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[Marxism] GHOSTS [My own strange kind of NDE -- also testimonials]



GHOSTS [HUNTER GRAY DECEMBER 22 2003] [many missed this a few days
ago]

Note by Hunterbear: In just two days, this particular post has drawn a
flood of continuing praise.

Here are just a few of many indeed:

"This near-death experience by an authentic American hero--who was deeply
involved in the Mississippi civil rights movement among many other
principled stands--is so moving that I have to share it with you."

Steven F. McNichols [Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Attorney]
San Francisco, CA 94104-3503 12/21/03

great writing. xo Kass Fleisher Author of forthcoming THE BEAR RIVER
MASSACRE [Spring 2004] 12/22/03

I HAVE FORWARDED THIS TO MY SONS, CALLING IT A WONDERFUL READ BY A WONDERFUL
MAN WHO HAS LED A WONDERFUL LIFE. THE WHOLE THING BELONGS IN YOUR
AUTOBIOGRAPHY, INCLUDING YOUR PRESENT ILLNESS, BECAUSE THAT WILL TELL
READERS ABOUT YOUR CHARACTER. AND I URGE YOU ONCE AGAIN TO GET IT WRITTEN
PRONTO, MAKING ARRANGEMENTS FOR YOUR WRITER AND EDITOR SONS AND WHOEVER ELSE
TO FINISH THE JOB IF YOU DON'T.

BILL [William Mandel] Activist and author of many books -- including
SAYING NO TO POWER. 12/21/03


GHOSTS

I was suddenly but gently aware that I was standing at the edge of a large
stand of tall, slim jackpine timber. I was in a very strange half-light
that I had never before experienced.

I dream little -- at least in any recollective sense --. at any time.

But this was no dream of any kind. I had gone to sleep that night in our
'way far up home on the far western edge of Pocatello, Idaho.

I knew precisely where I now was: several yards from our old and quite
isolated and remote -- and almost roadless -- family hunting camp on the
very edge of the vast and beautiful Sycamore Canyon Wilderness Area
southwest of my hometown of Flagstaff, Arizona. Through eternity, the always
flowing Sycamore Creek continues to cut at glacial pace -- deeper and
deeper.

I was looking from the Canyon's east rim directly west: down at the western
slope which then rose sharply to its rim -- in contrast to our eastern area
which had some substantial sloping regions in its upper setting. Then I
looked across that western rim and the widespread cedar plains that
dominated that side.

I looked southwest -- looking over a dozen mountain ranges that stretched
very far off toward the Colorado River -- and the California border.

And then I was looking south: many, many miles down the Great Canyon into
Sycamore Basin and its vast, and cedar-sprinkled open reaches -- bounded by
small mountains and high ridges.

And then beyond, directly south into the Verde Valley with its sprinkling of
tiny towns and scattered, often downright hardscrabble folk.

And then up above the Valley -- up the slopes of Mingus Mountain -- where a
handful of lights signaled the tenacious existence of the once fabulous
copper mining town of Jerome. It had been a ghost town since the early
1950s -- and it was still legend.

Now the Great Canyon pulled suggestively -- and it pulled south.

And then, suddenly, I knew I was in Borders -- a complex of them. And I was
also at Choices.

I had to go south -- directly down into the innards of Sycamore and then
southward 'way, 'way through the Canyon -- into the Verde Valley.

I had done that before -- a long time ago.

I was extremely ill with a sudden-striking and mysterious illness called
Systemic Lupus -- and the very worst and deadly form of that particular
verson of the oft lethal disease. It had struck only a very few months ago:
widespread rashes, fever, extreme weakness, body pain, swelling -- all sorts
of deep disorders. It has no cure.

And the destructive variant with which we are dealing -- what my doctors
call
"a very serious case" -- attacks and threatens lungs, liver, blood vessels,
kidneys, and a number of other critical organs.with a bloody passion.

In less than four months, I've been in the Pocatello mountain hospital three
times -- and have come extremely close to dying at each beginning point in
those week long stays.

This Lupus could and will attack literally Anytime.-- with virtually no
warning.

Early on, even before Lupus had been specifically diagnosed, our immedate
family gathered to do my will in my hospital room: Eldri [my spouse of 43
years], myself, Maria [school staff] and her two children -- Samantha [13]
and our grandson/son Thomas [21], Josie [just graduated from Idaho State in
Social Work]. Our two oldest sons, Beba [John ] a writer; and Peter, a
newspaper editor; each worn to the bone from travel exertion arrived on
schedule: Beba had come from Fargo to Lincoln, picked up Peter, and they
had driven a thousand miles to Idaho,

It's the will of a Native family: solidarity, consensus, communalism. While
a surprised -- and in some instances discomfited hospital staff watched and
listened surreptitiously -- we took it point by point. The family was the
executor committee and could choose its spokesperson when the time came; our
home -- very new, relatively large, big yard area, best view in Pocatello ,
rapidly climbing value -- would remain in the full hands of the family with
Maria authorized to use it throughout her life and the others able to use it
at will; our big historical and contemporary Native arts and crafts
collection would remain forever in the group and nothing could be taken nor
sold. [Beba subsequently drew up an intricate codicil which provides for
very careful loans to reputable exhibits and institutions; same basically
for my quite large collection of Western American and Western Canadian
radical labor material.] There is more, of course -- but mostly on a share
and share alike basis.

Once Eldri and I are both gone, and the will then locks in with total
finality, no changes can be made in any dimension of it save by bona fide
family consensus. But it's a very close and tight outfit indeed.

Back home, I typed it up, and all signed via notary plus witnesses.

And Eldri and I did a Living Will which provides for moderate efforts to
resuscitate.

After that there were more very close brushes with Death, twelve physicians,
twenty pills a day.

But before we ended that meeting, Beba raised a final point: looking at me,
he asked, "What do we do with you?"

"Cremation," I said slowly.

"And the ashes?" he continued.

"In the end there's only one place," I said. Heads nodded.

And that -- our historic and long ago hunting camp, to which as a Teen we
had brought the huge
Black coming-of -age bear which I had a lifelong mandate to kill and did --
is where I now stood.

Now I began walking slowly --- still in half-light -- down the trail into
the Great Canyon. And there I hoped to travel all the way down the Canyon
and into and through the Basin to the Verde Valley.

And Jerome glittered on Mingus Mountain.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------

Jerome, Arizona. July 10, 1917.

Two hundred thugs armed with Winchester 44/40s, pickaxe handles, and
baseball bats designated themselves a "Loyalty League" with the blessing of
United Verde Copper Company. The great IWW- led copper strike, [Industrial
Workers of the World] -- from Butte to the Mexican border -- necessitated by
wartime inflation and static wages, had just begun. The so-called
vigilantes rounded up 75 key Jerome strikers in the early morning hours of
that terrible day, beat them badly, placed them in United Verde boxcars, and
took them far westward to Kingman, Arizona on the California border. When
many tried to return, they were jailed at the Yavapai County seat of
Prescott,

Two days later, on the Mexican border at Cochise County, 1200 strikers and
sympathizers were rounded up by hundreds of Loyalty League vigilantes with
the full backing of the Phelps Dodge Copper corporation and local lawmen --
and taken by boxcars to Columbus, New Mexico where they were dumped in the
desert with neither food nor water.

In the early morning of August 1, 1917 at Butte, Montana, a major IWW
leader, organizer, and copper strike coordinator -- the Cherokee, Frank H.
Little -- was hideously murdered by gunmen employed by massive Anaconda
Copper.

Blood dark clouds gathered in the Western copper country where memories are
very long indeed. They are still there -- now, to this very day,

There was much. much more anti-labor and anti-radical brutality across the
West -- and eventually the country itself. No one was ever punished for
these atrocities. And then the Federal government itself rounded up 150
leaders of the IWW, quickly convicting them [along with Gene Debs, the
socialist], of the completely spurious charges of "Espionage" and
"Sedition."

That was long before my time, of course, But the historic, always
remembered Jerome Deportation was -- along with the racist brutality and
economic exploitation of Flagstaff and many regional environs -- a key
factor in my own eventual radicalization at barely 21.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------

The half-light didn't change -- but I had no difficulty seeing and
navigating. The Canyon was forty miles long, north to south, and I was
taking the lower 30 all the way to the end, But for me now time and distance
were meaningless.

For a few moments, I studied myself. I was big, very muscular, much hair.
I wore my traditional J.C. Penney wide-brimmed hat, Levis, worn blue Western
shirt, heavy and steel toed logging boots cut slightly long ago by a
mis-aimed double-bitted axe blow. I carried my old 30/30 Winchester lever
action, with its curved butt plate and long octagon barrel. On my left hip,
I packed a large hunting knife.

And I had energy! -- energy I had not had since the hideous disease had
struck many weeks before.

Almost 50 years earlier, in May 1955, I had taken this very route over a
major junket of several leisurely days.[I know of no contemporary person in
those days -- and maybe even to this day -- who ever made that trip.] I was
a basically healthy kid -- but there were problems. The Army, in which I
had just served a full stretch -- very honorably by its standards -- had
left marks. I had a brand-new IWW card. This was fine by my parents, but
they still hoped [and Mother pushed ] for a "respectable" career to which I
was resistant. That far off trip through Sycamore -- coming home to my very
special setting -- was in large part to organize my own thinking,

In the course of that Great Trek , I explored some vasty side canyons coming
down off the western rim. I saw ancient Indian ruins in cliff settings --
the location of which I would never reveal. The entire journey featured
all sorts of wild game -- much of it not afraid of me at all -- and I saw
hundreds of elk antlers, seasonally shed in winter grazing areas. At one
point, I saw huge bear tracks -- very fresh -- under Sycamore trees which
had been clawed eight feet or so up. This was grizzly sign -- even though
no grizzlies were supposed to exist anywhere in Arizona by that time. At
another point, resting on a knoll above Sycamore Creek, I heard a noisy
crashing sound coming in toward me through the brush. I waited. Suddenly,
a huge jet black long-horn bull emerged nosily, limping from an old wound on
one back thigh evidenced by old lion or bear claw scars. He drank from the
creek. When he had finished, I asked him quietly, "How are you doing
today?" He jerked his head up -- had never, I'm sure, seen a human creature
before -- and looked directly at me. Then he turned and plunged back into
the brush. He was a direct descendant of many generations of purely wild
cattle, stemming from Spanish gold mining operations in the latter 1700s.

Eventually, when the geology had shifted into the Great Verde Fault, I found
rose quartz -- gold-bearing quartz -- but I would never reveal the location
of that, ever.

In due course, at the lower end of the Great Canyon, I emerged into the land
of our two old hermit friends -- Joe Dickson, a retired hard-rock miner and
Jerry Greaves, a former merchant seaman. They lived in the Old Packard
Ranch and I spent a day with them, telling what I'd seen. They were a bit
disappointed that I had not cut the sign of the Lost Spanish Mine, somewhere
in the vastnesses of Sycamore, guarded -- according to legend -- by the
ghost of a black-robed Spanish priest.

And when I soon "came out" in the comparatively "civilized" Verde Valley, I
was very much together. Not long thereafter, I went with my family to
Mexico where Dad painted and lectured -- and I spent the month studying that
fascinating nation's radicalism and union movements. And then to sociology
at the University of Arizona and eventually to Arizona State University --
fine enough. But almost immediately I fortunately connected with radical
and democratic -- and consistently embattled -- industrial unionism.. My
organizing career all over the country in Native rights, labor, civil rights
and liberties, social justice in general, has been -- no false modesty --
successful. I still keep going.

Now I was at the bottom of the Canyon, turning south, downward. Sycamore
Creek's familiar running and rippling and splashing noises were old and
friendly music. And so was everything else I experienced-- almost all of
which I remembered with the most intricate clarity -- as I walked, slowly
but strangely down, down Sycamore, mile after mile after mile. Again, time
and distance meant nothing for me here, I was extremely happy and I liked
my thinking.

And then I was suddenly awake -- in my bed on the far western frontier of
Pocatello. It was dawn and the half light was gone. I was weak, utterly weak
and felt generally like Hell. My one-half Bobcat, Cloudy, nuzzled me,
Eldri was cooking breakfast and my daughter, Maria, handed me a huge cup of
super strong black coffee.

My head, as always was very clear.

"If you had to choose," my newspaper son Peter asked a few days ago,
"between physical health on the one hand and your thinking and writing
ability on the other, which would you take?"

"My mind always," I replied.


And what I do know is that it's critical to keep fighting -- and to always
remember that if one lives with grace he/she should be prepared to die with
grace.

How much time do I have? Maybe lots, maybe not much.

But I'd like, too, within the now somewhat narrowed borders of my
canyon-of-life, to help others do some good things as well. Let me know.

In the mountains of southeastern Idaho.

Nialetch/Onen

Hunter Gray [Hunterbear] Micmac / St Francis Abenaki/ St Regis Mohawk
Late December, 2003

HUNTER GRAY [HUNTER BEAR]
www.hunterbear.org

It's critical to always keep fighting -- and to always remember that, if one
lives with grace, he/she should be prepared to die with grace.
















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