signed off on for the trap rock in the Canadian Shield, is so desired to build the billion-dollar highway from the south of us to stretch up to the lowlands of James Bay, the 5,000-kilometers-wide ‘Ring of Fire’ touted as the most significant mineral deposit in the country. More importantly, though, the remoteness of this territory means that life has remained relatively unchanged for the dozen or so First Nations in the area. And while I can’t speak for them or their experiences of poverty, I know that the wholesale destruction of the land makes me afraid. More afraid than being shot at by militarized police and mercenaries for oil and mining companies deployed to every land-defending camp across the continent in the last few years.

The provincial government has removed endangered wildlife protections and the firefighting budget. They want to, quite literally, smoke us out so they have unfettered access to the minerals below the surface. This has always been the goal of the colonial project and the genocide of Indigenous peoples globally.

I look out my window at what Grandma calls ‘our emerald green forest.’ ‘I’m scared,’ she’d said just a few days ago, ‘that soon our emerald green forest won’t be so green anymore.’ I know what it feels like for me, a person who has just rediscovered what it means to be human again in the last decade and a half, but I can’t imagine what it must feel like for her, who has always lived in this way. When I was depressed, Grandma told me to go outside and pick the bright yellow flowers that looked like sunshine. ‘Three breaths,’ she says. ‘In the language, we call this medicine. The people say when you are three breaths from suicide, you make a tea and ask this medicine for help.’ And the red clover that grows all around is for balancing estrogen hormones and preventing osteoporosis, the horsetail that grows by the base of the big shield rock behind the house is for collagen, the sweetgrass that grows high around my plywood cabin exterior is for soothing the nerves. ‘Everything we need is in the bush,’ I whisper to myself again.

We need help keeping medical professionals at the health center up the hill. One nurse practitioner works seven days a week, one day in each community along the North Shore of Lake Huron. With rising food costs and soon-to-be privatized health care, what will we do when the land is too poisoned to use folk medicine? What will we do when the rivers and lakes are too poisoned to fish? Every day it’s looking more and more like those who remember what it means to be human will have to give our bodies for the land and the faces that haven’t appeared yet.

Cloud, Cloud

In Egypt, at the 27th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP27), a South Pacific leader asks the world to bear witness to the death of his homeland. He is speaking from a screen. In a full suit, flanked by the flags of his country and the UN, he stands behind a lectern on the shore of a nondescript island. His voice carries over the sounds of water on sand, wind through palm trees, and tropic birdsong. He says his islands are sinking. Rising sea levels will swallow Tuvalu whole in a matter of decades. The world has not acted quickly enough since his last speech at COP26. International law determines that a country is legitimized by its physical reality. Tuvalu shrinks. Tuvalu watches king tides erode their statehood.

Addressing the international stage—including the imperial core of industrial and military giants complicit in the climate crisis—Foreign Minister Simon Kofe delivers his people’s final plan for relocation. We have no choice but to become the world’s first digital nation. They will move online. They will somehow upload 3,000 years of history, language, art, culture, stories, people, memories, places, sounds, to the metaverse.

The video is a three minute speech and a slow reveal. It’s a re-creation of Kofe’s recorded message for COP 26 the year before: a lectern and flags set outside, a close-up shot of his bust that pulls back as he speaks. That time, Kofe was revealed to be standing in knee-deep seawater. We are sinking, he said. We cannot wait any longer. A provocative staging, a nation and her ambassador partly submerged. This time, Kofe has remained on the beach and there’s a distinct surreality to his background. You are to believe he’s speaking from the same place as before—the last remnants of Tuvalu’s first casualty in the climate crisis—a small, disappearing island called Te Afualiku. But instead of rising seawater, the camera pulls back to reveal a simulation: Kofe is not in Tuvalu’s islands at all. Instead, he looks out from Te Afualiku’s digital twin. He speaks from a future homeland—an illusion which quickly gives itself away by the tell-tale sheen of video game graphics, palm tree leaves that cast shadows but lack texture. The uncanny flatness of Gaussian blurred skin and sand, an image that falters as it widens toward the pixelated edge. White birds and coral rock wink in and out of existence, a daytime scene is set against a contradictory black sky that is not a sky at all but a data void, loading…loading. It is the first digital rendering of Tuvalu’s family of islands. A reanimated corpse—swallowed by water, rebirthed online. It is the place where Tuvalu has been made to hear its last rites.

The video was a collaboration between the Government of Tuvalu and The Monkeys—part of Accenture Song, and therefore Accenture [ACN), the gargantuan tech company whose employee count is roughly the entire population of Seattle. Its global virality after COP27 belongs to ACN, whose client projects range from national climate advocacy to Bitcoin Super Bowl ads. ACN’s self-proclaimed goal is to help the world’s leading businesses and governments “build their digital core.” They believe in the promise of technology, that the digital future is as real and vital as the deteriorating present. When faced with the question of an island’s drowning, they proposed a sovereignty that goes beyond homeland—untethered, invulnerable. A 200 billion dollar company offers a powerful dream: if reality fails, the immaterial plane will redefine its tenets. In the future, statehood is forever.

Tuvalu’s digital-nation launch would reach some 2.1 billion people globally. I watched it on TikTok that week.

I had just come home from a public hearing: a new resolution to halt U.S. military construction of a live-fire training range. Some 6.7 million rounds of lead ammunition to be fired annually above Guam’s main water source. The resolution was our latest protective attempt in a years-long battle to prevent our islands from becoming mass testing grounds. We’d been here before—our third time in the legislature that year. I hadn’t expected people to show up. They came in a crowd: a young girl in purple overalls holding a painted sign, two old men in dusty polos sporting veteran hats, a row of college students in matching shirts, four senatorial candidates for next year’s election, a pair of moms and their squirmy babies, cultural dancers in traditional regalia. It was a big day. It was a long day. It felt like every big, long day we had organized over the past decade of military buildup activities.

We pled our case for three and a half hours. We itemized our death: 338 acres of bulldozed limestone forest. 260 football fields of our oldest trees and natural filtration systems, gone. Impending lead contamination. 79 ancestral sites impacted. Bones unearthed. Bones boxed and stored in filing cabinets. Re-death. Reburial. We appealed to life: 1.7 million gallons of Guam’s water drawn per day from that single aquifer. We took turns testifying. We held signs. We cited studies. A recurring song and dance performed on the worn edge of old frontlines—our litany for the surviving.

I said my piece and went home in a daze. How much longer of this, do we think. 27 WhatsApp notifications from three different community groupchats. Pictures from the roadside wave where my mouth is somehow open in every single shot. YouTube link to the Guam Legislature recorded livestream of the hearing. Poll for the best day to meet next month to discuss base-building strategies. A clip of the young girl in purple who made the room cry. I tapped to expand the video. I remember her as a child, following her mom to Chamoru language classes with her rainbow assortment of sparkly gel pens. She tells the senators that she’s been coming to these hearings since she was a toddler. She’s graduating high school soon. She doesn’t know if she’ll have children of her own but she hopes she can tell them that she tried. She chokes up when she talks about the land, about a future, better Guam. The room is silent. I still can’t tell if we were all crying for the same reasons. I wish I hadn’t heard her testify. It made me morose. No one tells you how long you’re supposed to keep doing this when you start. The future is a wall.

I muted WhatsApp and scrolled TikTok instead. I saw a video with a Tuvalu flag emoji in the caption and immediately liked it before it could play. I watched as you watch all Pacific news when the world doesn’t pay your region any attention—in solidarity. Then the camera pulled back. And I listened in stunned silence to Kofe’s words playing over a badly rendered VR scene: The world has not acted, so we in the Pacific have had to act . . . we’ll move them to the cloud.

I couldn’t stomach it. The thought of any of our islands reduced to a crude Facebook Sims project with Halo graphics made me ill. I watched it anyway. Because Tuvalu asked. And in the many Pacific sagas of mass dispossession, we are rarely allowed the dignity of last rites. The glitchy birds, the shiny trees, the black sky. Kofe said in his UN speech what we never really get to say in the courtrooms where we beg for help—that mostly, it’s too late. On the international stage and in legislative hearings, the rules are simple: you don’t air grievances without presenting solutions. Any acknowledgment of permanent loss must be accompanied by a meticulous breakdown of advocacy plans, mitigation, and compromise. This is how you’re asked to turn existential mourning into political momentum. In the strategic landscapes of grant-funded projects, the benevolent hands of federal programs, philanthropy orgs, and national museums will throw millions of dollars toward the campaigns of native revitalization—but they do not fund vigils. They have a vested interest in the process of resurrection. No one seems to know what the plan is if none of this shit works out.

The tonal expectation in the goals-outcomes-outputs model of project planning for Indigenous creation has struck as a mass muffling. It resists declarations of catastrophic loss. Gestures at dystopia like Kofe’s undead nation are an ideological liability, a contagious defeatism that kills movements and meaningful base-building. Humanities councils, national coalitions, global initiatives—the great problem solvers of the world offer the dispossessed mile-long applications for assistance that all hinge on the fantasy of our immutable restoration: if you can tell us how you’re dying and how you’ll fix it, then we’ll help you.

The Tuvalu launch of Te Afualiku’s digital twin, then, is a blunt unfixing. As Kofe speaks from a doomed future, he calls into question the deceptive optimism of climate movements that have run out of time. If you won’t accept an invitation to our funerals, then you will deal with our reanimated corpse. If you refuse to hear that it’s too late, we will speak to you from where you have sentenced us: the polity of memory.

a black flower

In Tokyo, at a live show in a dim bar, artists from Okinawa and Guam sing to each other about an old homeland. The crowded room is thick with attentive quiet, lit in tungsten yellow. The wooden walls are a mosaic of linocut posters and rebel iconography haphazardly tacked over every inch of visible space. A painted underwater scene with a mother and child dugong that says NO BASE! An anthropomorphic cat character aims his slingshot at a sky full of helicopters. OSPREY OUT, NO NUKES, SAVE TAKAE. The rolled corner of a silhouetted Che Guevara portrait droops from the ceiling. Some thirty anti-war resisters and serious jazz fans have sardined their way into this upper room that is part izakaya, part pocket-meeting space. Music in English, Japanese, and Chamoru is performed with minimal translation. I’ve come because my sister and her husband are one of the guest bands, Microchild, and we wanted an excuse to visit our friends in Asagaya.

Mostly though, I’ve come for Mizuki—a clever translator and artist who’s been organizing in the Okinawan demilitarization movement for over a decade. She’s friends with the bar owner, the singer from Takae who’s wearing a very cool hat, the pretty belly dancer who performs during the week, the table of old ladies sitting close to the stage, and us—the visitors from Guam. Mizuki knows everyone. She wears a neat bob and smiles with her whole face. She drinks all of us under the table despite being 4’11 and never seems to suffer from hangover. I first met her in Guam, where most people encounter Japanese visitors as tourists—but Mizuki is not a tourist. She’s a resistance leader whose faction consists of highly-organized Japanese grandmas and grandpas who all remember the war. Once a year they visit Guam in little groups to build support across our community movements. Mizuki calls the trips de-tours. When she speaks about Guam she often says I love you and I’m sorry.

Chamorus in Japan can be a confounding spectacle. The entangled history is brutal and sad like everyone else’s in the Pacific theater during WWII. Japan paraded their war crimes across many islands. We were raised by the occupied generation whose landscapes shifted beneath them: villages carpet-bombed, jungles flattened, roads widened. Every day on my way to work, I drive across a river that trails a valley where Chamorus in labor camps were tortured, raped, and beheaded by Japanese imperial soldiers. Then the war ended, some survived, an empire rehabilitated their image, and my grandparents who were there for it all raised kids whose kids love anime. Time passed anyway.

I look across the room and Mizuki beams at me with a watery smile. Soragoro, the Okinawan man, sings Aguas de Marco in his native tongue. A stick, a stone, a sliver of glass. He offers a traditional song from Takae in northern Okinawa, where helipads threaten to destroy his home. He says culture is resistance. He sings and tap-dances and smiles in one sustained lilt. He could be a Yanbaru forest bird. He could be summer rain. Microchild follows his act and performs songs off their Chamoru album, Sengsong Mapagåhes (trans. ‘cloud village’). Eclectic sounds of jazz and soft rock frame vocal laments like the title track and Remember Me—songs that speak of a great vanishing, of a cloud that cannot be seen but whose rain can be heard. A melodica, a sax, a guitar. The trio moves from crooning restraint to lifting crescendos and the room rises and falls with them. I take as many videos as I can. My mom back home is texting me for the play by play. I forget to order something to eat, and matching Mizuki drink for drink makes me warm and dizzy. The show concludes with a spontaneous duet by Soragoro and Microchild performing Blue Moon, parrying the same melody back and forth in Japanese then Chamoru—harmonious in tone, dissonant in language, jazz in execution. The night slips into a pleasant buzz as my foggy knowledge of the original song lyrics in English floats to the surface. Something about a moon that saw us dreaming—alone, then together.

Our walk back to the hotel takes five goodbyes: one in the bar, one at the top of the stairs, one at the bottom of the stairs, one out the window, and one shouted down the street before we turn the corner and out of Mizuki’s sight. The cold has sobered me up enough to follow my sister in a straight line. She gestures widely to her husband, and I think of my grandma. Shannon has a way of benignly pointing at things as we pass them that reminds me of those hands—my grandma walking by a cafe sign and reading it aloud with no intent to expound on whether or not we should further investigate the place or if she’s been there before or if she’s in the mood for a hot beverage. A sort of general, constant acknowledgement of our surroundings. I wonder if our being here makes her ghost a little sad. Tokyo turns my mind into a river. I trail each memory upstream, through the long and tired years.

Sixteen summers before this one: I’m in my grandma’s living room. She’s telling my aunt about a valley. Japanese soldiers. A slow march to a wide clearing. The soldiers are hostile and on-edge. Something is coming. A girl falls in the road and doesn’t get up, an uncle is cut down in the mud. My aunt is asking about a song my grandma struggles to recall. At night they couldn’t be loud. The lyrics remain unclear. They sang in whispers and slept in rows. Crowded bodies murmuring like cicadas. Five summers before this one: I’m marching in Japan with Mizuki. Thousands gather in Hiroshima for the August anniversary. I speak with nuclear survivors here for the World Conference Against A&H Bombs, the soft voice of a translator in my earpiece. An old man describes a river of bodies. Melted skin. Red and red and red. After the public hearings, earlier in the year: my feet are warmed through my shoes as I stand on hot concrete and read a memorial plaque above a glass-covered pit. I’m in Tinian, a sister island north of Guam, at an overgrown airfield. I’m standing where the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs were loaded into the bellies of B-29s and sent off to level a city. The memories blur, my vision swims. The heat of nested summers. I don’t know if I’m remembering it all correctly. I follow my thoughts like receding water until I exit in a cloud.

My sister turns around and tells me she’s hungry. Her husband is navigating us to an udon spot and she’s laughing with too many teeth at a joke I didn’t catch. We’re absolutely sauced. She begins to hum very loudly, a little badly. A group of nice strangers applaud her as they overtake us on the narrow alley path. I try and fail to place the melody.

 

Blue moon, you saw me standing alone.

Blue moon, now I’m no longer alone.

a black flower

In Yona, the road cuts through a valley and I’m still fifteen minutes late to work. I’ve gauged it all wrong again. Woke up early enough to get ready slowly, went slower still. One minute lost scanning the fridge for a nonexistent apple. Three minutes lost listening to the rain. Five minutes lost trying to decide if the rain is bad enough for an umbrella or if a jacket will suffice. Two minutes lost sitting in the car deciding which station will upset me the least. Four minutes lost checking the office group chat to see if work will cancel for inclement weather, even though we never cancel. I’m stuck behind a school bus for predictable reasons. Traffic crawls up the hill near Pago Bay. A pond-sized puddle will soon be a flood warning.

I piecemeal the news through radio static. Operations have begun at the northwest field live-fire training range. It is an uncharacteristically rainy January. Camp Blaz’s completion initiates the multiyear relocation of 5,000 U.S. Marines to Guam. High-surf warning for Boat Basin and Rick’s Reef. Stars and Stripes reports that the plan to move the Marines off Okinawa was born out of massive protests following the 1995 rape of a 12-year-old Okinawan girl by two Marines and a sailor. A developing system 100 miles south of Guam brings heavy showers. Locals demanded the closure of Marine Corps Air Station Futenma due to safety concerns in a densely packed urban area and sought a smaller U.S. military footprint there. 2023 was the second highest year of rainfall ever for Guam since NOAA began recording in 1945. Post-Typhoon Mawar, scientists claim we can expect an increase of extreme weather in the Pacific as climate conditions worsen.

I’m beginning to second-guess the net benefit of morning news. Water drips through the torn seal of my passenger window, sloshes inside the back left door, pools at my feet. Something up the road has halted traffic altogether. I can’t see further than the car in front of me and this too, feels familiar. We idle and I wait for a sign. Nothing moves here but the rain. Where are any of us supposed to go?

 

We in the Pacific have had to act

We’ll move them to

The cloud

//

Sa’ malingu yu’, malingu yu’

(because i have vanished, vanished)

Sengsong Mapagåhes

(cloud village)

Sengsong Mapagåhes

(cloud village)

—Kofe // Microchild

A Haunting in Future Perfect Tense

these threads capture the shadows

and force them to account for the silence

these threads bind your sight to the sob

—Alejandra Pizarnik

these threads capture the shadows

and force them to account for the silence

these threads bind your sight to the sob

—Alejandra Pizarnik

1

Creo que sueñas con una persona cuando la piensas demasiado, Wagner says. Todo el tiempo, todo el tiempo, todo el tiempo.1 It took over a year after Roni’s disappearance in the Sonoran Desert for Wagner to dream of his brother, but once they started, the dreams didn’t stop.

Wagner is Roni’s older brother, and after he left Chiapas for the states, Roni decided to come too. He called Wagner from the tiny border town of Sasabe, Sonora, just before he began the trek across the Sonoran Desert into the US. He knew the guide would take him on a route called El Cerro Elefante, Elephant Peak, after a landmark that won’t be found on any map. Years before, Wagner had made the same journey, so he offered Roni advice. He says Roni was happy. Ponte muy abusado2, Wagner told him. Esto no es un juego3. Wagner never heard from his brother again.

Except in dreams. Inside the purgatorial nature of ambiguous loss, the disappeared are suspended for their family members in a space between life and death. Dreams offer both a mirror of the terrible uncertainty families find themselves in and an escape from it. Dreams are the only space where the missing loved ones can be experienced anew, where they can be present tense. And unlike dreams of the officially dead, dreams of the missing can be interpreted as messages from some corner of the world where the missing loved one is caught and alive.

Ojalá que este sueño me durara, Wagner says. Quisiera tener un sueño largo de dos, tres horas. Ponerme hablar con él y preguntarle todo.4

I listened to Wagner’s story in a podcast produced by the Colibrí Center for Human Rights as part of their Historias y Recuerdos project5, which records oral histories from families whose loved ones have disappeared in the Sonoran Desert. The Colibrí Center facilitates networks for families of the disappeared and works with the Pima County Office of the Medical Examiner to match DNA samples they’ve taken from families with DNA taken from remains recovered in the desert.

For the Colibrí Center, success occurs when a match is made between a family and a set of remains. Colibrí’s work is to solidify death, to bind the missing to an end. The match rescues the dreamer from the dream’s uncertain origin.

 

2

A year after I first moved to Arizona in 2008, I worked for a conservation corps whose range covered the entire state. Our first job took place in the Coronado National Forest on the US-Mexico Border. Near the military town of Sierra Vista, a huge, white Border Patrol blimp hulked above us while we worked. We were tasked with finding mountainous piles of backpacks, shoes, clothing, water bottles, and discarded tuna cans in places where guides would have groups of migrants stop and ditch their belongings. We would locate one of these piles, then stuff everything into neon green, ultra-thick trash bags to be evacuated by helicopters later and taken to a dump somewhere. They told us to shake out any shoes we found in case there were bones stuck inside. They didn’t say much else. It was the first time I began to understand the Arizona borderlands as a vast and indeterminate graveyard.

At the time of this writing, the Pima County Office of the Medical Examiner (PCOME) database contains the DNA of over 1,300 remains found in the desert. For six months after being found, the remains, often skeletonized by harsh desert conditions, are stored in refrigerated containers at PCOME. The holding capacity is always at a tipping point, and they have applied for funding to create a separate storage facility. If remains aren’t identified after 6 months, they are cremated, and each set of cremated remains is placed in a small, brown box. The small, brown boxes sit in a room on top of other small, brown boxes, stacked five feet high against all of the walls. Not all of the remains in boxes are unidentified, but since the repatriation process is very costly, and home countries often do not have or do not provide the funds, families might wait years to scrape together enough money to bring what is left of their loved ones home. And so the boxes of the cremated remains of people who have died crossing the desert, known and unknown, pile up in a room in a building near the air force base in the south of Tucson.

Beyond the city which contains this room, there are massive stretches of land empty and near empty of human life. Because large trees only grow on high elevation mountains, most of the desert is laid bare. It is often the land itself, its rolling and jagged rises and folds, which blocks lines of sight. In places closest to the border there is always the possibility that a dry riverbed or hillside might hold a femur, a jawbone, a desiccated corpse.

In the desert, people can disappear without a trace. Their remains may never be found. A set of recovered remains serves as a trace of a disappearance, but the identity of those remains may never be discovered. A set of recovered remains may never be matched with a family, and families may never find what remains of their missing loved ones.

A haunting permeates the Sonoran Desert, simultaneously in past, present, and future tense. The people who died. The deaths which are occurring. The deaths which will occur. And an even stranger grammar: future perfect. All of the deaths yet to be discovered. The deaths which, if their remains are found or matched with loved ones, will have been.

 

3

As they often do, the inscrutable logics of the border changed direction at the end of 2023. Suddenly there were hundreds of migrants camped out on the US side of the border wall, about 70 miles southwest of Tucson. Everyone was waiting for the chance to ask for asylum, and Border Patrol, which usually chases people down for crossing illegally, took their time coming around. The families, many with toddlers in tow, were left for days in the desert while Border Patrol refused to pick them up. Local aid groups set up a makeshift camp, and I drove down with friends to pass out supplies for a day.

The Trump wall is very high, and the dirt road which runs alongside it extremely steep. There are breaks in the wall where the construction is incomplete, and there are many holes which people have cut in order to cross. Three men in black balaclavas ran back to the Mexican side with an axe when we drove by. They were using the axe to make a new hole in a patch Border Patrol had made over an old hole. We waved to them, and they waved back. As we traveled, the sun shone through the slats of the wall in staccato flashes which made me dizzy.

It has been said that the Anthropocene is some sort of time travel, Bayo Akomolafe writes, in an essay6 on ancestry and apocalypse. It is almost as if we are looking back at ourselves from the devastation of a toxic, posthuman world, trying to understand our age. I closed my eyes while my friend drove, thrust myself into the future, and imagined the Sonoran Desert as an archeological site of the Anthropocene. Instead of confronting the climate crisis, the world’s second largest greenhouse gas emitter turned the ecosystem at its southern border into a militarized graveyard, evidence of which could be found in the belongings of those forced to take the dangerous journey and the bones of those who didn’t make it. The wall still stood, in its patchwork illogic, a strange spine cutting the land, rusted out. Abandoned surveillance towers leaned askew like slowly falling skeletons. Piles of tires, once dragged to clear roads for footprints, rotted in the hot desert sun. A human of the future, I stood among the rubble of my ancestors, shivering at the traces they left behind.

One day, we will all have died, and we will all have lived in what Dionne Brand calls a vicious period7. Tucson, like all border towns, and the towns which bordered them, and the towns which bordered them, will have existed on the edge of a terrible brutality. As residents of the United States, we will have lived in an age, in an empire, which placed very little value on human life, very little value on life at all.

If families of the missing will have been suspended by this brutality in an ambiguous and oneiric present tense, the towns which bordered the brutality will have been suspended outside of a reckoning which should have been taking place as the crisis unfolded. Much of the general public will have had an amnesiac, dissociated, subterranean relationship to the crisis at the southern border. More, we will have lived in a world in which the general consensus of the Global North will have been that it would not receive the citizens of the Global South as they fled the worsening conditions produced by the insatiable economies of the North.

Whether this will have continued as the prevailing consensus remains yet to be seen, but anyone standing close to the border will have been warped by its logic, and we are all standing close to the border.

 

4

On a hot summer evening in Tucson I went to an event in the backyard of a border education organization. The crowd contained young people recently involved in immigration organizing and elders who have been working on these issues for the majority of their lives. We sat in rows of plastic chairs listening to local thinkers and community organizers share their reflections. It was hot, even for June in Tucson. The backs of our knees sweated, and a hole in the ground erupted with black ants.

It was shocking, someone acknowledged, how far the immigration movement had fallen since the early years of the Obama administration. No party stands with immigrants. Still, many of the people who spoke felt that a different paradigm was possible, and that if we could articulate and work for a logic of open borders8 and unbuilt walls9, then we could see it through.

The meeting had opened with a moment of silence. We were given space to think of the people indigenous to the land, to think of the people of Palestine, and of the people who have died trying to cross the desert. We were instructed to close our eyes, and we were called into presence. As sometimes happens inside a collective silence, the space seemed to expand beyond our edges. Time and space folded briefly so that disparate injustice and resistance could touch. We closed our eyes under the same sky whose darkness holds webs of families dreaming of their absent loved ones. We breathed the vapors of these dreams. I thought of Wagner’s voice reaching towards his dreams of Roni. Me da más fuerza, he says, Me da fé sobre todo porque lo veo en el sueño, lo veo bien.10


1. “I think you dream about someone when you think about them too much. All the time, all the time, all the time.”

2. “Pull yourself together”

3. “This is not a game.”

4. “I ask God to give me these dreams. I’d like to have a dream that lasts two, three hours so that I could talk to him. Ask him questions.”

5. Quotations are taken from an audio interview with Wagner recorded in Tucson, AZ in 2018 and produced by Perla Torres as part of the Colibrí Center for Human Rights’ Historias y Recuerdos project.

6. Akomolafe, Bayo. When You Meet the Monster, Anoint its Feet.” Emergence Magazine.

7. Brand, Dionne and Naimon, David. Between the Covers Podcast. Tin House, 2022.

8. Washington, John. The Case for Open Borders. Haymarket Books, 2024.

9. Shah, Silky. Unbuild Walls: Why Immigrant Justice Needs Abolition. Haymarket Books, 2024.

10. “It gives me more strength. It gives me faith above all, because I see him in the dream, and he is well.”

The Coming of Sahara

Climate Change is an angry beast and we are poking it with sticks

—Wallace Broecker

A lot is changing. A whole lot, and just like Nma, my mother, would say, I can feel it in my body. I can also feel these changes. Nonetheless, I think the changes have gone beyond feelings. I see and hear them everywhere and every passing day. At night, usually before dawn, the wind sings in that voice that resembles an ancient masquerade. It is very scary. Some years back, it used to be like a soothing whistle or flute, something susurrant, until the trees around danced in harmonious bliss to the alluring tune of the wind, spraying out their leaves to the ground when the show ended. Now the wind rattles our windows and doors, sweeps in different calibres of polythene bags and other assorted wastes into our compound, and keeps us half awake at night praying that it doesn’t pull off our roof.

I can also see it coming. In 2015, when I went to stay in far away Gusau, a town located in northern Nigeria along the Sahelian savannah region of the country with my aunt and her family, I couldn’t help but notice how different their environment was from where I was residing, how flat their landscape was, which stretched and stretched one’s eyes until all one could see was the Earth running into the light blue and wooly white sky. How devoid of trees those landscapes were—a scenario which I later learnt in school to be caused by aridity plus desert encroachment.

Gusau was usually hot, especially during the day, even during rainy season. Standing under the sun for too long would result in a nefarious headache to end your day. There were days you wouldn’t even dare walk under it. It felt as though you could stretch out your hands, jump up a little and touch the sun. The surest survival kits for such days were chilled water to quench the burning thirst in your throat and enough of the lukewarm water for bathing each time you felt stuffy and itchy. And coupled with all that, there was serious water scarcity. Morning meant piling up buckets and jerry cans in search of water either from open wells or pipe-borne taps. Long was the queue, fierce was the struggle, impure was the water that we could only use to bathe or wash clothes, especially water from the wells.

I fear the aridity is encroaching into our Guinea savannah region. I fear that the rash and hostile weather condition of Gusau has trailed me back to Nasarawa state where I live with my family. Every day, I pray that the heat and scarcity of water is just a slight change in weather—nothing more, nothing less.

a black flower

I began to notice these changes in my community at the beginning of the year when I returned home from a one-year stay in Lafia, another town kilometers away from where I reside with my family. I live in a rural community that is fast becoming urbanized, but without the necessary social amenities. Houses are cramped into each other and we rarely have electricity to cushion the effect of heat on us. Probably because my community is densely populated, with almost everyone racing against time to make ends meet, most people are too bothered by the economic unfriendliness of the country, to focus their attentions on the changes. But I noticed them within two weeks of my arrival.

Everywhere was dry, and the air was whitened with mist and dry cold in the morning and brown with dust in the evening. I knew these were the prominent features of harmattan, but I felt it was unlike the others that had preceded it. At the turn of February, the cold, misty morning left and was replaced by windy morning, stormy evening and hotter afternoons. And I began to long for the rainy season to arrive.

My mother used to say that it is the romance between the sky and the Earth that birth rain: each time the Earth blows the sky a kiss, she becomes too overwhelmed and shed down tears of joy. What happens to the romance during dry season, especially moments when there was no power and the room was very hot? I would ask. She would point out places that were still having rainfalls in the country. She also added that in her childhood days, they experienced longer rainy periods, and rivers hardly carted away valuables like a heartless thief. A lot of questions kept bothering me: does this indicate we would be experiencing shorter but destructive rains in the future? or dryer and intensely hot heat periods?

In answer to my questions, we experienced irregularities in rainfallmonths that were known for intense rainfalls recorded not more than 10 rains, excluding rainshowers when it drizzles for hours non-stop, which was unlike it. To make matters worse, other neighbouring places and towns down the River Niger were having more rainfall than our town. Nma usually would quip, “See, the rain didn’t fall again. There is too much killings in Nigeria for God to send us rain.”

“But it rained in towns and villages closeby,” I would reply. “Besides, we are not the ones engaging in the killings for God to deny us rain.” I know she was aware of the changes in climatic conditions, but since she was raised in a Christian home, her only justification for it was tied down to religion: God’s wrath on man for turning their backs on him, just like Sodom and Gomorrah, just like in the times of Noah. She knows nothing about global warming as the cause of the ever-changing climate. She knows nothing about the imminent effects climate change will have on us, especially countries located below the sub-Saharan Africa. She knows nothing about how millions of Africans were encouraging desert encroachment by cutting down trees for diverse reasons. So I joined her to pray and longed for the rain so that we would have water in our wells and our crops would grow robustly.

a black flower

During my undergraduate year in the University where I was pursuing a degree in Environmental Management, we were taught that trees contribute immensely to rainfall and its distribution across each region, reasons why the rainforest zone of Nigeria, with so many trees, experiences more rainfall than the savanna and arid regions of the country.

My residence posseses few of these natural components of the environment: few intermittent rivers and fewer scanty trees. In fact, the fewer trees that had survived deforestation in the past, especially big trees that took up space, were going down for new-erected buildings. Fruit trees were countable because of how they become prey to stubborn boys when they start fruiting. This has resulted in fewer trees and hotter afternoons with nowhere to cool off, so you are forced to remain in your hot room, enduring the heat if there is no electricity.

To cap it all, the most ugliest experience is water scarcity. Shortage of water has become a threat to society. Wells are drying up, and it felt like our well was the first to empty its waters. We began to source for water in other open wells around. The first two weeks, we fetched in the afternoon or morning, until the interest of other water searchers began to materialize on the open wells. There were days we would go to the wells to find them dry, dirty and almost empty.

We re-strategized and started fetching the water at dawn before everyone else woke up. But that didn’t help, because the water seemed to be dwindling in quantity by the day, with or without competition from others.

One hot afternoon in the middle of April, I came out to find water to cool off because the weather was considerably hot and saw some children moving to and fro like ants with pails of water of different sizes on their heads. I traced them to their source only to realize it was a pure water bottling companyTruine Bakery and Pure Water Companythat was giving out free water to people. I joined the queue immediately.

Children were stopped from playing and asked to join in fetching the water. Every drop was precious. Everything that had the capacity to hold water was to be filled. Every trip counted, and so the more the heads carrying buckets of water, the sooner the house gets filled with it. One woman even remarked that weren’t the children the ones who consumed water the more? I didn’t agree to that, but I said nothing, listening to the conversations and the women asking their children the same questions: Are all the drums in the house filled up? What of the ones outside?

Soon, it got to my turn, and I took the water home, informing everyone about the turn of events. We too soon came out with our buckets and anything that needed to be filled with water.

And that became our own water cycle system—women fetching water in the morning while children roamed around in the evening looking for water. During school vacation, the children were saddled with the duties of sourcing water no matter the distance.

a black flower

At the beginning of 2023, I got a teaching job at a private secondary school close to where I reside. I find it really tasking, nurturing the future leaders of the country, but what I found more tasking was getting up very early for work after spending most parts of the nights fanning myself with an old magazine to assuage the heat and the body itching that follows to the barest minimum. At school, the other teachers and I usually inspect the children and accord severe punishment to the defaulters—those that are improperly dressed. It reduces the level of nonchalance and wayward dressing amongst the students. We do this every morning.

One fateful Monday morning towards the end of February, I was inspecting the children for improper dressing. A junior student was without her neck tie. I asked her, why didn’t you knot your tie? and she began to play with her fingers, whispering. I lowered myself to her face level, bringing my ears to her mouth. “My mother asked me not to because of my heat rashes.”

“Is that so?” I knew most of the students had series of pranks up their sleeves, so I called another studenta femaleto check to see if it was true or not. They both returned, with the other student confirming the heat rashes. The intense heat of March and April was already rearing its ugly head during the cold harmattan season of February.

The changes are becoming more pronounced. The coldness hangs in the air in the morning, reluctant to leave. The scorching sun sizzles and claims dominance of the afternoon, keeping everyone indoors. Most evenings find mothers crooning for the children to leave the prevalent sandstorms when they are not searching for water. It is taking a toll on everyone.

Maybe one of these days, I will bring it up in my classes. They may have noticed the slight difference in the weather, and it would be a lot of help to them knowing measures that could help them in our climate changing world. It is not too late to teach them about tree planting and nurturing more trees. We all are stakeholders of the environment and it is our responsibility to preserve it. The future is ours to take, and unless we get it right now, the narrative will remain the same, even as the climatic condition continues to change.