St. Paul

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stoweaway
Today we're on the high seas, having left St. Paul around 11 last night. We weren't expecting a great reception in St. Paul. Something happened there twenty years ago that the residents have not forgiven Greenpeace for, according to rumours going around the Espy. Details are sketchy. It's said that we had a boat visiting St. Paul, and some campaigners went to a Tribal Council meeting in town while other mates went out in a zodiac and accidentally disturbed the seals, which St. Paul Aleuts depend on for their subsistence. Some of the seals took off out to sea, and as the annual seal hunt was next day, our accident was seen as sabotage.
Rumors are rife and conflicting. It was the subsistence hunt of the Aleuts. No, it was really commercial seal hunting. At least one mate thinks it doesn't matter which it was, subsistence or commercial, that we have a duty to stop the hunting of all seals, period.
The Captain is prepared to apologize to the community at a town meeting we'll be holding in St. Paul.
At the island of St. George, which we just left, residents distrustful of Greenpeace came around to a supportive position. But a man warned me: "Don't expect the same reaction in St. Paul that you've seen here in St. George". Besides, St. George has 108 citizens. St. Paul, more like 500.
Needless to say we are a touch wary as we walk into the only bar in St. Paul and sit down for a brewski. Back in a bar in Dutch Harbour less than a week ago a man...wielding a knife, apparently...suggested to several Greenpeacers that they go drink elsewhere. They didn't, and nothing further ensued, but...
Anyway, I decide to check out the lay of the land, see if I can do some campaigning. While I order an Alaska Summer beer at the bar, a man introduces himself and we shake and I gradually get into why we're here. He isn't too crazy about Greenpeace, but he's interested in the canyon footage we're going to show at the meeting. He says he may come to the meeting. The guy on the other side of me. (Note to husband: all these guys are dead ugly!). is a longliner who says he's furious about how bottom trawling is destroying the marine environment. Or maybe it’s just a line. If so, these guys are good. (Note to husband, that means I'm happy my campaigning is working). He also kite-surfs (I make a mental note to mention this to Brent, our videographer, as a kite-surfer who opposes bottom trawling might make for interesting footage) and may come to the meeting, too. It occurs to me that word has preceded us. Have people in St. George called friends in St. Paul, given them a heads up that they're on side with us?
Then a giant of a guy, he must be six-five and maybe 225 or more, stomps up and plants himself about an inch from my face. "Greenpeace is twenty years too late!" he shouts. All I hear is "twenty years" and I think, I'm going to get my lights punched out. My companions at a table by the window suddenly seem so very far away. Why, why did I ever start talking to men in a bar? (Note to husband: never again). I start to stammer something about being sorry for whatever happened twenty years ago but he waves it aside with a hand as big as a bear paw. "That doesn't matter," he growls. "I don't always like what Greenpeace does, but if it wasn't for Greenpeace, there'd be no boreal forests in the Amazon!" He is so loud, I'm sure the whole bar can hear. How great is that? And then HE starts going on about the evils of bottom trawling. Kite surfer gets into the game: "Greenpeace is here at exactly the right time!" Boy, these guys sure know how to sweet-talk a girl. I mention we're going to Amchitka, and the giant gets heated: "They set off three nuclear bombs up there. My buddy won't work there, because it's radioactive." I pull aside my jacket collar, show him the button pinned to my denim shirt. It's the one that preceded the first Greenpeace button, the yellow one with a peace sign and the word "Amchitka" in green, the one I used to sell for 25 cents to raise money to charter the first Greenpeace boat to sail to Amchitka to protest the blasts. Giant staggers back a few steps. "No way!" he shouts.
As we leave the bar I'm practically floating, and it's not (just) the Alaska Summer.  After I shot my mouth off in St. George and accidentally said something right, I'd been targeted to open the meeting here, and although I'd prepared some remarks, I wasn't exactly looking forward to it.  But after talking with "Giant", I feel more hopeful.
Back at the boat Julie, our cultural anthropologist and as you may know from a previous blog super-duper prize knitter, shares her not-so-great experience. Apparently there are some in the community who attribute the blunders of every environmental group who've messed up here, to Greenpeace. Groan. Let's hope they come to the meeting so we can set them straight.
But the next night at the meeting, the only people attending are about eighteen locals, thirteen Greenpeacers from the Espy and a German camera crew who film the whole thing. George is absolutely brilliant, of course. Several Aleuts speak, articulately and at length, and seem to be on side. I'm off the hook, only have to say a few words about "back in the day". Whatever hostility and negativity there may be in the community towards Greenpeace never materializes. The only flack we encounter is from a pre-teen, hanging with his friends outside the general store, who asks Willem where he's from. "Amsterdam," Willem replies. "You must be a pothead then!" the kid says. When Willem denies it, the kid says: "Then you're a crackhead." "Look at him," I say to the boy. "Does he look like a crackhead?" Willem continues ahead, erect and well-dressed as always in subtle blues, greens and browns. His clothes hang on him as if they've just been ironed, although I'm sure there's no iron on board. "F... you," the kid says, and I continue on.

Comments (2)

  • Permalink themontag on August 23, 2007
    No iron on board? I'm shocked!
  • Permalink erinmoran on August 24, 2007
    nice "notes to husband"
    important to do so
    xox
  •  

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About Me

stoweaway
USA

Hi, I'm Barbara, aka "Stoweaway", because my last name is Stowe and you get the rest. My last name wasn't always Stowe though. My father changed it from "Strasmich" (our ancestry is Russian) when I was five. I remember coming home from pre-school and hearing: "I've changed our family name" and me spittting back, "How dare you!" My father did a lot of things that pissed me off. In 1971, when our house was the (only) Greenpeace office in the world, and our home number was the only number, and I was fourteen years old, he tried to get me to go on Greenpeace's first boat, the Phyllis Cormack, which was sailing to Amchitka Island. That's because he couldn't. His eardrums were wrecked flying a tiny plane with the Civil Air Patrol in World War II, looking for German subs, and being on a boat made him violently ill. As getting a ship to Amchitka was his raison d'etre in life in '71 (our spiritual guru and alround wiseman, Bob Hunter, was grumbling "How can we go without our leader?) he was determined that one Stowe would get onboard. Family honour was as stake. "You should get on that boat," he'd mutter. "It's going to make history." Yeah, right. Like I'd jump on an eighty-foot fishing boat with eleven men and sail up to Alaska to try to stop a nuclear bomb test. Not. Furthermore, the captain wouldn't even let a female on board. He said they were bad luck. (Yeah, we've come a long way, and we're not babies). But a part of me that wasn't full of fear ached to try. After all, I'd been selling Greenpeace buttons, making Greenpeace T-shirts, and passing petitions around in school for a year trying to raise money for the voyage. The word "Amchitka" had a hell of a lot of resonance for me. So when Captain Pete and the Espy crew came to dinner at our house a few months ago and he said "We're going to Amchitka", I knew I had to go. For family honour. For my Greenpeace aunts and uncles, Bob and Zoe Hunter and the Bohlens and Bill Darnell and all the other sages who taught me so much and who never got to Amchitka, because neither the Phyllis Cormack nor the other boat we ended up sending ever made it. I'm a ghost from Greenpeace past, the first of that original wave who will finally sail into the Amchitka harbour on a Greenpeace boat. But I also represent Greenpeace present, the generation my father and the others were fighting for, who didn't want their children to grow up in a nuclear world. And now at age fifty I feel like a Greenpeace aunt to all the amazing new generations of Greenpeace who are changing the world. And for that I have my father, who had the confidence in me to believe I could get on that boat, to thank. Not to mention my mother...but you'll hear about her, and a lot of other people, in my blog.


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