No Culture. No Future.
Why should we preserve and protect wild horses in the American West? I get asked that question all the time. For years I went with the obvious answer - because the horses are beautiful and free and they inspire our higher angels. While I rambled on the softies nodded along and the skeptics rolled their eyes but didn’t disagree.
And then came Global Warming. Our Federal herd management people became the merchants of post-truth to protect very wealthy individuals and corporations. Oh, you’ve heard it all. There’s not enough water for the horses. There’s no place for wild horses on the range. They argued wild horses and burros must be rounded up to save them from dying of starvation or thirst. To prevent destruction to the environment and protect the ecosystem. Because ranchers depend upon livestock grazing for their livelihood and wild horses and burros are creating an undue hardship on their operations.
At the end of the day it comes down to our own survival and the preservation of American culture in away that affirms our basic human values. While working with Navajo Wild Horse advocates on my documentary, A Sacred Horse, I became quite convince that the survival of the wild horse is tied to the survival of humanity. How they do is how we do. What do you think?
“This struggle between maintaining cultural traditions and being assimilated into contemporary culture is being played out on the range. Indigenous peoples see this clash as a microcosm of a much larger issue. We believe the inhumane treatment of the horse as a violation against Mother Earth and her natural cycles. This issue of horses is tied to our way of life as Indigenous Peoples so we realize that it’s not only the horses that are threatened but it is also our way of life that is threatened. It is our understanding that the health and future of the horses are intricately tied to our own. That is why we are fighting so hard. We are fighting for our own future generations.” — Navajo Elder