Act: Inspiration

Fast for the Future

January 20, 2020

Ed. disclaimer: Post Carbon Institute and the Resilience.org editors do not endorse any particular candidates for public office. The following post is published for informational use.

Today, in honor of the traditions of her ancestors, Lyla June Johnston will begin a seven-day fast on the steps of the New Mexico Statehouse. She begins her fast on Martin Luther King Day, as she says, “to honor his courage to act in times of crisis.” Johnston, who is challenging Democratic incumbent and Speaker of the House Brian Egolf, will be using the fast to invite contemplation and prayer; to draw attenton to the climate crisis; and to launch a discussion around her innovative Seven Generations New Deal.

New Mexico is home to the world’s top oil producer, the Permian Basin, which would account for 10 percent of the global carbon budget if extracted and burned. Johnston’s intention is to prevent that from happening, and to move the public to a larger discussion about the disastrous consequences of our country’s addiction to fossil fuels.

Here she explains, in a live Facebook video, the reasoning behind her decision:

Greetings, my kin and family, I am inviting you to my seven day fast on the Capitol steps here in Santa Fe, New Mexico. It starts Martin Luther King Day this Monday and it goes through Sunday, January 26. I’d like to invite all of you to come and sit with me to come and pray with me. And we’re doing seven days because we want to pray for the next seven generations to come. This is an indigenous concept that all of our policy and all of our actions should consider the impact on the next seven generations to come. And as a candidate for District 47 in the New Mexico House of Representatives, I really want to embody that principle and have our policies embody that principle. So during these seven days, we will be unveiling our Seven Generations New Deal, which is a seven point program for climate action. And we’d love for you to come and listen to see what we’re thinking and give your input, because we really want this policy to be built from the ground up. We fully expect that the first draft that we are releasing on Monday will look nothing like the final draft that we have by the end of this campaign. We want you to evaluate it. Tear it apart and put it back together, because we believe that the only effective climate policy is one that is built of, for and by the people. We believe that no matter how smart we are as experts, we will never be as brilliant as all of the minds of New Mexico woven together in a beautiful tapestry of ingenuity and innovation. We believe that we are stronger when we come together, when we honor diverse perspectives, when we honor different peoples in different situations. And we would love to hear what you think about our Seven Generations New Deal. It’s a hybrid of the Green New Deal and indigenous principles and practices. And each of our seven points has a policy action item so that these aren’t just principles, but real legislation that we could bring into the Santa Fe Roundhouse, the Santa Fe capital here in New Mexico and implement hopefully into law. And if it isn’t passed through the House and the Senate and signed by the governor, at the very least, we will be bringing these really important ideas into a sphere that has forgotten how to live on the Earth.

And so this is my humble invitation to all of you. I’ll be fasting all seven days. I will drink buffalo broth in the morning and evening. We have a medical crew monitoring my health every day. But we would really love if you could eat for me the first six days. And if you want to fast with me, come the last day, Sunday, the 26th, to the Capitol steps and fast with me. Pray with me and think with me. And as Sitting Bull said, Let us put our minds together and see what life we can create for our children. That is the whole plan here in my campaign. And if I’m elected, what I want to do as your representative. So please come and take the time to to be there with us. And if you want to learn more and see the exact schedule of all the events of the fast, you can go to www.electlylajune.com. And we would really love to see you there. So please come out and give me a little bit of strength because it’s gonna be a hard seven days. Thank you for your time. And we’ll see you there.

Checking my vitals and doing a pre-evaluation before this seven-day fast for Mother Earth in a time of climate crisis. We start at 7AM tomorrow. Normally I do not pray or fast in public, but extraordinary times call for extraordinary measures. I wanted to use this opportunity to get us all together to think about solutions to our situation. Thanks to Nicolle Gonzales, RN, and Dr. Rupa Marya for checking in on me each day and making sure everything is going well with me.(Lyla June’s Facebook page)

For a full schedule, see www.electlylajune.com. Follow her on Facebook and Instagram, and read her previous articles in The Esperanza Project.

 

Lyla June Johnston

Lyla June is a poet, singer-songwriter, hip-hop artist, human ecologist, public speaker and community organizer of Diné (Navajo), Tsétsêhéstâhese (Cheyenne) and European lineages. Her dynamic, multi-genre performance and speech style has invigorated and inspired audiences across the globe towards personal, collective and ecological healing. Her messages focus on Indigenous rights, supporting youth, inter-cultural healing, historical trauma and traditional land stewardship practices. She blends her undergraduate studies in human ecology at Stanford University, her graduate work in Native American Pedagogy at the University of New Mexico, and the indigenous worldview she grew up with to inform her perspectives and solutions. Her internationally acclaimed performances and speeches are conveyed through the medium of prayer, hip-hop, poetry, acoustic music and speech. Her personal goal is to grow closer to Creator by learning how to love deeper.


Tags: climate change responses, indigenous lifeways, new economy