On Wednesday, May 25, as I rose early to join an 8 am protest at the West Roxbury Lateral
Pipeline site, I wondered what my purpose was for attending. While I believe in
the importance of turning back climate change, I have not been a climate
activist. Several questions remained unanswered: If we don’t build a pipeline, how
will people heat their homes? Isn’t gas cleaner than oil? Is this a NIMBY
issue? How effective would this protest be?
From the
very first reading that morning, I realized that this protest was much bigger
than our neighborhood. It was, no surprise, a poem by Mary Oliver. But it wasn’t the
kind of nature poem I’m used to, and it grabbed me by the heart:
We will be known as a culture that feared death
and adored power, that tried to vanquish insecurity
for the few and cared little for the penury of the
many. We will be
known as a culture that taught
and rewarded the amassing of things, that spoke
little if at all about the quality of life for
people (other people), for dogs, for rivers. All
the world, in our eyes, they will say, was a
commodity. And
they will say that this structure
was held together politically, which it was, and
they will say also that our politics was no more
than an apparatus to accommodate the feelings of
the heart, and that the heart, in those days ,
was small, and hard, and full of meanness.
Standing in a circle of clergy from the Jewish,
Christian, Unitarian Universalist, Hindu and Buddhist traditions, surrounded by
neighbors and activists who had come from all over Massachusetts, I opened my
eyes to a much bigger vision than stopping one, admittedly dangerous, pipeline
from passing through West Roxbury, under a soccer field, through densely
inhabited neighborhoods, and in close proximity to the blasting of an active
quarry. The fears of building this
pipeline are not centered on our community alone. The symbolism of this
action goes well beyond Boston or Massachusetts or the Northeast.
We
began our morning vigil at the corner of Grove & Center Streets, right
across from the West Roxbury Crushed Stone Quarry. Clergy wore garb of all
types and colors, including tallitot. Roy Einhorn, cantor of Temple Israel
Boston, carried a Torah scroll. Others carried signs. Passing cars, trucks and
buses honked their horns in support. We stood at the entrance of the metering
station construction site, a 4-acre plot quickly being leveled and fortified
with rebar and concrete foundations. There, Rabbi Shoshana Meira Friedman,
associate rabbi of Temple Sinai, Brookline, opened the Torah scroll and chanted
the second passage from the Shema:
“If
you truly listen to me, then I will give you rain upon your land in its
appointed time, the early rain and later rain, so you may gather in your corn,
your wine and oil. And I will give you grass upon your field to feed your
animals, and you will eat and be content. Beware, then, lest your heart be led
astray, and you go off and worship other gods and you submit to them (you think
you are in control), so that the anger of the MIGHTY ONE should burn against
you, and seal up the heavens so no rain would fall, so that the ground would
not give forth her produce, and you be forced to leave the good land I am
giving you.” (Deut. 11:13-21)
Fortified
with faith, prayer, and song, about 75 people walked down Grove Street, clergy
leading in front, to the pipeline trench bisecting the street. As we
approached, the loud bulldozer shut down, and the workers in their hardhats and
yellow vests stepped out of the trench. The work stopped. Sixteen clergy leaders
stepped into the road, crossed the protective markers, and sat down, feet
hanging over the trench. I stood among the protestors across the trench who
were not risking arrest, in solidarity with those who were.
As
a group, we began with a Prayer for the Spectra Workers, and a prayer for the
police, affirming that our protest was not directed against them. Soon a police
officer came over to warn the 16 that they were trespassing. He informed them
politely that if they did not leave, they would be arrested. We watched as
about ten to fifteen minutes later, a paddy wagon pulled up. Then another
other. We watched West Roxbury police in blue uniforms step out and head,
respectfully, toward the protesters.
Just
before the police intervened, each of the 16 stated why they were there. One
man spoke about people in his homeland of India where temperatures are a
ghastly 124 degrees. Others spoke of their grandchildren. They were there out
of love, out of conviction, out of humility, out of hope.
Then
the police asked each one to stand, and one by one, they were handcuffed and
escorted to the police vans. It was chilling to watch religious leaders locked
behind bars in the police vehicles, and then closed in with heavy doors as if
in refrigerator trucks, headed toward the West Roxbury Police Station.
The
pipeline through West Roxbury is not bringing gas to heat our homes. Spectra is
building this high-pressure (750 psi) pipeline for Algonquin Gas Transmission
to transport fracked gas through our city. National Grid claims the pipe will
help make National Grid's system more reliable. The builders claim the pipeline
is safe, and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission agreed, arguably with
minimal investigation.
Opponents
claim that no one has demonstrated sufficient demand to justify a massive new
gas pipeline into Boston. Residents don’t want a dangerous pipeline running
yards away from their front doors. The City Council has voted unanimously to
oppose it. The mayor is challenging the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
in court. Boston’s state and federal legislators are against the project. Senators
Markey and Warren have requested further study before proceeding.
We
are protesting, because none of these voices have been heeded by the federal authorities.
Researchers
at Boston University have shown that current pipelines have over 3,000
documented leaks in the current distribution system. Though the industry claims
they are not dangerous — not prone to explosions — they do emit dangerous
levels of methane into the atmosphere, a major source of global warming, making
LNG even more polluting than coal. As the protestors were taken away, we
chanted “Stop the pipeline! Fix the leaks!”
What
really moved me was the realization that this entire protest is a wake-up call for all of us who have
quietly and helplessly stood by as the economic forces of the fossil fuel
industry, urging us to use more and more energy, continue business as usual. It’s
a wake-up call that we can make a
difference. With the 16 very visible clergy being taken to the police station,
that makes over 80 arrests along the construction route in Boston. This
movement is growing, here and around the country, calling for change in the way
we use energy and where our energy comes from.
See the letter I signed, “Interfaith
Religious Leaders Call For Climate Justice” at ClergyClimateAction.org whose
mission is to “invite clergy from all faith traditions to engage in soulful
leadership by exemplifying the ‘task of re-centering society imbued with the
hope, joy and serenity which only flow from living in the truth.’”
There
are many small ways we can bring that hope, joy and serenity to our commitment
to climate action. Drive by the construction site, honk your horn, join a
vigil. Stop using plastic and paper grocery bags and bring your own reusable
bags. Cut back on your energy use, whether turning down the a/c, turning off
lights, reducing the temperature on your hot water boiler.
It’s
time to change the conversation from political feasibility to moral
imagination.
It’s
time for us to get beyond our sense of helplessness and despair. It’s time for
us to peacefully, joyfully, and persistently choose a different path, the moral
path. For our future, for our grandchildren, for the life of all humanity, we
can make a difference.
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