The Condor and the Eagle

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The Condor and the Eagle

 
Image of “The Condor and The Eagle” movie poster.https://thecondorandtheeagle.com/

Image of “The Condor and The Eagle” movie poster.

https://thecondorandtheeagle.com/

 

A rush of brightly colored, transitioning animations opens up the documentary film, “The Condor and the Eagle.” We see color and sweeping movement and birds morphing into a river out of which a dancing woman emerges and then spirals back into a soaring bird, all depicted in vivid, eye-capturing animations. 

When Amazon Frontlines first emailed me about the special screening of this film, I thought the title sounded familiar. As soon I saw the opening scenes with these unique animations telling the native prophecy of the condor and the eagle, I realized why I was experiencing déjà vu. I had seen the film previously through a film festival. Since I had already committed my evening to watching the special screening, though, I decided to stick with watching the documentary all the way through again, perhaps looking for things I missed the first time or refreshing my memory of the issues it covered.

In “The Condor and the Eagle,” we follow the journey of several indigenous environmental activists. We are taken to various parts of the continent. Alberta, Canada with Melina. Houston, Texas with Bryan. Manchester, Texas with Yudith. Oklahoma with Casey. All four of these leaders are community organizers in their own way, addressing environmental problems that have been ignored by elected officials but which pose a dangerous threat to the health and wellbeing of their indigenous communities. There is fracking, there is drilling, there are pipelines, and there are oil spills, all disproportionately affecting communities of color. Casey powerfully refers to this as a situation in which “the extractive industry is reeking genocidal processes on us.” It is no longer smallpox and the Trail of Tears, Casey explains. Today, the atrocity against indigenous peoples is in the form of environmental genocide.

We get a glimpse into the lives of each of these activists and we begin to see how their stories overlap. Although they live in different parts of the continent, all of them are continuing the fight of their ancestors: the fight to simply survive. We see the evidence of systematic environmental racism against indigenous people in their stories of families who can’t breathe and all-too-common experiences of nosebleeds, asthma, respiratory illnesses because of close proximity and exposure to environmental hazards.  

Juxtaposed against these scenes of the harsh realities of indigenous people’s suffering through images of factories spewing pollution and rivers full of dead fish, we see a man in a suit, a representative from Valero at a city hall meeting in Houston. It is unlikely that this man has to deal with the consequences of crude oil expansion, but his sole-voice seems to be the only one in that decision for expansion as he stands between the neat rows of benches in the hall. We feel a sigh of relief when we see Yudith step up and make an unfaltering public comment that the community must be a part of these decision making processes since they are the ones ultimately paying the price.

The film transitions as we get another treat of bright, spiritual animations with a slow drum beat accompanying the movement. Our favorite animated bird flaps its wings as it lands near the Tigre River in Peru, and we dive into the journeys of Yudith, Bryan, and Melina travelling to South America. The camera pans over lush, green rainforests, and wide rivers of Peru and Ecuador.

Although this scenery can be deceptive and imply complete preservation of land, Yudith, Bryan, and Melina hear stories that contradict the idea that it has gone untouched. Julia Chuje Ruiz, a leader in the Community of Nuevo Remanente in Peru, tells Bryan of the heartbreaking reality that many community members, including 6 of her children, died after drinking water from their local river. No one had told them that oil was spilled into the river. No one had told them not to drink the water or that it had become toxic. 

It’s not just Julia’s community, we learn. Oil companies have targeted areas in and near the Amazon to exploit the land and its people. The government, which benefits off of the profit, uses sneaky tactics to ensure that oil companies can continue to extract resources no matter the damage to these communities. Indigenous people have paid a hefty price for that greed. Oil spills are never cleaned up. Rivers that function as important resources for local communities are contaminated. We see proof of this as Melina dips her hand into water from a river, only for her white glove to come out thickly coated with dark oil. 

Yudith, Bryan, and Melina hear from local activists who have fought hard to protect their communities from the ravaging and powerful fossil fuel industry. But their trip to the heart of the Amazon is about more than just taking notes on strategies to use back home. As the 3 activists connect with the land and people of the Sarayuka Jungle and Yasuni River, Yudith comments on the fact that she is finally able to breathe without fear of what she is inhaling - a liberating experience. As Bryan explains it, it’s about discovering indigenous roots and “finding your way back home.” In the United States, indigenous people were so heinously stripped of their culture, that this generation finds it difficult to understand their identity and their heritage. For indigenous peoples living tucked away in the dense canopies of Peru and Ecuador, they were able to accomplish something that indigenous peoples in America were not given the chance to: they fought hard to preserve their way of life, and for the most part, are able to continue to live traditionally without compromising their culture. Perhaps being able to maintain that sense of identity and heritage is what gives indigenous communities in this region the leg up on mobilizing to protect their lands, resulting in the powerful, united fight we see them leading today.

When Yudith, Bryan, and Melina return to North America, we see activists, led in part by Casey, coming together in front of the White House to march against the Keystone XL Pipeline extension, which stretches from the Tar Sands in Alberta to the Gulf of Mexico. Pipelines tend to be an enemy of environmentalists because of their potential to spill oil, causing deadly contamination of land and water. They also leak greenhouse gases and other hazardous liquids, leading to more death and destruction. The threat of environmental devastation from the Keystone XL Pipeline, spanning such a long distance, would transcend borders and significantly impact communities all across the continent. The scenes of this protest are a fitting way to wrap up the film since the Keystone XL Pipeline is the embodiment of the continuous threat posed on both indigenous communities and our environment, which are inextricably linked. Although the construction of the extension was resumed by the current president, just days ago, the Supreme Court ruled that the construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline would have to come to a halt. While this is a temporary win for environmentalists and indigenous rights activists alike, the same ruling also allows for over 70 pipelines to proceed construction. As we are reminded throughout “The Condor and the Eagle,” the fossil fuel industry is the most powerful industry in the world; their relentless destruction of our planet is not likely to end so easily. But, taking inspiration from the resilient leaders in the film, that does not mean we stop fighting.

So did anything change the second time I saw this documentary? I think so. Oftentimes, I am drawn to documentaries with drama, tears, and the urge to clap loudly at the end. My favorite documentaries are the ones that have me furiously Google searching to find an organization to donate to or running to the Kleenex box after the film is over. The first time I watched “The Condor and the Eagle,” I didn’t feel any of those things. I didn’t know what to make of some scenes. I felt as though the filmmakers weren’t being clear enough in what they were trying to say. But the second time around, I was actually more appreciative of that fact. 

“The Condor and the Eagle,” doesn’t need to follow the same tracks of a blockbuster documentary film. It doesn’t need to have a dramatic soundtrack and evocative editing, showing you exactly how you need to feel. The documentary preserves the reality of the indigenous community’s experiences, because that reality is harsh enough without any Hollywoodization or added spectacle. The injustices against our planet and the indigenous community are too plainly horrific on their own. After I got over the fact that this documentary didn’t succumb to the typical cookie-cutter style of many documentaries, I was able to understand the message of the film so much better and actually appreciate the way things were not played up, but instead laid out honestly. 

Needless to say, I highly recommend this documentary. It’s important for us to understand the interconnectedness of environmental issues and human rights, as well as the long fight for justice that indigenous communities have been leading. As Crystal Lameman, a member of the Beaver Lake Cree Nation accurately puts it in the film, “If you drink water, and you breathe air, this is about you. This is no longer an ‘Indian’ problem. This is about you.”

The movie is available for only $6 to rent here: https://www.filmsforaction.org/watch/the-condor-and-the-eagle/


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Briefing: Nature in the City

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Briefing: Nature in the City

Healthy cities exist in a state of flux. Change is necessary and good: people come and go, are born and die; industries are carefully harnessed, but almost never become permanent fixtures. A city that never changes is probably not a city at all.
— Samuel Stein, Capital City: Gentrification and The Real Estate State
For the heart, life is simple: it beats as long as it can. Then it stops.
— Karl Ove Knausgaard, My Struggle, Book One

Briefing: Nature in the City, is an introduction to urban forestry and Our City Forest’s planting philosophy and projects in San Jose, CA. It is a living document, updated in real time, using embedded GIS maps indicating planting progress. It can be a point of reference in a time of social distance. 

The nature of planting projects is informed by the material conditions of our environment. Briefing, then, also begins a dialogue on the spatial character of the city.

San Jose, City Scale | Permeable / Impermeable Surfaces

San Jose, City Scale | Permeable / Impermeable Surfaces

The city: an inexorably shifting system of systems. From the first cultural horizon in the history of the land’s early stewards, the Tamyen group of the Ohlone people, to Spanish colonialism, to agricultural eminence, to a global technological center, San Jose and the Santa Clara Valley’s arc of development dictates shifting needs for its populous. 


The area’s exponential rise in population and its simultaneously swift development— beginning in earnest as the 50’s turned 60’s—might be gleaned from the page of Kerouac’s Big Sur (1962): “Soon we’re set straight and pointed head on down beautiful fourlane Bayshore Highway to that lovely Santa Clara Valley—But I’m amazed that after only a few years the damn thing no longer has prune fields and vast beet fields like at Lawrence when I was a breakman on the Southern Pacific and even after, it’s one long row of houses right down the line 50 miles to San Jose like a great monstrous Los Angeles beginning to grow south of Frisco.”

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Cities are simultaneously the present future (pandemic conditions notwithstanding): of continued inhabitance, of economic opportunity, of the environmental zeitgeist. As our cities go, so too, will our planet. They are alive, and as such, changing. And yet? Development is not deterministic: we can improve the urban condition. Our City Forest works to do so—through canopy, conservation, and stewardship. 

This is a primer: Click here to read Briefing: Nature in the City. 

San Martin Community Planting, 2020.Land as Community as Section

San Martin Community Planting, 2020.

Land as Community as Section

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Gardening in Small Spaces

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Gardening in Small Spaces

With shelter-in-place orders in effect, many parks and open space preserves are closed. Many of us are missing our green spaces and want to start our own at home. Some are feeling more distant from friends and family, and find solace in nurturing plants. Others may find self-sufficiency in growing plants for food. In normal times you could look outside the home: volunteer with Our City Forest, join a community garden, help out a friend with their yard, or try covert guerrilla gardening. With social distancing, however, those may be less appealing options.

Regardless of why you may want to start growing plants or a garden, you will need space to do it but maybe you don’t have a yard. Maybe you are renting a room or an apartment. You just might think you don’t have enough space. Well, no worries. There are options for you. It turns out that even in a small space you can grow a successful garden. Even a window or a balcony is sufficient for a start. Some people can make it work with just grow lights.

For a successful small space garden, be sure to choose plants that will do well in your environment. Consider the plants’ environment -- sunlight, humidity, wind, and temperatures.  Most likely, you will have plants in pots or boxes and the size of the container also influences the type of plants you can grow most successfully. Your capacity for plant maintenance is an important consideration as well. If you tend to move often, you will want to think about plants that can move more easily with you. I have a hardy aloe that moved with me half a dozen times! The last couple of times were harder as it had been transplanted to a much larger pot. Whatever plants you decide to get, research the best ways to grow them. 

I once tried to grow air plants in my bathroom, with the naive belief that the humidity from my shower alone would suffice for them to flourish. They did not, however, fare well. And showering more often didn’t help. The room simply did not stay humid enough long enough for them. They did much better after I read about air plant care and started giving them weekly soaks. 

Did you know that you can propagate basil by taking a stem leftover from the kitchen and place it in a jar of water?  Days later, you will see roots sprouting from the basil and, after 2 weeks, you can plant it in a small pot of soil. Eco friendly tip: reuse a plastic yogurt container, or one of those delivery/take-out food containers. Clear containers can be okay, but some plants don’t like sunlight on their roots. Personally, I like to see the root structure through a clear container. Use the appropriate compost mixture for best results. You may scoop some soil from outside, but it comes with risks -- it may not be as rich with nutrients, may contain competing weed seeds, may come with hungry bugs, or contain plant pathogens.

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One year, I ran with this basil-growing plan. Every week, I pinched off a branch of basil and started propagating it and eventually I had a small forest of them growing on shelves by the window. At the end of the season, I froze the basil and used it throughout the next year. A plant stand or shelf can help expand your plant capacity within an area.

Introducing new plants into an indoor garden can come with risks. If bugs sneak in with the new plant, they may spread rapidly over your plants since their natural predators are outside. This is where plant social distancing comes into play. You can designate another space to quarantine your new plants for some time until you feel confident they aren’t harboring bugs or disease. This is something I learned the hard way after white flies and aphids wrecked my plants. Sometimes it is unavoidable if the bugs enter through an open window. Beware open windows!

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Even potentially large plants can be grown in a small space. I started growing some loquat trees from seed after a friend gave me some of their fruit to try -- they’re tasty and grow well in the Bay Area. Keep in mind not all fruit trees grow true to seed or germinate readily in all weather. I kept the loquat trees outside growing on my apartment balcony. They grew well despite the heat and windy weather. On the other hand, an avocado tree I started could not tolerate the wind exposure and suffered. Over time the loquats stayed small as I kept them in small pots. Years later when I got some yard space, I finally planted them. They have since shaken their bonsai form and are flourishing.

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