Iowa's own DuPont/Pioneer is a major player in the GMO fiasco in
Hawaii. The late H.A. Wallace would surely disown the company that he helped
found.--Tom
“For Hawaii’s indigenous peoples, the concepts underlying genetic
manipulation of life forms are offensive and contrary to the cultural values of
"aloha āina [love for the land],” wrote Mililani B. Strask, a native Hawaiian
attorney.
==============================================================================
EXTRACT:
In the current legislative session, there are about a dozen proposed bills
pushing GMO regulation, labeling and a ban on all imported GMO produce. These
fights over mandating GMO labeling and regulation in Hawaii may seem like a
remote issue, but what happens on these isolated islands is pivotal for land
sovereignty movements across the globe.
---
---
Exposed: Monsanto's
Chemical War Against Indigenous Hawaiians
AlterNet, April 12
2013
http://www.alternet.org/activism/exposed-monsantos-chemical-war-against-indigenous-hawaiians
*Hawaiians
are fighting back against the GMO giant.
At 9 am on an overcast morning
in paradise, hundreds of protesters gathered in traditional Hawaiian chant and
prayer. Upon hearing the sound of the conch shell, known here as Pū, the
protesters followed a group of women towards Monsanto’s grounds.
“A’ole
GMO,” cried the mothers as they marched alongside Monsanto’s cornfields, located
only feet from their homes on Molokai, one of the smallest of Hawaii’s main
islands. In a tiny, tropical corner of the Pacific that has warded off tourism
and development, Monsanto’s fields are one of only a few corporate entities that
separates the bare terrain of the mountains and oceans.
This spirited
march was the last of a series of protests on the five Hawaiian islands that
Monsanto and other biotech companies have turned into the world’s ground zero
for chemical testing and food engineering. Hawaii is currently at the epicenter
of the debate over genetically modified organisms, generally shortened to GMOs.
Because Hawaii is geographically isolated from the broader public, it is an
ideal location for conducting chemical experiments. The island chain’s climate
and abundant natural resources have lured five of the world’s largest biotech
chemical corporations: Monsanto, Syngenta, Dow AgroSciences, DuPont Pioneer and
BASF. In the past 20 years, these chemical companies have performed over
5,000 open-field-test experiments of pesticide-resistant crops on an estimated
40,000 to 60,000 acres of Hawaiian land without any disclosure, making the place
and its people a guinea pig for biotech engineering.
The presence of
these corporations has propelled one of the largest movement mobilizations in
Hawaii in decades. Similar to the environmental and land sovereignty protests in
Canada and the continental United States, the movement is influenced by
indigenous culture.
“All of the resources that our kapuna [elders] gave
to us, we need to take care of now for the next generation,” said Walter Ritte,
a Hawaii activist, speaking in part in the Hawaiian indigenous
language.
“That is our kuleana [responsibility]. That is everybody’s
kuleana.”
In Hawaiian indigenous culture, the very idea of GMOs is
effectively sacrilegious.
“For Hawaii’s indigenous peoples, the concepts
underlying genetic manipulation of life forms are offensive and contrary to the
cultural values of "aloha āina [love for the land],” wrote Mililani B. Strask, a
native Hawaiian attorney.
Deadly practices
Monsanto has a long
history of making chemicals that bring about devastation. The company
participated in the Manhattan Project to help produce the atomic bomb during
World War II. It developed the herbicide “Agent Orange” used by U.S. military
forces during the Vietnam War, which caused an estimated half-million birth
deformities. Most recently, Monsanto has driven thousands of farmers in India to
take their own lives, often by drinking chemical insecticide, after the high
cost of the company’s seeds forced them into unpayable debt.
(WNV/Imani
Altemus-Williams)
A Molokai resident expresses joy as the march passes by
her home, which is located across the street from Monsanto’s fields. (WNV/Imani
Altemus-Williams)
The impacts of chemical testing and GMOs are immediate
— and, in the long-term, could prove deadly. In Hawaii, Monsanto and other
biotech corporations have sprayed over 70 different chemicals during field tests
of genetically engineered crops, more chemical testing than in any other place
in the world. Human studies have not been conducted on GMO foods, but animal
experiments show that genetically modified foods lead to pre-cancerous cell
growth, infertility, and severe damage to the kidneys, liver and large
intestines. Additionally, the health risks of chemical herbicides sprayed onto
GMO crops cause hormone disruption, cancer, neurological disorders and birth
defects. In Hawaii, some open-field testing sites are near homes and schools.
Prematurity, adult on-set diabetes and cancer rates have significantly increased
in Hawaii in the last ten years. Many residents fear chemical drift is poisoning
them.
Monsanto’s agricultural procedures also enable the practice of
monocropping, which contributes to environmental degradation, especially on an
island like Hawaii. Monocropping is an agricultural practice where one crop is
repeatedly planted in the same spot, a system that strips the soil of its
nutrients and drives farmers to use a herbicide called Roundup, which is linked
to infertility. Farmers are also forced to use pesticides and fertilizers that
cause climate change and reef damage, and that decrease the biodiversity of
Hawaii.
Food sovereignty as resistance
At the first of the series
of marches against GMOs, organizers planted coconut trees in Haleiwa, a
community on the north shore of Oahu Island. In the movement, protesting and
acting as caretakers of the land are no longer viewed as separate actions,
particularly in a region where Monsanto is leasing more than 1,000 acres of
prime agricultural soil.
During the march, people chanted and held signs
declaring, “Aloha ‘āina: De-occupy Hawaii.”
The phrase aloha ‘āina is
regularly seen and heard at anti-GMO protests. Today the words are defined as
“love of the land,” but the phrase has also signified “love for the country.”
Historically, it was commonly used by individuals and groups fighting for the
restoration of the independent Hawaiian nation, and it is now frequently
deployed at anti-GMO protests when people speak of Hawaiian sovereignty and
independence.
After the protest, marchers gathered in Haleiwa Beach Park,
where they performed speeches, music, spoken-word poetry and dance while sharing
free locally grown food. The strategy of connecting with the land was also a
feature of the subsequent protest on the Big Island, where people planted taro
before the march, and also at the state capitol rally, where hundreds
participated in the traditional process of pounding taro to make poi, a
Polynesian staple food.
The import economy is a new reality for Hawaii,
one directly tied to the imposition of modern food practices on the island.
Ancient Hawaii operated within the Ahupua’a system, a communal model of
distributing land and work, which allowed the islands to be entirely
self-sufficient.
“Private land ownership was unknown, and public, common
use of the ahupua’a resources demanded that boundaries be drawn to include
sufficient land for residence and cultivation, freshwater sources, shoreline and
open ocean access,” explained Carol Silva, an historian and Hawaiian language
professor.
Inspired by the Ahupua’a model, the food sovereignty movement
is building an organic local system that fosters the connections between
communities and their food — a way of resisting GMOs while simultaneously
creating alternatives.
Colonial history
The decline of the
Ahupua’a system didn’t only set Hawaii on the path away from food sovereignty;
it also destroyed the political independence of the now-U.S. state. And indeed,
when protesters chant “aloha ‘āina” at anti-GMO marches, they are alluding to
the fact that this fight isn’t only over competing visions of land use and food
creation. It’s also a battle for the islands’ political
sovereignty.
Historically, foreign corporate interests have repeatedly
taken control of Hawaii — and have exploited and mistreated the land and its
people in the process.
“It’s a systemic problem and the GMO issue just
happens to be at the forefront of public debate at the moment,” said Keoni Lee
of ʻŌiwi TV. “ʻĀina [land] equals that which provides. Provides for
who?”
The presence of Monsanto and the other chemical corporations is
eerily reminiscent of the business interests that led to the overthrow of the
Hawaiian Kingdom. Throughout the 19th century, the Hawaiian Kingdom was
recognized as an independent nation. That reality changed in 1893, when a group
of American businessmen and sugar planters orchestrated a U.S. Marine’s armed
coup d’etat of the Hawaiian Kingdom government.
Five years later, the
U.S. apprehended the islands for strategic military use during the
Spanish-American War despite local resistance. Even then-President Grover
Cleveland called the overthrow a “substantial wrong” and vowed to restore the
Hawaiian kingdom. But the economic interests overpowered the political will, and
Hawaii remained a U.S. colony for the following 60 years.
The annexation
of Hawaii profited five sugarcane-manufacturing companies commonly referred to
as the Big Five: Alexander & Baldwin, Amfac (American Factors), Castle &
Cooke, C. Brewer, and Theo H. Davies. Most of the founders of these companies
were missionaries who were actively involved in lobbying for the annexation of
the Hawaiian islands in 1898. After the takeover, the Big Five manipulated great
political power and influence in what was then considered the “Territory of
Hawaii,” gaining unparalleled control of banking, shipping and importing on the
island chain. The companies only sponsored white republicans in government,
creating an oligarchy that threatened the labor force if it voted against their
interests. The companies’ environmental practices, meanwhile, caused air and
water pollution and altered the biodiversity of the land.
The current
presence of the five-biotech chemical corporations in Hawaii mirrors the
political and economic colonialism of the Big Five in the early 20th century —
particularly because Monsanto has become the largest employer on
Molokai.
“There is no difference between the “Big Five” that actually
ruled Hawaii in the past,” said Walter Ritte. “Now it’s another “Big Five,” and
they’re all chemical companies. So it’s almost like this is the same thing. It’s
like déjàvu.”
Rising up
At the opening of this year’s legislative
session on January 16, hundreds of farmers, students and residents marched to
the state capitol for a rally titled “Idle No More: We the People.” There,
agricultural specialist and food sovereignty activist Vandana Shiva, who
traveled from India to Hawaii for the event, addressed the crowd.
“I see
Hawaii not as a place where I come and people say, ‘Monsanto is the biggest
employer,’ but people say, ‘this land, its biodiversity, our cultural heritage
is our biggest employer,’” she said.
As she alluded to, a major obstacle
facing the anti-GMO movement is the perception that the chemical corporations
provide jobs that otherwise might not exist — an economic specter that the
sugarcane companies also wielded to their advantage. Anti-GMO organizers are
aware of how entrenched this power is.
(WNV/Imani
Altemus-Williams)
Women lead the anti-GMO protest on Molokai in a
traditional Hawaiian chant. (WNV/Imani Altemus-Williams)
“The things that
we’re standing up against are really at the core of capitalism,” proclaimed
Hawaiian rights activist Andre Perez at the rally.
Given the enormity of
the enemy, anti-GMO activists are attacking the issue from a variety of fronts,
including organizing mass education, advocating for non-GMO food sovereignty and
pushing for legislative protections. Organizers see education, in particular, as
the critical element to win this battle.
“Hawaii has the cheapest form of
democracy,” said Daniel Anthony, a young local activist and founder of a
traditional poi business. “Here we can educate a million people, and Monsanto is
out.”
Others are using art to educate the public, such as Hawaiian rapper
Hood Prince, who rails against Monsanto in his song “Say No to GMO.” This
movement is also educating the community through teach-ins and the free
distribution of the newly released book Facing Hawaii’s Future: Essential
Information about GMOs.
Hawaii has already succeeded in protecting its
traditional food from genetic engineering. Similar to the way the Big Five
controlled varying sectors of society, the biotech engineering companies are
financially linked to the local government, schools and university. Monsanto
partially funds the College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources at the
University of Hawaii. The university and the Hawaii Agriculture Research Center
began the process of genetically engineering taro in 2003 after the university
patented three of its varieties. Once this information became widely known, it
incited uproar of objection from the Hawaiian community. Taro holds spiritual
significance in the islands’ indigenous culture, in which it is honored as the
first Hawaiian ancestor in the creation story.
“It felt like we were
being violated by the scientific community,” wrote Ritte inFacing Hawaii’s
Future. “For the Hawaiian community, taro is not just a plant. It’s a family
member. It’s our common ancestor ‘Haloa …. They weren’t satisfied with just
taking our land; now they wanted to take our mana, our spirit too.”
The
public outcry eventually drove the university to drop its
patents.
Anti-GMO activists are hoping for further successes in stopping
genetic food engineering. In the current legislative session, there are about a
dozen proposed bills pushing GMO regulation, labeling and a ban on all imported
GMO produce. These fights over mandating GMO labeling and regulation in Hawaii
may seem like a remote issue, but what happens on these isolated islands is
pivotal for land sovereignty movements across the globe.
“These five
major chemical companies chose us to be their center,” said Ritte. “So whatever
we do is going to impact everybody in the
world.”
==============================================
You received this
email because you signed up for a GMWatch Review or Daily
List
Unsubscribe
[log in to unmask] from this
list:
http://gmwatch.us6.list-manage.com/unsubscribe?u=29cbc7e6c21e0a8fd2a82aeb8&id=151eeeb338&e=ec3824c80e&c=3dbe0b99e0
Forward
this email to a
friend:
http://us6.forward-to-friend1.com/forward?u=29cbc7e6c21e0a8fd2a82aeb8&id=3dbe0b99e0&e=ec3824c80e
Update
your
profile:
http://gmwatch.us6.list-manage1.com/profile?u=29cbc7e6c21e0a8fd2a82aeb8&id=151eeeb338&e=ec3824c80e