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E Magazine Rafting with the Cree by Carol Goldstein September 1993 RELATED EXPEDITION: Great Whale River, Quebec For 5,000 years, nomadic Cree natives have wandered along Canada's Great Whale River, a subarctic land of rolling hills, peat bogs and spruce they call "The Garden." Although they have more recently settled in a village on James Bay, the Cree still subsist largely on game animals. The construction of Hydro-Quebec's proposed Phase II dam in the Great Whale River would wipe out not only their food sources, but their lifestyles, history and ancestral home. As long as the land is intact our culture is intact...When we say the land is our life, the developers don't understand this, explains former chief Robbie Dick. Two years ago, in a plea for help, Chief Matthew Mukash canoed with other Cree down New York's Hudson River. Hearing their message, Eric Hertz, president of Earth River Expeditions, which runs rafting trips, offered to teach the Cree to guide river trips on the Great Whale River to generate cash and jobs and help raise public awareness about Hydro Quebec. There was one problem: Historically, the Cree have avoided tangles with whitewater rapids. But neither Hertz nor the Cree were to be easily deterred: In August 1992, Hertz, four Cree volunteers, and a hardy group of 20 paying guests took off on a commercial rafting trip down the Great Whale. They paddled a 20-mile stretch about 50 miles inland from the community and hit little whitewater but when they did, it was huge. A couple of eight-foot waves, parted down the middle by a foamy tongue of waternot-too-facetiously named the Pearly Gateswere clear testimony to Hydro-Quebec's desire to harness the power, and to Hertz's missionary zeal. By the end of the trip, Vera George, the only Cree woman in the group, had decided to take over the rafting operation. She subsequently left her house in town to move back to the bush. In December 1992, the tribe laid out $15,000 for new rafting equipment, and helped lead several trips this past summer. Despite this encouraging start, Eric Hertz wonders when the Cree will be able to run trips independently; the Cree wonder how their new business will fare; and everyone wonders how it will contribute to the final outcome of the dam proposal. Does Matthew Mukash believe, in his heart of hearts, that the dam will eventually go through? Never, he says. After experiencing the die-hard resiliency of the Cree people, many are optimistic that he's right. Contact: Earth River Expeditions, 180 Towpath Road, Accord, NY 12404/(800)643-2784. |
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