July 25, 2005

LEGENDARY ACTIVIST JOAN NORMAN PASSES ON

joan on bridge_crop_sm.jpg

On July 23, legendary activist 72 year old Joan Norman was killed in a head on car collision on Highway 199 near the California border. Joan is dearly loved and revered by many; the news of her passing sends shockwaves through Southern Oregon and far beyond. Forest activists, friends, and family are now planning a solidarity forest defense action in her honor on August 2, 2005.

The ?Biscuit Fire Recovery Project? began logging old-growth reserves just above the nationally designated Wild & Scenic Illinois River in the Siskiyou Wild Rivers Area on March 7 of this year. The image of Joan Norman seated below the American Flag in her lawn chair just before her first arrest on the Green Bridge has reached news racks nationwide. Stories of her courageous acts of resistance and conviction have touched tens of thousands of people.

"I don't know what else to do to stop the log trucks, so I am sitting down again,? Joan said during her second arrest on March 14. Refusing compromise or bail payment, Joan voluntarily spent several weeks in jail in protest of illegal logging. While inside, she worked tirelessly to empower other inmates by offering legal resources and personal support. Joan was arrested over 100 times in her life; standing up for civil, social and environmental causes, and never had a lawyer until the Biscuit campaign. She will be dearly missed, as will her ever-present enthusiasm and her no-nonsense, powerful style.

Recently, Joan was asked if she was ever afraid to go to jail. Her response to that question echoes loudly through our minds today: "NO! No?I would rather go out in a blaze, defending the world I love. I will be on the front lines someday and my soul will know the time to go, and I will just leave. I will make that decision. Knowing this, I am not afraid. I am more afraid that my grandchildren will think I did not try hard enough to leave them a legacy of peace, and world worth living in. I don't want them to know the beauty of trees by looking at a book. I want them to be able to walk among 800-year-old trees and know that is our destiny. That is where we have to get back to."

Joan had a contagious resolve and humble nobility that challenged those around her to take a stand for what they hold most dear, becoming a national icon of the forest defense movement. She personified the dignified heroism of those who act selflessly in defense of the fundamental values most American's share; but rarely act on.

Her daughter, Sue Norman Jones, said ?Joan would like to be remembered actively, not passively?.

Asked what her message to the world was last march regarding the effort to stop the Forest Service?s largest logging project in modern history, the Biscuit, Joan said, ?Tell them to get some fire in their bellies and come to this gate of paradise and help us defend it. Tell them to come. I will be here."

Joan is survived by four children: Susan, Timothy, Terry and Annie, her friend and companion Bob Youdan, four grandchildren, one great-grandchild, nieces, nephews and her extended environmental activist family.

Information about the upcoming action to honor Joan Norman will be available at www.o2collective.org.
An interactive memorial is planned for Joan on Sunday, July 31st at 3:00 PM at the Forks State Park, south of Cave Junction, just off hwy 199. Friends can bring food, pictures, songs and writings, and are invited to participate in celebrating Joan?s remarkable life and her legacy. Donations can be made to the Joan Norman Memorial Fund at Home Valley Bank in Cave Junction.

MORE ABOUT JOAN:

?I have been arrested over 100 times standing against injustice. Why, I went with the freedom riders to the south. I went to Alabama to stop the lynchings and let the people be free. I went to Montgomery, Selma and Birmingham. I started out with members of a church. I met Martin Luther King, Jr. The thing we wanted to stand up to then was the destruction of the diversity of people in this nation. The slavery, racism, and violence toward people of color. The thing we are fighting today is much the same only we are trying to defend the diversity of the whole world, of life on earth. We need all of it to not just survive, but to thrive as a peaceful, loving people.?

After that, Joan joined Vietnam War protests, she said, ?I saw the genocide against the people of Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos and I jumped in, with both feet. I was at the Nevada test site protests. I stood beside the true hero's of this country. I stood by them at Fort Benning to protest the School of the America's, the place where international terrorists, death squads are trained.?

?I was at the WTO protests in Seattle in 1999, I went to Washington DC to stop the G8 and the WTO takeover of the world. I have been in the streets with the best of them. I have lived for 30 years in a community of freedom riders. I lived in a motor home for 12 years and traveled to where I was needed. I had my own kitchen, my own first aid station, my few books and my passion for freedom and justice.?

When asked how she got into environmental activism, Joan tells how her Grandson was responsible:

?He said "Grandma, it's so beautiful and amazing in the forest, you have to come with me so I can show you". So, I went with him. It was hard for my old bones and joints. He was so excited to be showing me this pure, beautiful world he had found. Excited that someone in his family would go with him. It was hard to go up the steep paths, but I did. And what he showed me was just so amazing. I saw it the first time through the eyes of a child. We should all go into the forest with young children. They see it like it is meant to be seen. With the innocence of a being still connected to the earth. They see it the way humans lived it for thousands of years.
I cannot explain in words what my grandson taught me. I can only say that you cannot read about nature and wild places, you have to go there. And, once you do, no threat of jail will keep you from preserving it. The wild places are the last place on earth that we have to remember our heritage and show us our legacy. We need to stand up and protect these places. This is why, at this time of my life, after all I have tried to defend, I am a forest defender.

When arrested last March 7 trying to block the Silver Creek Logging company?s access to what activists maintain is an illegal old growth logging sale on Fiddler Mountain, Joan said, ?they came and removed me from the bridge I was blocking by carrying me in my chair to the edge of the sheriff's vehicle. They put me down there and thought I would stay put. Then the officers went off to arrest someone else. I got up and moved my chair back to my space. My sovereign space. An officer yelled, ?Hey you?re not supposed to do that! Get back over where I put you.? I just laughed. People have been trying to get me to be where they put me all my life. I have a right to stand up against evil and I will.?

* Most of Joan Norman?s quotes have been taken from a June 2005 interview with Ellen O?Shea that appeared in ?Z? magazine. You can see the whole interview and more about Joan on Portland Indymedia.com

* To learn more about Joan Norman?s last campaign, the ongoing effort to stop the Forest Service?s largest logging project in modern history, the Biscuit, go to o2collective.org, kswild.org or siskiyou.org

Posted by laurel at 01:35 AM | Comments (0) | Category(s): Biscuit Fire Campaign

July 21, 2005

New Biscuit Blockade Shuts Down Full Day Of Logging Activity

fortress-from-above-web.jpgWednesday morning, just 72 hours after law enforcement dismantled the log cabin fortress that launched the Siskiyou Free State- dedicated forest defenders worked through the night to reconstruct a bigger, better-fortified version of the blockade. When the feds arrived at the Hobson old growth reserve timber sale this morning, they encountered an intricate lockdown scenario that foiled their efforts at extraction for the entire day.

Logging preparation operations by Greg Liles timber company were stymied by an unwavering forest lover who refused to voluntarily unlock and held his ground until nearly 10:00 pm tonight- making this the longest lasting road blockade in the Biscuit campaign to date.

As of last communication with the woods, only one arrest was made today, leaving dozens of folks in the area along with the intact canopy-rope-network-tree sit device that extends over multiple acres of the timber sale. An open call for allies to gather and support this ongoing civil disobedience campaign remains in effect. Logging is active in the Mac Guire timber sale on the Illinois River, and is imminent in a number of other sales.

(Photo of original blockade- same site as today?s)

Posted by laurel at 12:21 AM | Comments (0) | Category(s): Biscuit Fire Campaign

July 17, 2005

Siskiyou Free State Declared in the Biscuit!

Free-State-for-Web-1.jpgIn an exciting new chapter of the campaign to save the Wild Siskiyou, forest activists announced today the construction of a bold and elaborate infrastructure of resistance at the Hobson old growth reserve timber sale in the Biscuit Fire area. Southern Oregon forest defenders are calling on all allies to support these actions in whatever ways they can.

An impressive log cabin fortress now stands on the single road leading to this remote North Kalmiopsis timber sale, sealing off vehicle access to an area now referred to by many as the ?Siskiyou Free State.? In addition, an unusual new form of tree sit has been established in one of the units of the sale that connects many trees together across multiple acres in a rope-work network that suspends an activist in midair while preventing any trees from being felled in the area.

Dozens of people worked through the night with chainsaws and other tools to transform an abandoned log deck and boulder pile into a Lincoln Log-style cabin that completely blocks the road from human passage, other than foot traffic. Beneath the fortress is a boulder-fortified basement chamber that contains two activists secured to lockdown devices that prevent their removal.

Law enforcement has now made contact with the blockade. Spirits are high and activists are confident the fortress will remain in place for a good while. The forest canopy network is sure to last even longer. Now is the time to take action in defense of this magnificent landscape. We cannot sit idly by while the last of the pristine backcountry on our public lands are sold away for corporate profit! Activists are on their way to the Free State now! Join us! Spread this message! Donate to local groups! Write letters to the editor and to the Forest Service! Have your voice heard in defense of the Wild!

To The Tree Sit!

*From I-5 take the Merlin exit just North of Grants Pass
*Head West on the Galice Rd and pass Indian Mary campground
*Left on Forest Service 25 Rd (also known as Taylor Creek Rd)
*Go 10.5 miles, take a right onto the gravel FS 2510 rd
*Follow detour signs about 4 m then right onto the FS 2402 rd
*Left at the junction and again follow the detour signs
*After about 3 miles left onto paved FS 23 rd (on some maps it is labeled 34-8-36)
*After about 2 miles take a left on FS 2411 rd
*You are at Hobson and will soon be greeted.

Posted by laurel at 12:44 PM | Comments (0) | Category(s): Biscuit Fire Campaign

July 14, 2005

Art and Action as Cultural Creation

stilts port art-small.jpgThe Oxygen Collective is always looking for new ways break the mold of conventional political organizing and engage in culturally creative collaborations to reach new audiences. For our last tour, we combined resources with a cutting edge crew of artists, electronic musicians and performers for a two-week road show exploring the fertile fusion of arts and activism. Our goal was to bring messages of inspired resistance and personal empowerment into a contagious environment of dance and avant-garde music.

We used our biodiesel bus to transport dj Lorin of Bassnectar along with two amazing performance art troupes from the San Francisco Bay Area, El Circo and Apsara on a wild adventure from Southern Oregon to British Colombia and back. We created a number of media to infuse into events, including a glossy, alternative culture resource directory/hand out for club-goers to bring home and explore the next day. Images of the Siskiyou forests and the civil disobedience campaign to save them projected on giant screens to packed venues at each stop.

In Vancouver, we brought our traveling circus to a rally protesting the Global Summit on Paper and Forests and added a carnival flare with stilt walkers holding signs that read ?Community Forests- Yes! Industrial Logging-No!? The spectacle we created was printed in color on the cover of a Vancouver weekly paper after we left.

We opened and deepened many relationships on this journey that we look forward to nurturing into future cooperative projects. The trip was full of a rich, ongoing dialog about where art, personal expression and political activism overlap- and how best to encourage people to take meaningful action without alienating others who are not interested.

Perspectives were broadened and some minds were changed in the direction of getting involved in proactive causes- and most of all we received solid affirmation that there is an electric and influential potential in the combination of personal liberation, community celebration and creative resistance to war, social injustice and ecological destruction.

Photos by Joshua Brott (joshuabrott.com)

Posted by laurel at 04:01 PM | Comments (0) | Category(s): o2 Friends & Family

July 03, 2005

Oxygen Collective Receives Grant Support From MRG

mrg_logo.gifThe MacKenzie River Gathering foundation has granted the Oxygen Collective a $5000 grant to build our capacity as an organization and contract some of our members to work on administrative tasks, membership building and fundraising. We will use these funds to help turn our organization from an all volunteer project towards one where we are self sufficient enough to compensate members for community organizing and developing future tours.

We also look forward to making some infrastructure upgrades on our biofuel bus, improving our website and furthering our collaborative work with other groups like the Clean Fuels Caravan Coalition (www.cleanfuelcaravan.com) and the crew of musicians and performers we traveled with on our last tour.

The Oxygen Collective continues to focus most of our energy on the protection of our regions native and old growth forests. Our largest project is the ongoing campaign to save the Wild Siskiyou from the Bush Administration?s massive logging project called the Biscuit Fire Recovery Project. Stay tuned for much more to come.

Posted by laurel at 12:58 PM | Comments (0) | Category(s): Our Supporters