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In 2002, the Native American/environmental publication AHSKWA had the 4th in a series of interviews with Onondaga Chief Paul Waterman. Paul sat on the Onondaga Council of Chiefs, and the Six Nations Iroquois Confederacy's Grand Council of Chiefs. This "question & answer" came to mind when reading some of the discussions on DU. It is not intended to suggest that it is somehow wrong to stock up on supplies; indeed, Chief Waterman's ancestors did just that every fall. It is, rather, a commentary on extremes.
Q: What do you think about people stocking up on food and water, in case of a catastrophe?
A: It's the opposite of sharing. Remember the Y2K scare? Some people asked me if we were 'prepared' at Onondaga, if we had stored up food and water?
I said, 'Listen, if the Creator wants to bring dinosaurs back, they'll be on your front lawn tomorrow. And if he wants to end the world, he will.'
On that day, do you want to tell the Creator that you prepared to meet him by storing food, or by sharing it?
See, people suffer every day, from floods and hurricanes. If we want to do the work of the Creator, we share with them. That's doing the Creator's will.
People who think they are as good as the Creator think they can move mountains. They can't. Do the Creator's will, and the mountains will move.
Be a good neighbor. If my garden is ready before yours, we should share mine now, and yours later. Too many people do not understand the power of sharing. You have to remember that all of the earth is the Creator's garden, and he shares it with us. That is why I say that sharing is divine intervention."
(This was from the last interview Chief Waterman gave before he died. I am completing a book about my work with him.)
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