Music | December 19, 2011 | 12 comments

Facing rising seas islanders call on their music

JanforGore
Stymied in global climate negotiations, three tiny Pacific nations plead for action through songs and dances


By Jennifer Weeks

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – The applause was raucous, growing louder and faster as the beat accelerated.

A dozen dancers, arms stretched, torsos bare, pounded the stage in an increasing frenzy. They turned, swooped, slapped their thighs, swooped and turned again– birds hovering in the air, looking for something below – and shouting, "koburake!” or “rise up!" The audience exploded after each verse, thinking the performance over.

But the dance started up again, faster still.

The dancers had traveled more than 7,000 miles to perform for the crowd at Harvard University's Sanders Theater. They were singing of the frigate bird – an agile flier with a seven-foot wingspan that forages across the open ocean, returning to land only to roost or breed.

The performers on stage were part of a troupe of three dozen islanders from Kiribati and two other Pacific atolls, Tokelau and Tuvalu, touring the East and West coasts this fall.

Cloaked within the music was a message: Life on these islands centers on fishing and family ties. But climate change, driven by industrialized activities thousands of miles away, is intruding. Coastlines are eroding and sea level rise is pushing salt water into wells. Families that have lived in the same places for hundreds of years wonder how future generations will subsist.

No polished message

I didn't want a polished message. If you live on these islands, you are the spokespersons. - Judy Mitoma, tour organizer

The performers – fishermen, farmers, homemakers and students – tapped their culture and art to tell of their home and plight. The tour's title was also its message: Water is Rising. The goal was to share island culture with Americans and offer a deeply personal plea for action.

"Climate change is a survival issue for these people," said tour organizer Judy Mitoma, director of the University of California, Los Angeles' Center for Intercultural Performance and emeritus professor of dance. Mitoma has curated many cross-cultural performing-arts events in Asia and the Pacific. This project attracted her because it combined scientific and artistic themes, yet relied upon performers unversed in the science or politics of climate change.

"I didn't want ... a polished message," she said. "The point was that if you live on these islands, you are the spokespersons."

Kiribati, Tokelau and Tuvalu, with a combined population of about 113,000, have pushed themselves to the forefront of the global climate debate. Two years ago, at the United Nations climate talks in Copenhagen, Tuvalu's delegates brought the proceedings to a halt by arguing the Kyoto Protocol was fundamentally too weak to be used as a basis for negotiations.

Tokelau and Tuvalu both are gripped by drought; saltwater infusion has rendered many wells undrinkable, prompting New Zealand and the United States to airlift water to residents. In September, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon used a visit to Kiribati to spotlight risks climate change poses to island states, saying the nation was at "the front of the frontlines."

"Some indigenous cultures could literally disappear because of climate change," said Suzanne Benally, executive director of Cultural Survival, a Massachusetts-based nonprofit. "Their lives are very entwined with their ecosystems, and they are feeling direct, immediate consequences."

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12 comments // Facing rising seas islanders call on their music // Video

  • maasanova
  • JanforGore
    • +2
      JanforGore  
    • maasanova:

      It certainly isn't going to be because of anything this country or people who constantly bash this areN'T doing that has caused this crisis to become worse. But let's just go on "debating" about it here as if it isn't real, even when people LIVING IT TELL YOU it is.

    • 5 months ago
  • the4104
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
  • Anonmaly
    • +1
      Anonmaly  
    • TY Jan...

      But I'm sure Scott will come to tell us how in fact; "There is reasonable question as to whether or not the island is sinking, because all that icecap shrinkage/melt might not equate to rising waters."

      (I believe you, though probably only because the church of "climate change" told me to, nothing to do with science, and the fact this issue had been brought into the spotlight a few times.)

    • 5 months ago
  • LivingPong
    • +2
      LivingPong  
    • Anonmaly:

      Why do such people even bother about something they don't want to believe in?

      If there was a bloody great fin poking out of the water down at the beach, shark alarms were going off, people in boats are yelling at everyone to get out of the water, it would seem an odd thing to swim out towards the shark yelling "There is no shark!" while peeing your pants.

      In the rural area I live in, meeting someone who does not believe in climate change is an increasingly rare event, in fact bloody rare! Generally it takes our area about two years to receive news from the rest of the world. Unfortunately the weather waits for no one and it has become increasingly difficult to plan for planting and harvesting of crops as the rainfall pattern now is quite different than in the past. Once you could depend on a regular pattern every year and a glance at the sky at dusk and dawn would provide enough warning of a freak storm. These days the only indicator of future weather events I'd put much faith in are certain native plants and the quantity of seed and flowers they are producing, though this knowledge gives mainly long term forecasting information .

    • 5 months ago
  • JanforGore
    • +2
      JanforGore  
    • LivingPong:

      I love your shark analogy. It explains some to a tee. I also just read about coming changes in world vegetation due to climate change. Some areas of the world that are dependent on certain plants will see them dwindling with others becoming more doiminant and also the spreading of deserts. This will change the way we are used to living and without adaptation measures in place... well, you know.

    • 5 months ago
  • LivingPong
    • 0
      LivingPong  
    • JanforGore:

      Plants that thrive in drier conditions are becoming more common in our region and the number of dead trees that relied on deep tap roots have been increasing. These trees have died off completely in a very short time, which I suspect is caused by underground streams drying up. The trees are dying off all together in small groups or running along a line, perhaps over an underground water course. If disease was responsible they wouldn't likely all wilt over night and die off completely from base to tip. I haven't noticed any trees that feed off surface water die, they are coping well so far with conditions.

    • 5 months ago
  • thedirtman
    • +3
      thedirtman  
    • Image
    • Saltwater intrusion occurs when salty ocean water moves into fresh water aquifers used for survival. Drinking ocean water causes madness.

    • 5 months ago
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
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