Invalid Connection
Published March 20, 2003
I am a moderate environmentalist - this is where my views diverge most sharply from those of oilman George W. Bush. I am all for alternative energy, against global warming (even though Cleveland stands to become a resort town eventually), drilling in protected areas (ANWR), etc. I think wind power is a great renewable energy source, where applicable, and I even sympathize with the quasi-religious perspective of the land as "sacred."
So this tour announcement sounds pretty cool to me:
- Grammy-award winning musicians Indigo Girls and Native environmental activist Winona LaDuke team up in April to take a message of alternative energy and cultural preservation to college campuses from Minnesota to Colorado. The Honor the Earth Tour is a cross-country speaking and performance tour aimed at educating college students and the general public on current issues related to Native environmental activism and the development of wind power on Native lands, in particular. The tour will also include visits to Native reservations currently implementing wind power and other alternative energy projects in their communities.
In 1991, Winona LaDuke met Indigo Girls Amy Ray and Emily Saliers backstage at an Earth Day benefit near Boston, MA. Out of that first meeting, a long-lasting friendship and working partnership was born, and the national Native foundation, Honor the Earth, was created. Indigo Girls have since headlined four Honor the Earth concert tours to raise money for Native groups working on front-line environmental issues in communities across the country. This year, Indigo Girls and LaDuke will embark on their fifth benefit tour together, but this time, they are taking a message of environmental activism directly to college campuses. "When I was in college one thing that was sorely lacking from my education was exposure to the indigenous perspective and approach to activism, specifically around cultural and environmental sustainability," says Ray. "I don't believe we can be activists without contemplating the effects of manifest destiny on the development of our country and its relationship to all aspects of our current movement for human and environmental dignity. The struggle for a sustainable and tolerant world community has always been embraced by student activists."
- The tour targets colleges located close to Native lands in an effort to bridge what is often an isolating gap between college students and the communities that exist very close to them. The Honor the Earth Tour will draw connections not only between local colleges and regional Native environmental issues, but between the imminent war on Iraq and the need for more sound energy policy and technology across the United States.
- Invalid Connection
- Published: March 20, 2003
- Type:
- Section: Politics
- Filed Under: Music: News
- Writer: Eric Olsen
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