MOTHER JONES BY E-MAIL

A fierce responsibility

March/April 1994 Issue


TOOLS

EmailE-mail article
PrintPrint article




BACKTALK

E-mail the editor





Google


When Utah naturalist and writer Terry Tempest Williams talks about her family, she often speaks of "the clan of one-breasted women." Nine women in her family have had mastectomies. Seven have died of cancer--starting with her mother in 1987.

These deaths are no coincidence. Williams and her family are "downwinders," people the U.S. government knowingly exposed to radiation during nuclear testing in the 1950s and 1960s. At 38, Williams is a time bomb herself. As a child, she saw a mushroom cloud explode. Doctors say it is a matter of when--not if--she will be stricken with cancer.

After her mother died, Williams committed civil disobedience at the Nevada Test Site to oppose ongoing nuclear testing. In 1990 she joined the D.C.-based governing council of the Wilderness Society, where she educated communities on the connection between health and the environment. But she recently abandoned Beltway politics to return to the land she knows best--the West.

"Sometimes the most radical act is to stay home," she explains. There, "issues are not abstractions--they are our lives. That creates action, impassioned action, born out of love and urgency."

Since her return, Williams has become embroiled in a heated public-lands debate. With the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, she is organizing grassroots support for congressional legislation that would designate 5.7 million acres of federal land as wilderness.The effort has pitted conservationists against everyone else: the state government, mining and grazing interests, and rural communities that depend on those industries.

Taking such a stand in Utah comes with risks. Yet Williams has embraced her Mormon roots, incorporating them into her writing as she searches for language that will heal the divide between people on opposite sides of the debate. Like her friend and mentor, the late Edward Abbey, she draws on her love of the "wasteland of the West." In her latest book, "An Unspoken Hunger: Stories from the Field" (Pantheon), she articulates the spiritual need to preserve wilderness."With love of land comes a fierce responsibility," she says.

Williams feels that legislators don't understand this. People in Washington talk about the West "in terms of economics. But what about the spiritual resources?" she asks. "We don't have the language in this nation to speak of these things."



 

Post a Comment

Your Name: 

Your Comment: 
 
Please press "Submit" only once to avoid double-posting.
All HTML formatting is removed from comments.
Read the Mother Jones community rules here.

Comments:


Jail.org - Inmate Search
Criminal records, instant public records & people search & current court records. www.jail.org

U.S. Public Records Search
Search County & State Court Records, Criminal records, Vital and Adoption Records www.PublicRecordsInfo.com

Records.com - People Search
Public Records and Background Checks. Instantly Search Criminal Records, Addresses and Court Records www.Records.com

Court Records & County Records
Find Instant Public Records, Criminal Records as Well as County Property Records Search. www.PublicRecordsIndex.com
















Wage Insurance

McCain's Speech

Quote of the Day

Calm Down


More MoJo voices...



bookIN PRINT

CLICK HERE
for more great reading

headphones IN TUNE
New music every issue

CLICK TO LISTEN


This article has been made possible by the Foundation for National Progress, the Investigative Fund of Mother Jones, and gifts from generous readers like you.

© 1994 The Foundation for National Progress

About Us   Support Us   Advertise   Ad Policy   Privacy Policy   Contact Us   Subscribe   RSS