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Mystery of Life

By Jay Taber

If you want to understand environmental racism in the United States, the Grand Canyon National Park in northwest Arizona makes a good base camp for exploring US policy as it plays out across the indigenous landscape. From the harnessing of the Colorado River via the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation’s Glen Canyon Dam to the coal-fired Navajo Generating Station, U.S. Government funding and policies promote depletion of indigenous rivers and aquifers in order to make lifestyles in Arizona’s desert complete with golf courses and swimming pools.

Uranium mining in Arizona on public lands in the area of the Grand Canyon also comes with government funding, both for development and cleanup, as well as Indian Health Service programs to treat the cancers caused by the former. Then, as you gaze at the sacred San Francisco Peaks in the Coconino National Forest from nearby Flagstaff, you can take in the wonder of indigenous spirituality saturated with sewage water used to manufacture artificial snow for making snowboarding and skiing accessible to those who want a break from golfing and swimming during Christmas holiday.

While strip-mining coal from Black Mesa and depleting fossil aquifers to pump the coal slurry to Navajo Generating Station to burn for lighting Las Vegas and chilling Phoenix might seem like a small price to pay for maintaining the American Dream, it is sometimes worth remembering these and other US policies create nightmares for the indigenous communities living daily with the pollution of their water and air and desecration of their lands. But on a day the wind is blowing the coal smoke away from the Grand Canyon, you can always sit on the rim and marvel at what was once an unspoiled view into the mystery of life.