Showing posts with label Anima Sanctuary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anima Sanctuary. Show all posts

Anima Sanctuary Update

 "A steady stream of elk have been driven east across our Anima Refuge by the alarming smoke."
"Given the steady eastward progress of the Wallow Fire and absence of rain in the near future, I have to avoid denial and accept that we likely have a scary 70% chance of our land being burned out.  This is NOT to say that I am resigned to such a fate, we will oppose it in every way possible.  Nor are we fatalistic about it.  As we teach in Anima, the only thing that is hopeless, is the person unwilling or unable to hope."
Jesse Wolf Hardin, from his Blog (6/20)
I am sorry to report that things are not looking good for Anima Sanctuary.  Here in Tucson it's a roaring 112 degrees, bone dry, and no sign of the monsoon season.  Still praying for these dedicated and courageous people.

“Considering what I get from the work that you and your family do… I wish I could have given more.  All your hard work is not for nothing. You live in the wilderness, at the complete mercy of nature’s whims.  You’re not a martyr, and I can’t tell you how much I respect that…. You are raising awareness, inspiring and enlightening people, even in the face of the destruction of your home. I don’t know what it feels like to have the prospect of your home being destroyed, and not only that but a place that you’ve put blood and guts into restoring… But if the fire hits your canyon, it will not kill the spirit that runs through it. It can be built again. And you’ll have hands to help.”   -Rebecca A.

Wallow Forest Fire in AZ & NM

Smoke from the Wallow Fire is seen near Reserve, New Mexico, on Thursday, June 9, 2011. (AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, David Wallace)


In my previous post, I gave information about the status of the huge Wallow wildfire that is menacing  Jesse Wolf Hardin, Loba and Kiva and the Anima Nature Sanctuary in western N.M., near Reserve. I'm not able to find out the current status of the fire today.  Information about donating to an emergency fund for them, or volunteering is in my  post.  I pray it will be contained before it reaches Anima.

"Spider Woman" (petroglyph, New Mexico)
I know I'm stating the obvious, but an eco-system, an environment, the real "diety of place" ( Anima Mundi),  is a long, long conversation that has evolved as life adapts to a particular land.  Each being, plant and animal, is finely tuned  to that Web of interdependent life,  a balance that shows an underlying, magnificent intelligence at work.  My diety, my Grandmother Spider Woman, works from the roots, weaving a language between all beings as they evolve and survive.  We're the ones who need, very soon, to re-join the Conversation. 

I'm deeply saddened to see the beautiful forests of Arizona and New Mexico aflame, and I'm praying that the Anima Sanctuary  will be spared.

One of the reasons I don't eat meat has to do with the long term impact of the cattle industry - the delicate ecosystem of the Southwest has huge, and permanent,  environmental degredation as a result, and it's for cattle that much of the rainforests in Brazil are currently being destroyed.  I take the liberty of copying a little article below that addresses the increasing incidence of  "monster fires" in the drought prone Southwest, and some of the reasons why they are increasingly occurring.

"As the Wallow Fire in eastern Arizona grows to nearly half a million blackened acres, experts say the Southwest has entered an era of monster fires, sprawling infernos that, if they continue to erupt, could wipe out half of the state's pine forests in another decade.  In the past nine years, five over sized fires - two this year alone - have scorched more than 1.3 million acres of Arizona's wildlands. The Wallow Fire, still out of control in the forests and meadows of the White Mountains, grew in less than two weeks into the second-largest fire in the state's history.

With so much at risk every time a monster fire takes hold, experts say state and federal officials must be more aggressive about managing forests to prevent a fire from exploding out of control. The key, they say, is thinning and restoring health to overgrown forests at a rate faster than they are burning.

Crippling drought and warmer temperatures over the past decade have heightened the potential for big forest fires. Insects killed millions of trees weakened by a lack of rain and snow, leaving behind brittle husks with less moisture than kiln-dried lumber.  But what feeds the monster fires are the trees themselves. There are simply too many crowded too close together, a situation that scientists say was created in large part by a series of land-management decisions dating to the 1880s.  Livestock grazing stripped the forest floors of native grasses that helped maintain natural fire and slowed the proliferation of too many young trees. Loggers removed older trees critical for forest health, and scientists say the holes filled in too fast with young trees when lawsuits shut down the timber industry.
In the old forests, fires burned low to the ground and swept the landscape of tall grasses, tree saplings and other forest debris, rejuvenating the landscape. In the dense, overgrown forests, fires explode into the crowns of tall pines, spreading quickly and killing the trees.

"We've crossed the threshold," Covington said. "We're going to be seeing these fires every other year of 100,000 acres plus. And we can only do that for so long."

N.M. Fire Threatens Anima Sanctuary

 As those living here in the Southwest know, this has been a terrible season for fires.  I wrote about  Jesse Wolf Hardin, Loba and Kiva and the Anima Nature Sanctuary and Herbal School just a week ago - tragically, they are currently threatened by a huge forest fire in Western New Mexico, and may be forced to evacuate.  For more information, here is Jesse's Blog.  At the urging of friends, Anima has set up an emergency fund.  I've copied from the latest post on their blog below - and I know that prayers are welcome from their many friends.

 Anima Emergency Fund

A fund has been set up for Anima Sanctuary and School, at the insistence of many.  Contributions will be accepted for land protection and repair, which will also help make possible our continuing publication and healing work.

We have already had to shift funds from home repairs to evacuation preparedness, extra fuel for the vehicles and supplies, while our paid workers and gifting friends shift their emphasis from the water project to clearing the ground of flammables in a perimeter around the main cabins.  This Emergency Fund will help fund these preparations, and in the event the fire does indeed overtake and engulf us, it will be used to replace and repair the infrastructure of the sanctuary and school, and to pay for what will be a huge reseeding and restoration effort.

Donations to the Anima Emergency Fund can be made at http://animacenter.org/donate.html and indicate in the message box that it is intended for the fire fund. Or a check or m.o. made out to

Gretchen Geggis (Loba)
Anima Emergency Fund
P.O. Box 688, Reserve, NM 87830

Thank you!


NonMonetary Donations

To those of you offering to send foods, herbs, tools and so forth, we ask that you send a letter to the above addresses with a list of what you can provide, and then IF and when they’re needed we’ll get back to you.  If the fire moves through this canyon and takes our living structures, a travel trailer will be the first item we look for.

Physically Assisting With Our Evacuation

Only a few of the many folks offering to come here and help, are even from the Southwest!  We will only accept the assistance of those who live close enough for it not to be a great hardship, and only in the last couple days before we need to be fully evacuated.  This could happen a week from now, several weeks from now, or in only a few short days depending on what the winds and blaze does.  If you are determined to help with an evacuation, please write us with your availability and how to reach you quickest.

Wallow Fire Satellite Image showing Anima Sanctuary

The Anima Sanctuary & Earthen Spirituality Center

'The Prophetic Heart explores the true frontiers of consciousness, where past, present and future meld seamlessly into activist art, an inclusive pulsing web of which we are both but a single inextricable strand and one of the crucial conscious weavers..... We see that our personal struggles are part of a shamanic process of falling apart and being remade, much as the tumultuous Earth Changes tell the story of a living planet restoring balance through dramatic transformation."
-Jesse Wolf Hardin 
 I posed the question, "How do we talk to the Earth? " and immediately thought of Jesse Wolf Hardin, Loba, and Kiva Rose, who have created the Anima Sanctuary in Reserve, N.M.  For many years they've been living off the grid in their magical canyon near the Gila wilderness.  Jesse is a philosopher, writer, teacher and artist, and Loba and Kiva Rose are herbalists and Medicine Women.

The high deserts and hidden canyons of New Mexico, layered with cottonwood trees and rock sites inscribed, like some ancient book,  with petroglyphs, have been famous for attracting artists and spiritual seekers.  It's Spider Woman's Country, the shimmering, transparent strands of her Web seem especially lucid and visible.  There is a particular kind of person I seem to meet there I call the "New Mexico Mystic ".  A couple of years ago I wrote about the ecologist, philosopher and magician David Abram, and Wild Ethics. New Mexico also hosts eco-psychologist Bill Plotkin's Animas Valley Institute.  And the Lama Foundation, with its World Indigenous Peoples Conference.  And the  Cuyamungue Institute, founded by Felicitas Goodman, and Greg Bradon........new Mexico mystics, people who speak with the land.

For a long time I've been aware of the Anima Center in Western New Mexico.  I've corresponded with Jesse, and met him and Loba one wonderful summer at Brushwood, where he came to teach at the Starwood Festival, and Loba, who is a fabulous cook, created special feast for the women.  Jesse has been a prolific writer, with hundreds of published articles and 6 books.  He was also a  visual artist who left his life in Taos to become caretaker for the land in the Gila Wilderness he fell in love with, where he later established, with his partners Loba and Kiva  Anima.
 
"There at the base (of the cliff)  the impulse is always to look up, and it must have been so even for those first human inhabitants of the canyon trained to seek spirit in the ground as much as the sky. And craning my neck towards the forms and fissures above, through choking tears, came these unexpected words “I promise, no matter what, I’m yours. Even if I end up penniless with no one here to love me....” Then, in almost a scream, “I will never leave you!” And in turn, I accepted the canyon’s assurance that I belong.... and that as lonely as I might be, I would never be alone."
Loba
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"Contracted: receiving the support of the land and pledging the self in return. There was of course another contract as well, whereby I– then a young man with more attitude than common sense– signed my name on a set of papers that indentured me for fifteen years. As with most or all real estate agreements, it stipulated that if I was more than thirty days late with any of the semiannual payments, the land would automatically revert back to the seller. In order to stay close to the land I’d gone from selling expensive paintings in our gallery in Taos to working minimum wage jobs doing everything from spreading seeds on logged acreage to making adobe bricks, with friendly immigrant workers I could barely understand. My part of the bargain involved doing whatever it took to get up the money for the land payments, and the seller was likewise bound to turn over control of a most special place.

......Nonetheless, the most important contract is not that between two people.... it’s the reciprocal commitment between human and land, made and fulfilled in particular places. As with contracts between individuals or entities, both parties make promises in exchange for specific benefits. For centuries the land has kept its part of the bargain by offering up nourishment, shelter and instruction while we’ve largely defaulted as a species on our reciprocal obligations. We’ve largely failed our task to be the planet’s most sensitive receptors, to temper knowledge with humility and wisdom, or to properly give sacrament to, give thanks for, preserve or celebrate that land we as a species have evolved in contractual partnership with.


With every gift comes a responsibility to its spiritual and physical “care and feeding.” This goes for the soil itself, elemental to all life, and all that grows from its bosom or calls its rocks and trees home. Responsibilities to the plant and animal species we consume, to the water we drink and the air we breathe. The responsibility to insure that which we take is neither diluted nor despoiled, to give back equal to that which we are given. And whether we choose to call it that or not, it includes a responsibility to engage in some form of prayerful communion. 

Responsibility: the ability to respond."

From "Selected Writings", Jesse Wolf Hardin

 Jesse's Blog:   http://animacenter.org/blog/?cat=10

Kiva Rose