Photo Courtesy of the World Wildlife Fund |
Part One of a Four-Part Post
They
are here, shoving against the sofa, blocking the doorway, rattling
the window shades. Keening. Grieving.
From my bedroom, huddled
under blankets suddenly gone heavy, I hear them, feel them. Maybe one is sitting on me, like that nauseating
commercial with its endless parade of elephant-exploitation.
The breath of life in these mammals is fading fast.
My sister called from
Northern California. The elephants have also found her; her heart is breaking
too. She lives in a lovely senior residence--a labyrinth of small apartments stacked
in five connected high-rise buildings, zig-zagged around a leafy commons. These
behemoths can weave their way through any jungle, seeking shelter.
But . . . but they
left their tusks in San Francisco: a lament that catches in our throats. In
certain mazes of the nearby city, ivory
is Big Business, ivory is King. Every elephant is Dumbo, a lumbering,
floppy-eared source of trinkets and ornaments.
On my back deck, a tiger
huddles under our large glass-topped table. Its muzzle is nearly visible,
quivering silently beneath the fringe of a winter drape.
This kitty doesn't purr.
There are no lairs safe
enough to nest in, on the pampas where the big cats once stalked freely, sinews
taut with propulsion. These hunters long ago became the hunted. The haunted. Bred
to be killed. Killed to be bled. Tigers are a rare prize now, a trophy that
goads rigorous stalking by profit-crazed poachers. Their various parts are
bought and sold avidly on the road to extinction. They are nearly at the end of
the road.
"This land is your land, This land
is my land...from California...to the Gulf Stream waters."
Off
our Gulf Coast, some beaches and marshes and wetlands are still leached with a
deep, dark fringe, like blackstrap molasses spilt. The odor is nauseating. The
seas are noxious, half-or-more dead―and deadly―for endless stretches, permeated
with toxic effluvia that erupted from beneath them. A sudden cataclysm.
There
are dolphins in my bathtub, circling tightly. They are very quiet. They have
nowhere to go.
No
"alternate universe" lies conveniently at hand, no pristine waters
around the next bend of beach. And now the seismic drumbeat of our search for sub-sea
oil is set to become our heartbeat? Their death knell.
The
losses there, and yes, off the coast of Alaska and elsewhere, are uncountable. Unaccountable―both in
marine life and the once-viable communities dependent upon them. Irresolvable.
Woody
Guthrie never lived to see what today's exponential greed-power-indifference would do to "this land." The great trifecta that has infected everything .
. . everything.
This
land is not our land at all. The exploiters have taken over.
This earth is no longer our earth (although it never really was,
of course; we merely have custody of it, which is the problem we
face), and soon it will be no more an elephant/tiger/rhino/great-fish/you-name-it
earth. The zoos and laboratories alone will keep them from extinction.
But the earth that bred them
is their only habitat: Nothing can replace the irreplaceable.
And my home is haunted by
the dwindling ghosts of these stricken animals, and the countless others
falling off the chain of life. My heart can hold them all. Our hearts can.
to be continued....
to be continued....
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