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The Columbia
River Watershed:
Caring for Creation and the Common Good
An International
Pastoral Letter by the Catholic Bishops of the Region
(This text made available to the FSSCA courtesy of the Columbia
River Pastoral Letter Project. For a printable version, click
here.)
"God saw all that had been
made, and indeed it was very good." (Genesis 1:31)
"We cannot interfere in one
area of the ecosystem without paying due attention both to the consequences
of such interference in other areas and to the well-being of future
generations
delicate ecological balances are upset by the
uncontrolled destruction of animal and plant life or by a reckless
exploitation of natural resources. It should be pointed out that
all of this, even if carried out in the name of progress and well-being,
is ultimately to humankind's disadvantage.... An education in ecological
responsibility is urgent: responsibility for oneself, for others,
and for the earth."
--Pope John Paul II, The Ecological Crisis: A Common Responsibility,
1990
"We must expand our understanding
of the moral responsibility of citizens to serve the common good
"
--The Catholic Bishops of the United States, Economic Justice for
All, 1986
"The fundamental relation between
humanity and nature is one of caring for creation."
--The Catholic Bishops of the United States, Renewing the Earth,
1991
"We need to reexamine the ways
we think and act, to affirm and support what we are presently doing
that is environmentally responsible and to critique and challenge
what is irresponsible and unsustainable."
--The Catholic Bishops of Alberta, Canada, Celebrate Life: Care
for Creation, 1998
(c) 2000 Columbia River Pastoral
Letter Project. Permission is granted to quote from this document,
with appropriate attribution, for journalistic, educational, or
discussion purposes.
Caring for Creation, Community
and the Columbia
The Columbia River Watershed stands
as one of the most beautiful places on God's earth. Its mountains
and valleys, forests and meadows, rivers and plains reflect the
presence of their Creator. Its farms and fishing boats, rural communities
and cities, railroads, ports and industries reveal the varied ways
in which peoples of the region have worked with earth's beauty and
bounty to derive their livelihood from the land and water.
The core of the 259,000 square miles of the Columbia Watershed is
the 1,200 miles of the great river known as the Columbia. It begins
in British Columbia in Canada, is fed in the U.S. by tributaries
in Montana, Idaho, Washington and Oregon, and flows to the Pacific
Ocean. This magnificent network of rivers -- the region's lifeblood
-- is an extensive ecosystem that transcends national, state and
provincial borders.
We, the Catholic bishops in the international watershed region of
the United States and Canada, write this pastoral letter because
we have become concerned about regional economic and ecological
conditions and the conflicts over them in the watershed. We address
this letter to our Catholic community and to all people of good
will. We hope that we might work together to develop and implement
an integrated spiritual, social and ecological vision for our watershed
home, a vision that promotes justice for people and stewardship
of creation.
We recognize the great contributions that our ancestors made to
this region. The original native inhabitants and the early ranchers,
farmers, fishers and loggers struggled against almost insurmountable
odds to carve out a home in this sometimes inhospitable land. We
recognize that damage to the watershed may have been caused by financial
need and lack of knowledge more than by a lack of appreciation for
the environment.
Our pastoral letter is not meant to criticize people's efforts to
provide a suitable living for their family. We are hopeful that
those involved in industry are, by and large, also concerned about
the environment.
At the same time, we commend those who have recognized and responded
to the environmental challenges that result from commercial and
industrial enterprises. It is important for those with deeper concerns
about the environment to recognize that farmers, ranchers and other
landowners and workers are not their enemies. It is equally important
that the latter groups seek to better understand environmental concerns.
Protection of the land is a common cause promoted more effectively
through active cooperation than through contentious wrangling.
We call for a thorough, humble and introspective evaluation that
seeks to eliminate both economic greed that fails to respect the
environment, and ecological elitism that lacks a proper regard for
the legitimate rights and property of others.
The Columbia River Watershed: Caring for Creation and the Common
Good focuses particularly on our common responsibilities for our
region. In this pastoral letter we will explore biblical and Catholic
Church teachings about stewardship; the need to respect nature;
and the need to recognize and promote the common good. These themes
are consistent with a Christian belief that the earth is a creation
of God intended to serve the needs of all creation.
Caring for Creation
The Columbia Watershed and all
creation are entrusted to our loving care. As persons created in
the image of God and as stewards of creation (Genesis 1-2), we are
challenged to both use and respect created things. The watershed
is ultimately God's; human beings are entrusted with responsibility
for it, concern for its species and ecology, and regulation of its
competitive and complementary uses.
The watershed, seen through eyes alive with faith, can be a revelation
of God's presence, an occasion of grace and blessing. There are
many signs of the presence of God in this book of nature, signs
that complement the understandings of God revealed in the pages
of the Bible, both the Hebrew and Christian Scriptures.
Caring for Community
People are created in the image
and likeness of God and are called to be neighbors to one another.
We are created as social beings who must exercise a certain responsibility
toward our neighbors. Each is responsible, in part, for promoting
the good of the entire human community and the good of our common
home.
Caring for our Common Home
The watershed is the common home
and habitat of God's creatures, a source of human livelihood, and
a setting for human community. The commons belongs to everyone,
and yet belongs to no one. We hold this land in trust for our present
use, for future generations, and ultimately for God, from whom all
good things come. It is intended by God to be used for the well-being
of all its human inhabitants, present and future.
The common good demands a proper respect for the land, the air and
the water to assure that when we have passed through this land it
remains habitable and productive for those who come after us.
The recognition of the presence and plan of God challenges us to
work to understand better the ecosystems of our region and to seek
to utilize its goods justly while respecting the value of all its
creatures.
Commitment to Creation and the
Common Good
The preservation of the Columbia
Watershed's beauty and benefits requires us to enter into a gradual
process of conversion and change. Our goal is to review very broadly
the present situation of the watershed; to reflect on our common
regional history; to imagine a viable, sustainable future for the
watershed; and to seek ways to realize our vision.
Therefore, we offer four reflections, entitled: "The Rivers
of our Moment," "The Rivers through our Memory,"
"The Rivers in our Vision," and "The Rivers as our
Responsibility." We suggest that people will have to change
some current practices to transform the watershed into an economically
and ecologically sustainable place.
A Project in Process
As Catholic bishops, we offer a
pastoral reflection spoken with a voice of faith and compassion,
offering insights drawn from the teachings of Jesus Christ and from
the Christian tradition through the ages, particularly the developing
Catholic social ethical thought of the past century. We teach with
Pope John Paul II that "Christians, in particular, realize
that their responsibility within creation and their duty toward
nature and the Creator are an essential part of their faith."
(The Ecological Crisis: A Common Responsibility, hereafter EC, §
15)
We hope that the values we express, the issues we raise, and the
insights we offer will serve as a catalyst for further discussion
toward the resolution of the complex issues of the Columbia River
Watershed. We invite people to explore with us the implications
of the Christian idea of human stewardship of creation, and to effect
a spiritual, social and ecological transformation of the watershed.
I. The Rivers of Our Moment
When people travel in the Columbia
River Watershed they see areas of pristine beauty, where the handiwork
of God is hardly touched by human interventions. They see areas
of ordered beauty, where people have worked well with the land and
water in their care. And they see areas of blight, where people
have disregarded their responsibilities to their Creator, their
community and their environment.
Contradictions in human behavior are evident throughout the region.
There are beautiful farms and deteriorated riverbanks; degraded
forests and landscaped community parks; chemical and radioactive
wastes seeping into the rivers; and conscientious children cleaning
streambeds. In areas of Canada, extremes in river levels that prevent
the existence of both natural ecologies and human enterprises are
caused by dams built primarily to meet U.S. needs for energy and
at times for flood control. In both countries, we share the watershed
with members of the animal kingdom. We are stewards of this ecosystem
with its diversity of life. What is the current condition of our
region?
Throughout the past century industrial development provided needed
goods and jobs in the watershed and beyond. Sometimes this development
has resulted in harm for the watershed. Dams provide energy, and
aluminum plants provide airplane parts. But the construction and
use of these human structures have been accompanied by the loss
of fishing-related enterprises. U.S. dams provide irrigation, but
dams north of the border have resulted in flooded Canadian lands
and communities, depriving families of their homes, farms and businesses.
Modern technology has provided better living, but has also produced
chemical and radioactive waste storage sites that pose serious threats
for the area.
The endangerment and possible extinction of the area's animal and
fish species are of notable concern in our day. The specific causes
of, and remedies for, salmon endangerment and extinction are hotly
debated in the region.
Indigenous peoples of the watershed -- called First Nations in Canada
and Native Americans in the United States -- have unique cultures
and insights. But native peoples have been targets of racism, and
experience economic hardships. The terms of treaties made with them,
such as the 1855 treaty with the Yakamas in the United States, often
have not been respected. Indigenous peoples in the region seek the
freedom to exercise fishing and water rights once thought to be
guaranteed by treaties.
Agriculture is a valuable contributor to community life and to the
economic well-being in our region. Some operations currently are
partially dependent on irrigation water and energy supplied by dams.
Owner-operated family farms are on the decline, with consequent
impacts on rural businesses, schools and communities. Agricultural
chemicals are used to control pests and increase profits, but these
can also be sources of pollution of land and water. Unmanaged entry
of livestock into rivers can damage riverbank habitat and harm aquatic
life. Responsibly run family farms, and responsibly managed corporate
agribusiness operations, are important in our region as sources
of food and as stabilizing economic influences. Their well-being
is vital to the economic life of the watershed.
Mining has provided jobs and funded schools, but its residues sometimes
leave the land and waters tainted. In the watershed, one finds examples
of huge cleanup sites as well as environmentally dangerous working
conditions. By contrast, there are also industrial operations that
stand as models of respect for people's health and which exemplify
a proper stewardship of the watershed.
Forestry has provided needed lumber for homes and industry, and
jobs for loggers, mill workers, truckers, plant managers and support
staff. In some places, timber harvesting and road construction harm
local areas by causing increased runoff and sedimentation. Exemplary
forest stewards are cognizant of the impact of their industry on
the surrounding land and rivers, as well as on the workers and communities
where their business is located.
Working people are concerned about finding or keeping employment
in the watershed. Land-related occupations such as farming, fishing,
forestry and shipping are directly linked to the flowing waters
of the river network. Many other jobs are tied to them as well.
The economy is dependent on the health of the regional ecosystem.
There are limited land and water resources, despite seeming abundance,
especially in arid areas. Political, business, labor and religious
leaders are striving collaboratively, in some areas, to integrate
the needs of communities, workers and the environment.
Consolidation of ownership of land and commercial enterprises occurs
in the region. People are seeking clear ethical guidelines and standards
to promote just property distributions, appropriate access to land
and water, and an equitable sharing of regional goods.
Recreational uses of the land provide needed rest and recuperation
for people. Environmental impacts of various types of recreational
pursuits are being assessed. People need places for quiet reflection,
meditation, appreciation of God's creation, relaxed fishing and
rigorous exercise. Other creatures need habitat for shelter and
reproduction.
We are blessed in the diversity of our peoples and of our land.
A renewed appreciation for both is contributing to increased community
well-being and ecological health in our region.
Signs of Hope
We see signs of hope amid the problems of the watershed. Many people
live responsibly from, and work with, the gifts and goods of the
Columbia and its tributaries. Many understand that their own or
others' actions have caused harm. They are striving to guide human
activities and shape corporate operations and community consciousness
with the ethics of stewardship of creation.
We see signs of hope in the scientific studies of agricultural,
fishing, transportation and energy needs. Renewed hope is evident
in a new consciousness among government officials and business entrepreneurs
about the impact of past abuses of the rivers' environment and their
expressed intentions to avoid similar abuses in the future. There
is hope in the various proposals for carrying out a responsible
cleanup of the devastation wrought by various operations of the
past. Various conservation and species-strengthening measures bode
well for the future.
Efforts to use profits from U.S. dam operations to compensate Canadian
communities most heavily impacted are a sign of a stronger sense
of justice. The compassionate and constructive exchange of ideas
by people of diverse and sometimes competitive interests is more
and more common. Greater community involvement, by which local citizens
reflect on local issues and seek to address them, shows an appropriate
concern and responsibility for the common good.
Spiritual and Social Consciousness
Our awareness of the presence of God, who is lovingly concerned
about creation, and our openness to God's grace enlightening and
strengthening us, enable us to confront the conditions that concern
us, and to affirm and commend the signs of hope that we see.
One of the key concepts that applies to our entire discussion is
simply respect. Industry must respect people and nature and take
particular care to be cognizant of its impact on the common good.
People must exercise a basic respect for one another, for God, for
other creatures and for the environment. Individuals also need to
respect the rights of others, including those engaged in agriculture,
mining, forestry and the like.
We must become increasingly aware of the needs of people, our neighbors;
of the sanctity of life, from conception to natural death; and of
the integrated ecosystem whose benefits and complexities we share.
We are called to relate to people as neighbors and to our shared
place as our common home. We recognize our responsibility for this
place, a sign of God's creative power that is blessed by God's presence.
We are responsible to God and to the community and we are responsible
for the creation around us.
II. The Rivers through Our Memory
The second step in spiritual, social and ecological transformation
is to reflect on the waters of our memory as they are expressed
in regional and religious traditions. The history of the Columbia
Watershed is described in people's written and oral stories, and
is evident in geological formations and biological diversity.
Regional Traditions
In the watershed, the natural physical laws instilled in creation
by God control the tectonic plate collisions, floods, glaciers and
earthquakes that shape the land and waters. Migrations of animals
and people have given new forms to the land, and brought about new
relationships among creatures and between creatures and the earth.
Human communities entering the watershed adapted to, or altered,
natural settings. Along the Columbia River, the first peoples in
the region (even though they were sometimes in conflict with each
other over village, hunting or fishing sites) generally adapted
themselves to Che Wana, the Great River. They knew a continuous
river, undivided by political boundaries. They fished for salmon,
hunted wild game and gathered roots and berries to sustain themselves.
Native religions taught respect for the ways of nature, personified
as a nurturing mother for all creatures. They saw the salmon as
food from this mother, and the river as the source of their life
and the life of the fish. They adapted themselves to the river and
to the cycles of the seasons. Among the Wanapum, the River People,
some elders were set apart as dreamers and healers, respected for
their visions and healing powers.
Europeans and Euro-Americans made their way west beginning in the
16th century. An American explorer, Captain Robert Gray, renamed
the great river "Columbia" in 1792. Trappers and traders
came to provide the basis for a United States claim to the river
region and to establish new forms of commerce in the area. After
the trapping of beaver and other fur-bearing animals ceased to be
profitable, new immigrants entered the region, established homesteads
and towns, and turned to agriculture and to salmon as sources of
food and livelihood.
Unregulated fishing and cannery industries seriously depleted salmon
supplies. The River People were forced to live a modified way of
life on severely diminished lands, with less abundant salmon runs.
Eventually, dams on the Columbia-Snake river system, and open sea
fishing operations in the Pacific Ocean had further impacts on the
species. In 1957, the opening up of the Dalles Dam destroyed Celilo
Falls, a tremendously important Native American fishing area.
Besides these human interventions, climatic changes could impact
salmon populations. Regional and global warming, which alters water
temperatures and salmon predators' habits, may also accelerate declines
in salmon populations.
Human communities in the watershed have oral and written memories
of its ongoing history. In this community memory there are elements
of a community conscience, a moral sense of appropriate social interaction
developed over time and adapted to and lived in each new era. Responsible
community memories recall not only moments of achievement, but also
moments of social insensitivity.
Regional people in the United States have community myths about
the West -- myths about rugged individualism; absolute ownership
"rights"; a narrow economic way of valuing places, things
and even people; and a myth that the West was "won" without
government assistance. Such myths sometimes make it difficult for
people to understand the importance of ecosystems, and the benefits
of government policies to conserve natural goods for the whole community.
Religious Traditions
Peoples of the rivers have a religious memory. In the Catholic tradition,
that memory includes biblical and Church teachings about human responsibilities
for creation.
God, who alone can create, invites people to participate in divine
creativity. Thus, humans have a unique role. In the physical universe,
they alone are consciously able to be caretakers of creation. In
the physical order, only humans, with the abilities granted to them,
can understand creatures soaring in the heights or swimming in the
depths, and can come to know the laws of biology, chemistry and
physics that influence creation. They are called to use these understandings
to describe, celebrate, develop and care for creation. They are
created in the image and likeness of God and are commissioned as
stewards of God's created and beautiful universe.
Created in the image of God (Genesis 1:26-27), humans are to recognize
that all of God's works and creatures, as they emerge from God's
creative loving power, are "very good" (Genesis 1:31).
God cares for these creatures.
At the end of the Genesis flood story, God makes a covenant, whose
sign is the rainbow, with "every living creature" and
with "the earth" (Genesis 9:12-13). Wisdom says of God:
"You love all things that are ... your imperishable spirit
is in all things!" (Wisdom 11:24; 12:1). Job reveals God's
providence for all creatures (Job 38-41). In the Psalms the poet
calls upon all creation to "praise the Lord" (Psalm 148).
The author of Sirach exclaims: "How beautiful are all God's
works! Even to the spark and fleeting vision! The universe lives
and abides forever; to meet each need, each creature is preserved.
All of them differ, one from another, yet none of them has [God]
made in vain, for each in turn, as it comes, is good; can one ever
see enough of their splendor?" (Sirach 42:23-25).
In the Gospel according to Luke, Jesus notes that God cares for
the birds of the air and the flowers of the fields as well as for
people (Luke 12:24-28). In the Letter to the Colossians we are taught
that God was pleased through Christ "to reconcile all things
... whether those on earth or those in heaven" (Colossians
1:20). People are called to live in God's presence solicitous of
the wondrous works of God: the earth and the earth's inhabitants.
Stewardship is the traditional Christian expression of the role
of people in relation to creation. Stewards, as caretakers for the
things of God, are called to use wisely and distribute justly the
goods of God's earth to meet the needs of God's children. They are
to care for the earth as their home and as a beautiful revelation
of the creativity, goodness and love of God. Creation is a "book
of nature" in whose living pages people can see signs of the
Spirit of God present in the universe, yet separate from it.
The individual members of the human family are called to respect
both creation and Creator and are responsible for that part of the
earth entrusted to their stewardship, whether by property rights
or other legal or managerial responsibility. They are to take care
of the earth out of respect for the Creator who loves all creatures,
and out of a charity that calls us to love our neighbor.
Our unique role in creation as God's stewards carries with it a
serious responsibility for service to God and to creation. As Jesus
teaches us, when we are given positions of responsibility, we are
called to serve and not to be served by those in our care; we are
not to "lord it over them" (See Matthew 20:25-28.) We
neither worship creation nor are worshiped by creation; we relate
to creation as its stewards, with the unique responsibilities that
God has entrusted to us.
Creation provides the opportunity for spiritual contemplation because
it is from God and reveals God. The natural world of creation is
not itself to be worshiped. It is not an autonomous being, but a
revelation of the wondrous power and love of its Creator. In the
created universe we may perceive the brush strokes of a loving God.
The bishops of the United States have voiced this sentiment in Renewing
the Earth, declaring that the Christian vision of the universe --
"a world that discloses the Creator's presence by visible and
tangible signs -- can contribute to making the earth a home for
the human family once again." And in eloquent words the bishops
of Alberta, Canada, in their statement: Celebrate Life: Care for
Creation, teach that "the abundance and beauty of God's creation
reveal to us something of the generosity of the Creator. God is
present and speaks in the dynamic life forces of our universe and
planet as well as in our own lives. Respect for life needs to include
all creation."
Each portion of creation can be sign and revelation for the person
of faith, a moment of grace revealing God's presence to us. Our
minds and spirits can catch glimpses of God in moments of solitude,
reflection and grace in God's wondrous creation.
The Columbia and the Common Good
As the whole universe can be a source of blessing or revelation
of God, so also the commons of a local place can be revelatory.
In a setting such as the Columbia River Watershed, the signs of
God's creativity and presence are abundant. The startling beauty
of a snowcapped mountain or a colorful sunset, a river valley or
a starlit night, the sight of a well-kept farm integrated with its
surroundings or the free flight of a bird -- all point beyond themselves
to the Creator of the universe. In words taken from the Book of
Wisdom in the Hebrew Scriptures: "From the greatness and the
beauty of created things their original author, by analogy, is seen"(Wisdom
13:5).
Signs of God's presence are evident in all of creation. When we
are open to the Spirit of God we may experience the loving presence
of God among us.
In biblical teachings and the Christian tradition the earth is intended
by God to provide for the needs of peoples as they live in complex
and diverse ecosystems. The Bible teaches that people should distribute
property and goods justly. In the book of the Acts of the Apostles
in the Christian Scriptures, a description of an early Christian
community in Jerusalem states that the members "had all things
in common" (Acts 2:44) so that the needs of all might be met.
The documents of the Second Vatican Council likewise reference the
common good: "The state has the duty to prevent anyone from
abusing his private property to the detriment of the common good.
By its nature private property has a social dimension which is based
on the law of common destination of earthly goods" (The Church
in the Modern World, § 71, 1965).
Our present Holy Father, Pope John Paul II, declared that "private
property, in fact, is under a 'social mortgage,' which means that
it has an intrinsically social function, based upon and justified
precisely by the principle of the universal destination of goods"
(On Social Concern, § 42).
Living Water
The Bible and our Christian tradition teach us about the benefits
of water, which is seen both literally and figuratively as a giver
of life. A key phrase used in these sources of our spirituality
is "living water." In the Hebrew Scriptures, living water
meant water that is flowing free and pure; it is contrasted with
water from wells or cisterns, which tended to be stagnant and undesirable.
In the Christian Scriptures, Jesus appropriated the term "living
water" to refer to himself as the source of genuine spiritual
life. He applied this symbol to himself because he knew that people
depend on water for their survival as individuals and as communities;
that water slakes thirst and quenches fields and livestock as well
as wild creatures. Water, used in religious ceremonies, gives life
to our spirits, too. It is the element used to symbolize spiritual
cleansing and a sign of God's grace conferred upon us.
Water was present at significant actual and symbolic moments of
God's revelation to humanity. The prophets of old envisioned a place
where spiritual waters and earthly waters flowed together, with
the earthly waters a symbol of the spiritual. Isaiah proclaimed,
"I will pour out water upon the thirsty ground, and streams
upon the dry land; I will pour out my spirit upon your offspring,
and my blessing upon your descendants" (44:3), and "All
you who are
thirsty, come to the water!" (55:1). And Ezekiel (47:1-12)
saw water flowing from beneath the temple and becoming a river along
whose banks trees grew abundantly. He added that "Wherever
the river flows, every sort of living creature that can multiply
shall live, and there shall be abundant fish, for wherever this
water comes the sea shall be made fresh." Ezekiel's vision
is recalled later by the seer of Revelation (1-2).
Jesus was baptized by John in the flowing waters of the Jordan River
(Mark 1:9). At the temple, Jesus exclaimed: "Let anyone who
thirsts come to me and drink. Whoever believes in me, as scripture
says, 'Rivers of living water will flow from within him.' (John
7:37-38). Jesus told the Samaritan woman that he gives "living
water" to those who ask (John 4:4-15). Water flowing from Jesus'
side at his crucifixion is richly symbolic; by his death he offers
eternal life to all (John 19:31-37). Jesus told his followers to
make disciples of all nations, "baptizing them" with water
(Matthew 28:18-20). The living water offered by Jesus for our spirit
and the living water in God's creation for our body are both life-giving
waters -- one natural, the other supernatural.
The Columbia River and its tributaries are intended by God to be
living water: bountiful and healthy providers for the common good.
The water itself is to be a clear sign of the Creator's presence.
Church Teachings about the Land
In the Catholic tradition, for more than a century, church leaders
have developed teachings on social justice. Social justice for people
and proper respect for the earth are now seen as related issues.
The Catholic bishops of the Midwest state that "the way in
which we relate to the land will affect the extent to which the
land will continue to provide our sustenance and livelihood"
(from Strangers and Guests); and the Catholic bishops of the United
States teach that "the fundamental relation between humanity
and nature is one of caring for creation" (Renewing the Earth).
Similarly, Pope John Paul II instructs us that "[There should
be a priority of] the preservation of the environment over uncontrolled
industrial expansion" (Canada, 1984), and that "the Bible
speaks again and again of the goodness and beauty of creation....
The ecological crisis is a moral issue" (The Ecological Crisis:
A Common Responsibility, 1990, § 14, 15).
The Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops took up these themes,
calling for respect for regional ecologies. These Church teachings
point to the need to work for justice for people, and proper stewardship
of the earth's goods.
In the United States, Canada, and globally, a majority of the earth's
goods are controlled by a minority of individuals. While many people
lack life's basic necessities, others have more than an excess for
a lifetime. This gross imbalance is harmful to humanity and, to
the extent that singular individuals have consumed more than a reasonable
share of earth's resources, they have harmed creation. Good stewards
of creation use what they need and recognize that others, both those
presently living and future generations, have a right to enjoy the
fruits of the earth as well.
As people have become more absorbed by material things and less
conscious of spiritual and social relationships, consumerism has
replaced compassion, and exploitation of the earth has replaced
stewardship. There is a need for a spiritual conversion to a better
and deeper sense of stewardship for God's creation and responsibility
for our communities. This global reality touches our watershed,
and it is important to take stock of it and envision a transformed
future for our region.
III. The Rivers in Our Vision
We live in a literal watershed and are simultaneously at a figurative
watershed moment, a time of making important decisions that will
impact, into an unforeseeable future, this place we call home and
habitat. It is now important to envision how we can rise to meet
our responsibility to care for the waters in the present, and for
the future.
In the third step of spiritual, social and ecological transformation,
we imagine together what we would like the watershed to be. This
is an idealized dream and we recognize that, as such, it is not
immediately practicable. Nevertheless, in order to preserve our
watershed we must posit a hope and a dream and strive to build toward
that best possible world.
We must begin with the Author of creation and ask: How will we be
images of God and care for that part of creation entrusted to us?
How can we ensure that a rich sense of God's presence prevails?
How can we assure that spiritual living waters, as well as clear
and pure literal living waters, continue to flow in our region?
As we ponder these questions, we can imagine diverse and contradictory
possibilities for the watershed of the future. With a hopeful heart
we can envision economic stability, ecological integrity and regional
sustainability. This can be a reality if we are good stewards of
God's earth.
With sadness we can also envision ecological disaster and economic
depression. This too can be a reality if we are not conscious of,
and responsive to, our need to be good and faithful stewards.
In our watershed vision we choose to look with hope at what the
watershed can be in the years and decades to come.
Spiritual Vision
In our hope-filled, spiritual vision, we see communities of faith
exercising responsibility for the region. The biblical tradition
states that ecological harm is caused by human sinfulness. In the
Hebrew Scriptures, Hosea (4:3) and Leviticus (26:16-22) declare
that the people's sins harm the earth. In the Christian Scriptures,
Paul declares in the Letter to the Romans (8:22) that all creation,
suffering from the effects of human sinfulness, groans for salvation.
In the present time, we envision individuals and communities honestly
evaluating their conduct and objectively viewing its consequences
to see how that conduct impacts the environment. This examination
of conscience requires grace and honesty, integrity and humility,
and it is an examination that each must make of his or her own actions.
No one who has so much as irresponsibly disposed of a gum wrapper
or an aluminum can is exempt from such an examination.
When every man, woman and child acknowledges individual responsibility
for the well-being of the watershed, then the vision of a new earth
described in Revelation 21-22 can come to pass. There, John relates
that he saw living waters flowing beneath and nurturing a tree of
life that provides fruit for food and leaves for medicine, for all
peoples.
We envision a place where all peoples are treated justly and authentic
stewardship is the norm. In this hope-filled vision, every man,
woman and child acknowledges individual responsibility for the common
good and the good of the commons as well as a responsibility toward
their neighbors, resulting in a place of genuine peace and justice.
In that place, the place of our hopes and dreams, people will manifest
a fidelity to their calling to be images of God and caretakers of
God's creation. There people will recognize the inherent value of
creation and the dignity of all living beings as creatures of God.
There they will work for the well-being of generations yet to come.
There they will be ready to make sacrifices for the common good.
In that place, the place of our hopes and dreams, there will be
genuine respect for life, especially human life, and a proper regard
for the Creator.
Social Vision
In our hope-filled social vision for the watershed we see working
people engaged in productive employment at living wages, and renewed
communities integrated with their environment. In that hope-filled
vision we see workers providing for their own needs and, in a spirit
of sacrifice and compassion, helping to provide for the needs of
the elderly, the young, the unemployed and underemployed, and the
poor. There regional goods are distributed justly to meet regional
needs, and local economies prosper.
Community consciousness is ever aware of, and community conscience
provides for, the needs of the poor, weak and vulnerable, the "least
of the brethren" loved by Jesus (Matthew 25:31-46). The peoples
of the region, though in distinct local communities, are envisioned
as a unit connected by the web of waters and integrated as one watershed
community.
Ecological Vision
In our idealized ecological vision we see the Columbia Watershed
community inhabiting an environment of clean land, clear water,
and pure air. In that vision the ecology is altered only by the
earth's natural colorations, seasonal variations, and people's responsible
use of the earth's goods.
In the vision, the peoples of the region are conscious of their
stewardship responsibilities. They conserve regional goods carefully.
They work in factories that recycle resources, efficiently utilize
inputs, have little or no waste materials that need disposition
except to be recycled into other goods, and release clean emissions
and cleaned effluents into the environment. They work to develop
an international and intergenerational consciousness of, and respect
for, the needs of the entire watershed -- its people, animals, birds,
fish and plants.
In the vision, forests are managed wisely and trees and associated
vegetation of varied ages and diverse types flourish. Timber harvesting
is done responsibly, with minimal disturbance to the land and water
and, along with lumber mills and other value-added enterprises,
provides jobs. Paper manufacturers use production processes respectful
of water quality and the health of the inhabitants -- human and
animal -- of the watershed.
Here the vision of the prophet Isaiah is partially fulfilled: "The
wolf lives with the lamb, the panther lies down with the kid, calf
and lion cub feed together with a little child to lead them"
(Isaiah 11:6).
In the vision any contention between industry and environment is
discussed maturely, openly and calmly recognizing that the common
goal is the well-being of the entire community of life and the promotion
of the common good.
In the vision, fish populations are abundant, responding to human
ingenuity and mutual cooperation. Commercial, recreational and private
fishers continue to enjoy opportunities for providing a family meal,
family livelihood or a family outing. People realize the interconnectedness
of rivers and ocean, and understand their individual and community
responsibilities to exercise proper stewardship for both. Negative
impacts on fish populations from irresponsible commercial and industrial
operations are no longer seen.
In agricultural operations, we envision that farms are carefully
integrated into, and respectful of, their environment. Where feasible,
farmers produce organic crops that safeguard water quality and the
health of their families, consumers, livestock and local wildlife.
Water is carefully conserved through innovative irrigation techniques.
Energy is used sparingly and wind farms provide clean energy for
the community and a supplemental income to traditional crops. Farmers'
markets enable farm families to sell their produce directly to consumers.
Once again we see the vision of Isaiah as owner-operated family
and cooperative farms complement larger agribusiness operations
and together they produce abundant food for the region and the world,
stimulate rural economies, and stabilize rural communities.
The vision for the future of the watershed extends to mine owners
and managers who are seen as operating with a consciousness of their
responsibility to care for creation and respect local community
needs. Their acknowledgement of the need to promote the common good
prompts them to assure that mine workers have good salaries and
safe working conditions. They assure that mining processes do not
endanger waters and aquatic life or pollute the air or land.
Individuals take stock of what metals they genuinely need for a
healthy life, artistic enhancement and industrial use, and create
a market where metals superfluous to human needs have no market
and thus are not mined. In the vision, leaders in the mining industry
acknowledge the need to reclaim mined lands and the neighboring
waters for the benefit of local communities.
Visions, hopes and dreams are the blueprints for the future. The
dreams enunciated above are a real challenge to present and future
regional policies and practices. The linking of vision and practice
must occur in specific historical projects. Collaborative efforts
among individuals and communities must occur to make economic justice
and ecological prudence a reality.
Convictions that Underscore the
Need to Care for the Earth
In the presentation of our spiritual, social, and ecological visions
for the Columbia River Watershed and, indeed, for other regions
of the earth entrusted to us, we manifest certain underlying convictions.
These are:
* God is the Creator of the universe and maintains its existence
through an ongoing creative will.
* God's presence is discernible in all creation.
* God has blessed and called "very good" all that is created.
* God loves the community of life.
* God's creatures share a common home.
* God entrusts the earth to human care. People are stewards of God's
world.
* God intends the earth's goods to be equitably shared.
IV. The Rivers as Our Responsibility
People throughout the Columbia
Watershed seek good jobs, vibrant communities, a fair share of the
earth's goods, and clean air, land and water. When they view the
watershed with the eyes of faith, they recognize their responsibility
to God to promote and protect these goods.
In this fourth step of the spiritual, social and ecological transformation
of the watershed, we must act as a regional community to begin to
actualize our ideals and vision. As in all areas of our lives, we
need to fulfill our responsibilities to God, to creation and to
each other in concrete, definable actions.
Community consciousness of present difficulties in the watershed
can serve as the basis for improving local ecologies and economies.
Local community experts need to work with balanced, reflective advisors
to bring about greater ecological health and renewed economic strength.
We proposed above seven "Convictions that Underscore the Need
to Care for the Earth." What are some of the ways these convictions
may be acted upon? We offer the following "considerations"
for community projects to renew the watershed.
Considerations for Community
Caretaking
1. Consider the Common Good
In the concept of the common good, community and individual needs
take priority over private wants. The right to own and use private
property is not seen as an absolute individual right; this right
must be exercised responsibly for the benefit of the owner and the
community as a whole. Property must be used wisely as a trust from
God to the civil owner. Public property use should reflect its status
as a community benefit to be conserved as a good both in itself
and for what it can provide to meet human needs.
The first and primary good to be preserved is the good of the individual
person. Human life is sacred and the good of the community demands
respect for that life. Environmental degradation can be particularly
harmful to the unborn, the young and the elderly. The life in the
womb is precious. The life of the elderly person is precious. The
life of the disabled person is precious. The life of the seriously
infirm person is precious. We call upon all men and women of good
will to be good stewards of the human lives entrusted to them and
to work diligently and respectfully to preserve this greatest of
resources.
We urge all private property owners and all managers of public lands
to be good stewards of God's land, to restore and conserve that
land, and to promote human communities integrated with regional
ecosystems.
2. Conserve the Watershed as
a Common Good
The Columbia River Watershed is home to people and to a variety
of other creatures. This shared habitat needs to be nurtured and
carefully conserved if all its inhabitants are to live in an integrated
and interrelated manner. Besides being a regional shared space,
the watershed provides food and other necessities, fostering the
common good of all people who dwell here.
We urge people to be conscious of, and respectful toward, the watershed
as our common home and as the provider of necessities for the good
of the whole ecosystem. We encourage people to recall their responsibilities
to God to be good stewards of creation, so that it might meet the
needs of all its inhabitants, present and future; foster appreciation
of God's creativity; and be a place of graced encounters with the
presence of God.
3. Conserve and Protect Species
of Wildlife
The presence and health of wildlife is in many ways a sign of the
health of our ecosystems, of the well-being of the people and communities
dependent on the ecosystems for their livelihood, and of our respect
for God's creatures and creation. The presence and health of salmon
and other species of fish in the Columbia-Snake system, in particular,
is a sign of the health of the entire region.
Some urge breaching the four dams on the lower Snake River in order
to improve the water environment for fish. Others advocate keeping
the dams for energy and agricultural uses, and suggest other means
of assuring the survival of fish and fish-related industries. The
situation is very complex and unilateral answers appear to be inadequate.
Those involved in the debate and decisions must consider scientific
studies, community needs and ecological impacts in making decisions
which are ultimately political but which must stem from a spiritual
and ethical base.
We urge that serious discussions and serious scientific research
continue in order to assure the presence of a habitat suitable for
the native fish of the region. Those discussions must always maintain
a proper respect for God's creatures and a prudent consideration
of the common good of the people of the area.
4. Respect the Dignity and Traditions
of the Region's Indigenous Peoples
The indigenous peoples have a wealth of spirituality, culture and
traditions that call forth a need for appropriate respect and preservation.
We are brothers and sisters in God's creation and we are grateful
to the First Nations and the Native Americans for the lessons they
teach about respect for nature. We apologize for cultural insensitivities
and lack of justice, both past and present.
Today, we extend an offer of peace and friendship to native peoples
of our region. We pledge to work with them to seek equitable resolutions
of conflicts over treaty rights, to work with them to enhance their
engagement with other cultures, to foster their economic development
and to participate with them to promote care for creation. We call
upon the members of our parish communities, government officials,
those with economic interests and the general public to join in
these efforts.
5. Promote Justice for the Poor, Linking Economic Justice and Environmental
Justice
The poor suffer more than other segments of the population from
job loss, low wages, poor working conditions and environmental degradation.
The Church, in the spirit of Christ, exercises a preferential, but
not exclusive, option for the poor; that is, we are called as a
people to help them acquire justice, respect, and an inherent sense
of dignity, and to participate in transforming economic and political
structures to create a just society and a sustainable environment.
We urge the public and private sectors to work with the poor to
secure employment at a living wage and in safe working conditions;
decent and affordable housing; essential health insurance; educational
opportunities; and a healthful environment. We urge the poor to
become actively engaged in these efforts, and to explore cooperative
enterprises in which they would be owners, managers, and workers
and consequently share equitably in the distribution of profits
and in the responsible care of God's creation.
6. Promote Community Resolution
of Economic and Ecological Issues
Local community members are often most knowledgeable about local
ecosystem dynamics. Such citizens are best able, sometimes with
necessary technical assistance, to initiate community-based and
community-oriented ecologically sustainable economic development,
and to suggest areas of individual and community sacrifices to conserve
resources for the common good. In those instances where serious
damage has already been done to a local ecology we urge individual
citizens, local governments, federal government agencies, educational
institutions, local businesses, community organizations and parish
communities to work together, cooperatively and patiently, in searching
out appropriate solutions.
7. Promote Social and Ecological
Responsibility among Reductive and Reproductive Enterprises
Reductive industries extract from the earth goods that are not renewable,
such as metals and petroleum. Reproductive industries harvest from
earth's bounty renewable goods such as timber and agricultural products.
People living and working in areas in which these enterprises operate
have a right to a clean and healthful environment.
Mining provides needed mineral resources and the jobs that produce
them. We applaud the conscientious mine owners and operators who
have used scientific data and economic projections to construct
and operate mines that support working people and their communities
while safeguarding ecosystem health. We thank mine workers who have,
at times, risked their lives to benefit others: their families,
their church and their communities. We urge mine owners and operators
to be conscious of their responsibilities to local communities,
downstream communities, and the environment in general when siting
or operating mines built to meet human needs.
We commend timber industry owners and workers who provide lumber
for people's needs, and engage in long-term sustainable timber practices
that respect diverse wildlife habitat needs and the overall health
of local ecosystems. We encourage timber interests, government agencies,
and local communities jointly to evaluate the social and environmental
impacts of present and proposed forestry practices and harvest allowances.
We urge that the costs of U.S. logging operations be borne by the
profiting private enterprises (in a way similar to Canadian policies)
and not externalized to the taxpayers; and we encourage consideration
of the needs of rural communities when environmental conservation
is implemented.
Agriculture is vital for food provision in the watershed and beyond.
People engaged in renewable operations on farms, orchards, vineyards,
and ranches work hard to provide the necessities of life for themselves
and others. We applaud especially family agricultural operations
that are integrated with local ecologies and interrelated with local
communities.
We urge that government and banking policies and laws encourage
family agriculture, including both private and cooperative enterprises,
in the Columbia Watershed. We suggest that low-interest agricultural
loans be linked to land, water and energy conservation practices
and, as far as possible, to organic production techniques. We urge
the implementation of economic policies designed to enable farmers
to cope with the vagaries of weather and of national and international
market demands.
8. Conserve Energy and Establish
Environmentally Integrated Alternative Energy Sources
Energy conservation consciousness has increased in the watershed.
Conservation practices by individuals and businesses, including
diminished power use, the installation of insulation, and subsidized
weatherization of the homes of low-income families, will certainly
assist regional energy providers to continue to meet projected needs.
Additional creative energy-saving initiatives are necessary, and
new sources of energy need to be developed to supplement or, if
ecologically or economically necessary, to supplant current systems.
Solar power and wind power systems, for example, show promise of
being efficient and low-cost electrical power sources if they are
mass-produced and if government subsidies for other power sources
are taken into account in parts of the watershed.
9. Respect Ethnic and Racial
Cultures, Citizens and Communities
Our region is blessed with peoples of diverse cultures who, as individual
citizens and cohesive communities, enrich the social fabric of our
lives while contributing their labor to promote societal well-being.
We are particularly concerned about the situation of Hispanic workers
who sometimes receive low wages, endure unhealthy working conditions,
and suffer discrimination. We need to celebrate the contributions
of all the diverse peoples of the Columbia Watershed, and to explore
joint projects for economic justice and ecological conservation.
We call upon the members of churches, in particular, and in a special
way the members of Catholic parishes, to reach out to those who
are of different races, ethnic groups and cultures to promote mutual
understanding and cohesive communities. We expect these churches
to be a leaven in the broader society, teaching by their example
a respect for others that will extend into neighborhoods and communities.
10. Integrate Transportation
and Recreation Needs with Sustainable Ecosystem Requirements
Reliable transportation utilizing airports, highways, waterways
and railways is essential to the river region. Careful planning
can ensure that transportation-related structures and space will
meet regional needs without encouraging the sprawl and checkerboard
development that can consume energy resources and weaken cohesive
communities.
We urge rural and urban planners to determine carefully commercial,
industrial, and individual transportation needs, to meet them with
improved public transportation and enhanced private transportation,
and to integrate them carefully into local ecologies.
People need recreation to rest from their labor and rejuvenate their
spirit. Some people prefer pristine areas where they can enjoy God's
creation with limited human intervention, while others prefer developed
areas where they can responsibly utilize recreational means developed
by human ingenuity.
People should keep in mind that recreation should not become more
valuable than work, and that it is more than "fun." Recreation
has a primary spiritual sense; it is an opportunity to encounter
God. Our souls are restless, St. Augustine says, until we find God.
In the watershed commons we can find God by leaning on what God
has created in order to pass on to God for refreshment and true
strength. In the words of Pope John Paul II, "the aesthetic
value of creation cannot be overlooked. Our very contact with nature
has a deep restorative power; contemplation of its magnificence
imparts peace and serenity" (EC, § 14).
We urge that recreational uses of public lands be permitted in designated
areas and in such a way that more intrusive motorized means of recreation
be limited, in order to allow reflective people a restorative contact
with the presence of God in pristine creation.
These considerations complement each other and exemplify the observations
of Pope John Paul II that "the earth is ultimately a common
heritage, the fruits of which are for the benefit of all" (EC,
§ 8); "the proper ecological balance will not be found
without directly addressing the structural forms of poverty"
(EC, § 11); and "the right to a safe environment is ever
more insistently presented today as a right that must be included
in an updated Charter of Human Rights" (EC, § 9).
If these projects succeed, the regional economy will be substantially
enhanced, the regional ecosystem will be able to provide for the
well-being of the community of living creatures, and regional employment
and community viability will be improved.
Conclusion: Living Waters in
the Columbia Watershed
As we study watershed land, air
and water, we become aware of other members of the biotic community
and the traditions and insights of regional peoples of the land.
We come to recognize more fully the interrelatedness of life and
the relationship of different lives to the environment in which
they dwell. We come to know more than before and we recognize that
we have much more to learn. Hopefully, after this reflection, we
are a bit more aware of the sometimes delicate relationship we have
with other people and of the responsibility we have for the other
creatures of God in the watershed.
In the watershed of the future, we hope to see the best of the watershed
of the past: living waters of God's creation flowing from meadows
and mountains to the ocean while providing for the needs of God's
creatures along the way. We ask all people of good will to imagine
what they would like the watershed to be like in ten, fifty or one
hundred years, and to work conscientiously to make that image a
reality.
We hope and pray that the issuance of this letter will be beneficial
for the Columbia Watershed. We hope and pray that it will contribute
to a deeper respect for the dignity of the human person. We hope
that it will be a source of encouragement to people who care deeply
for God's creation. We pray that people will be more reverentially
grateful for the goods that the watershed provides and respect and
assist those who depend on those goods for their livelihood. We
ask that people use the watershed resources responsibly to promote
the human community and the well-being of all people.
The reign of God proclaimed by Jesus is present and yet to come.
Signs of its presence are evident in people's efforts to restore
God's creation and live in harmony with the earth and all creatures,
and in struggles to promote justice in human communities. The signs
are yet incomplete but by the grace of God and the cooperation of
humanity the struggle will be more energetically engaged and justice
and peace can prevail. The watershed can be transformed through
community commitments to concrete historical projects.
People live in the world of nature, not apart from it. They need
to alter that world at times in order to provide for their needs.
The means are now available to use regional resources more efficiently
while doing much less harm to regional ecologies. We can live in
greater harmony with our surroundings if we strive to become more
aware of our connection to, and responsibility for, the creation
that surrounds us.
The vision of a renewed earth in the Columbia River Watershed poses
a challenge of grand scale. It parallels the challenges faced by
the original natives or the challenges faced by the early Europeans.
Living in and developing the watershed demanded courage, conviction,
perseverance and vision.
These same qualities are demanded now as we enter the Third Millennium
and present our vision for the Columbia River Watershed of the future.
It is a vision that can be realized. It is a challenge as great
as the Columbia River itself. It is a challenge worthy of the men
and women who inhabit this watershed. It is a challenge that will
test the resolve of us all.
Such a challenge can be met only with faith in God, faith in one
another and mutual cooperation. Such a challenge can be met only
if we implore the assistance of the God who creates the universe
and who continually sends forth the Spirit for the ongoing renewal
of the human race and for the renewal of the face of the earth.
Our prayer for the successful fulfillment of the vision for the
Columbia River Watershed is simply: Lord, send out your Spirit and
renew the minds and hearts of the people of the region so that,
being renewed, they may cooperate with your Spirit and together
renew the face of the earth.
Dated: The Feast of the Baptism
of the Lord, January 8, 2001
Signatures of the Bishops:
Archbishop Alex J. Brunett, Archdiocese
of Seattle, Washington
Archbishop John G. Vlazny, Archdiocese of Portland, Oregon
Bishop Eugene J. Cooney, Diocese of Nelson, British Columbia
Bishop Michael P. Driscoll, Diocese of Boise, Idaho
Bishop Robert C. Morlino, Diocese of Helena, Montana
Bishop Carlos A. Sevilla, S.J., Diocese of Yakima, Washington
Bishop William S. Skylstad. Diocese of Spokane, Washington
Bishop Robert F. Vasa, Diocese of Baker, Oregon
Auxiliary Bishop Kenneth D. Steiner, Archdiocese of Portland, Oregon
Auxiliary Bishop George L. Thomas, Archdiocese of Seattle, Washington
Archbishop Raymond G. Hunthausen (Retired), Archdiocese of Seattle,
Washington
Bishop Thomas J. Connolly (Retired), Diocese of Baker, Oregon
COLUMBIA RIVER PROJECT PASTORAL
LETTER APPENDIX
Appendix A: Pastoral Letter Project
Process
The Columbia River Watershed:
Caring for Creation and the Common Good integrates Catholic
faith and ecological responsibility. With the assistance of grants
from the United States Catholic Conference Environmental Justice
Program and the National Religious Partnership for the Environment,
the project began in 1997 with the formation of an international
Steering Committee. The Committee represented Canadian and U.S.
watershed dioceses and Catholic colleges and universities. A series
of "Readings of the Signs of the Times" was held in Washington,
Oregon and British Columbia in which representatives of diverse
constituencies -- industry, agriculture, fishing, education and
native peoples -- presented their perspectives on regional needs.
A draft of these perspectives was enlarged and enhanced by the advice
of a wide range of consultants: theologians, natural and social
scientists, and church representatives. A web site was established
describing Project activities and inviting comments from interested
people. An exploratory document, "The Columbia River Watershed:
Realities and Possibilities," was released for discussion on
May 12, 1999.
Subsequently, listening sessions
were hosted by bishops from the Columbia River watershed.. Hundreds
of people from all walks of life have participated in the process.
All of their ideas and perspectives have been considered for inclusion,
and have been reflected upon during the pastoral letter process
in some way. A poetic statement about the Columbia River, entitled
Riversong, is also included in the appendix. The letter is being
disseminated through the Columbia River Pastoral Letter Project
to provide an international, watershed-wide, ongoing conversation
process: to care for creation, to resolve regional conflicts with
respect, compassion and good will, and to promote sustainable ecological
relationships linked with community economic benefits.
The Project Steering Committee
Bishop William Skylstad, Diocese of Spokane -- Spokane, Washington,
Chair
Mr. Joseph Burns, Diocese of Baker -- Hermiston, Oregon
Mr. Robert J. Castagna, Oregon Catholic Conference -- Portland,
Oregon
Rev. Scott Coble, S.J., Gonzaga University -- Spokane, Washington
Mr. J.L. Drouhard, Justice and Peace Office, Archdiocese of Seattle
-- Seattle, Washington
Dr. Frank Fromherz, Office of Justice and Peace, Archdiocese of
Portland -- Portland Oregon
Ms. Donna Hanson, Social Ministries Office, Diocese of Spokane -
Spokane, Washington
Dr. John Hart, Carroll College -- Helena, Montana
Dr. Loretta Jancoski, Seattle University -- Seattle, Washington
Dr. Steve Kolmes, University of Portland -- Portland, Oregon
Rev. Pat Monette, Pastor -- Westbank, B.C., Canada
Sr. Sharon Park, O.P., Washington State Catholic Conference - Seattle,
Washington
Rev. Ron Patnode, Pastor -- Sunnyside, Washington
Dr. Mark Petruncio, Heritage College -- Toppenish, Washington
Sr. Cecilia Ranger, S.N.J.M., Marylhurst College -- Marylhurst,
Oregon
Mr. John Reid, Project Manager, Reid & Associates, Inc. -- Seattle,
Washington
Ms. Yvonne Smith, Diocese of Yakima -- Wapato, Washington
Mr. Wes Towle, Diocese of Nelson -- Nakusp, B.C., Canada
Appendix B: "Readings of
the Signs of theTimes" and Listening Sessions
1. "Readings of the Signs of
the Times"
The University of Portland,
Portland, Oregon: November, 1997
Seattle University, Seattle, Washington: February, 1998
Hanford, Washington: March, 1998
Toppenish, Washington: May, 1998
Umatilla, Oregon: July, 1998
Castlegar, British Columbia: September, 1998
Spokane, Washington: February, 1999
Hermiston, Oregon: March, 1999
2. Listening Sessions*
St. Mary's Parish, Spokane, Washington: August, 1999
St. Paul Parish, Yakima, Washington: August, 1999
Columbia River Maritime Museum, Astoria, Oregon: October, 1999
St. Pius X and Holy Trinity Churches, Cedar Mill & Beaverton,
Oregon: October 1999
Carroll College, Helena, Montana: October, 1999
Holy Family Church, Clarkston, Washington: October, 1999
Salish-Kootenai College, Pablo, Montana: November, 1999
* Many other parishes and community organizations sponsored sessions
on their own
between June and December, 1999.
Appendix C: Resource Consultants
Loren Bahls, Helena, Montana
Diane Bergant, CSA, Chicago, Illinois
Rev. Carla Berkedal, Mercer Island, Washington .
Russ Butkus, Portland, Oregon
Judy Byron, O.P, Seattle, Washington
Pat Clancey, Ennis, Montana
Carol Dempsey, OP, Portland, Oregon
Rev. John DuLong, Revelstoke, B.C.
Rev. Hugh Feiss, OSB, Jerome, Idaho
Walt Grazer, Washington, D.C.
Richard Harmon, Portland, Oregon
Chief Johnny Jackson, Underwood, Washington
Rev. Charles Lienert, Portland, Oregon
Jim Male, Portland, Oregon
Debrah Marriott, Portland, Oregon
David McCloskey, Seattle, Washington
Sallie McFague, Nashville, Tennessee
Gary McNeil, Seattle, Washington
Sabino Sardineta, Cornelius, Oregon
Wilbur Slockish, Jr., The Dalles, Oregon
Mary Jo Tully, Portland, Oregon
Appendix D: Selected Bibliography
Alberta Catholic Bishops, Canada.
Celebrate Life: Care for Creation, 1998.
Appalachian Catholic Bishops, United States. This Land Is Home To
Me: A Statement on Powerlessness in Appalachia, 1975.
Canadian Catholic Bishops. The Environmental Crisis: The Place of
the Human Being in the Cosmos, 1995.
The Struggle Against Poverty: A Sign of Hope for Our World, 1996.
Drew Christiansen, S.J., and Walter Grazer, eds. "And God Saw
That It Was Good": Catholic Theology and the Environment, United
States Catholic Conference, 1996.
Guatemalan Catholic Bishops. The Cry for Land, 1988.
John Hart. The Spirit of the Earth: A Theology of the Land. Paulist
Press, 1984.
Ethics and Technology: Innovation and Transformation in Community
Contexts, Pilgrim Press, 1997.
Midwestern Catholic Bishops, United States. Strangers and Guests:
Toward Community in the Heartland, 1980.
Pope John Paul II. The Ecological Crisis: A Common Responsibility,
1990.
As the Third Millennium Draws Near (Tertio Millennio Adveniente),
1994.
United States Catholic Bishops. Economic Justice for All: Catholic
Social Teaching and the U.S. Economy, 1986.
Renewing the Earth: An Invitation to Reflection and Action on Environment
in Light of Catholic Social Teaching, 1991.
Appendix E: The Project Web Site:
www.columbiariver.org
Appendix F: A Poetic Reflection
Riversong
In the beginning was the Word, who
brought forth the cosmos,
creating the stars and the worlds and the waters,
a universe wondrous, dynamic and blessed.
The Spirit breathed spirit enlivening the cosmos:
over eons in waters the first life was born,
then evolved yet new creatures, sent to air, onto land:
the finned ones and winged ones, the rooted ones and legged ones
all that had life emerged on the earth
to give life in turn, passing through generations,
diverse forms of beauty spread over the world.
God said all creation was now "very good."
Then the Word who created the worlds
and the waters
and the wondrous lives in them, came into this world;
was immersed in womb waters, was born among people;
in the Jordan was baptized, living waters poured on him;
came to teach us as Word by his words and his life,
came to tell us that we among creatures were called
-as images, dreamers, aware of creation-
to drink living waters of earth and the Spirit
to care for each other, all life and our home.
The Word spoke of water as living and flowing;
the grace of the Spirit called all to be one:
a sharing of goods and a life of compassion
a way to see all as our neighbors to love.
In regions afar from the Word's
place of birth,
some ten thousand years before the Word's birth,
the Word in creation had forged different lands:
a sea far inland broke through its rock dam,
Lake Missoula went westward seeking out the Pacific
-shattered rock that seemed solid, plowed canyons in Earth,
and gave the Willamette the richest of soil-
left beneath and behind it a world now transformed
-a world of new lakes and new rivers, pure waters
a watershed reaching from meadows, through mountains,
a lifeblood of life-giving waters still bearing
in memory their turbulent flood time of birth;
among them a great river flowed, filled with salmon
a great singing river through Celilo splashed down
called first by first peoples, Che Wana, Great River,
and then called Columbia, the West's mighty river.
The waters, still living, rushed over the land,
revealing in beauty and life's diverse forms
the vision, the power, the presence of Spirit.
In their depths, on their surface and splashing in waves
salmon streamed, flickering flashes of silver in sunlight
leaping up falls, and gliding in currents
-Celilo's great height was a trial for all,
their challenge and triumph the great falls would be
their tails splashed the waters, their strength gave them wings
as they flew up the falls to conquer its heights
headed home to spawn offspring to pass on their life
then feed other creatures of air, land and water.
The rivers sang out then, a clear, mighty song,
the melodies played by their rapids were strong
-at Wapta, Celilo, Shoshone and Kettle,
and through the Grand Coulee and Hells Canyon rocks-
a symphony soaring through meadows and mountains
- the Snake played it southward, the Blackfoot sang east,
the Kootenay north, the Willamette far west-
a chorus soon joined by the breath of the wind,
by the cries of the birds soaring up in the air:
the eagle and owl, merganser and magpie,
osprey and raven, and other winged people;
by the splashing of fish swimming deep in the waters:
salmon went westward with the song of the young,
while others swam eastward with songs of new life,
and steelhead and other finned people sang too;
by the branches of trees swaying in the air currents:
the aspen, the larch, the Doug fir and cedar,
the rooted ones all whispered words for the song;
by the voices of all those who walk on the land,
and drink of the waters, and feed in the forests:
the mule deer, the elk, the black bear and lynx, and others who
leap, crawl, or slither or run.
God heard there in echo the words of creation
that through all time call all the world into being;
God said that the song of the rivers was good.
The waters, still living, flowed
on through the eons,
the Great River felt when the peoples arrived,
and built there their homes, River People by name;
they lived tuned to "Mother Earth's" rhythms and nurture,
the way of the Spirit they tried to live well
and many were fishers and some were called Dreamers.
Celilo their seasonal home came to be
when the salmon leaped skyward, and surged through the waters
coming back from their journey in the stormy Pacific
to spawn in the old gravel beds of their birth,
giving life among watershed waters of old
which flowed south from marshes in Canada's Rockies
to unite with the west ocean beach's strong tides.
The waters, still living, flowed
on through the centuries,
the shores of Che Wana new peoples made home,
Columbia became the great river's new name;
they used nature's goods in new ways and they prospered;
but the old peoples then were displaced from their lands:
Che Wana's first peoples lost lives, fish and home.
Generations passed on and the Earth
was transformed
from meadows to farms, food and fiber for some,
from forests to lumber and framing for houses,
from hillsides to aluminum plants for new airplanes,
from mountains to atom-based plants and new weapons;
some peoples cut ties with the rivers, their place
-with the Spirit, the earth and each other as well-
and the land in pain languished, groaning for its redemption;
the song of the river was mournful, near mute
the waters flowed slowly, less living for all:
the voices of wind, birds and salmon, all life
were fewer and softer than ever before;
the peoples of sky, land and waters were weary,
longing for visions and a new way of life.
A wind rippled rivers, the Spirit
was whispering
its breath touched the peoples of sky, land and waters:
they turned from illusions, from dancing with death
to follow its promise of new life to come.
The rivers flowed on, quickened
now by the visions
while sensing new projects being formed on the land;
restored, renewed places, new habitats, homesteads
soon came into being, with peoples now conscious
of the presence of Spirit, of the rhythms of earth,
of how they related, each one to each other.
The waters and watershed then were
transformed:
the rivers ran clear, strong, and living again;
the peoples of the sky, the land and the waters
lived each in relation to all and to earth:
farmers and fruitful fields, fishers and fish,
forests and foresters cared for each other,
communities cared for the commons, their home,
the common good all sought to work for as one;
new energy sources soon came into being,
that worked with earth's energy, sunlight and wind;
industrial plants used old waste as new products,
the air, land and waters were cleaned and renewed;
economics and ecology through ethics were bound,
eco-justice, eco-consciousness walked hand in hand,
and communities called themselves neighbors again.
Che Wana and her sisters sang with joy, living waters,
and peoples of the sky, land and swift flowing rivers,
plants, birds, fish, animals, life in communion
all lifted their voices and joined in the song.
God saw living waters and peoples
who cared for them,
sharing the life of the cosmos and commons
-the tree of life gave them its fruits for their food,
its leaves were their medicine, healing for all-
the riversong soared, then, on wind, over waves.
God blessed them, saying to them, "You are all very good."
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