Showing posts with label Elie Wiesel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elie Wiesel. Show all posts

Friday, June 21, 2019

A SAFE HAVEN


The world is a dangerous place to live; not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don't do anything about it. --- Albert Einstein

It's a phrase printed on bumper stickers and T-shirts in paddle shop everywhere reading, ‘Paddle faster, I hear banjos.’

For years, it's given many folks in the paddling a slight chuckle as it makes reference to the 1972 classic movie Deliverance starring Burt Reynolds and Jon Voight. The film was adapted from the James Dickey novel, about a group of suburban men on a weekend canoe trip down the fictional Cahulawassee River in the Georgian mountain wilderness. The adventure turns to horror when they encounter a pair of dangerous mountain men that set off a disturbing sequence of events along the river.

In the memorable opening scene of the movie, a suggested mentally challenged and inbred banjo player joins in and plays with one of the guitar strumming canoeists. Improvising a song between them, the two produce a bluegrass tune known as “Dueling Banjos." It's the bright spot, in an otherwise, unbearably dark film about conflict on the river that is now a part of paddling folklore.

In all my days of paddling rivers, however, I have never really had any conflicts with anyone either along the shore or paddling nearby. Most of the folks I've come across along the waterway proved to be either helpful and courtesies. I have seen paddlers offer over equipment that has been forgotten as well as advice to just about anyone at the access site. I have seen total strangers retrieve lost boats and paddles for frantic swimming paddlers without any question.

"They were just ordinary paddlers," wrote Jeff Moag in a 2014, June edition of Canoe & Kayak magazine, "Who extended the lessons of the river of life: If you have a rope, use it. If you need one, grab it and hold on."

Those are the people of the river and paddling community I have come to know. I 've found that everyone is pretty much your friend when they have a paddle in their hand. That's why I was surprised and very disappointed after reading about the incident on the Flint River in Northern Alabama last month.

For a group of teens, a kayaking trip down a popular Alabama river known as flat water enthusiast's "dream come true" turned into a nightmare when the kids were allegedly attacked and threatened with sexual assault by three suspects.
Collins Nelson

According to Alabama news outlets, Collins Nelson of Huntsville says he and other friends were on the river when a man paddling behind them began heckling the group. He says, words were exchanged, as the group tried to get away from the man as he threatened one of the girls with rape saying he and his friends would see them downriver.

“We proceed to go down the river a little more and hear his friends running through the woods telling us just to be ready,” Nelson told AL.com, “It was just chaos from there. Flipping our kayaks, flipped my kayak, some man put me in a headlock and proceeded to beat my face.”

Nelson said he was held underwater by his attackers, and couldn't remember much of the fight after that.

John Norris who was in Nelson's party told, WAAY 31-TV this account, ""We are sitting there hands up begging, 'Please stop,' and they just didn't care and continue to go on,"

Someone on the river called the police, who were waiting when the party finally made it to the takeout point. According to a girl who didn't want to be identified told AL.com, "If the police hadn’t been there, I think these people would have continued to beat us up. I think that was their intention.  It “definitely” could have been worse."

Nelson suffered a broken nose and fractured eye socket that will require surgery, among other injuries in the attack. The Huntsville police are investigating and have since arrested three suspects with at least one more arrest is still expected in the case.

Incidents like this should shake up our paddling community. Our rivers and water trails should be a safe haven for all who travel them without fear of being bullied, intimidate, coerce or attacked. Our rivers both wild and mild should be places where we offer those using and enjoying them despite their race, religion or sexual orientation the same friendly respect that our paddling community is known for  That alone should be enough. But, it isn't. There are many issues and the banjos continue to get louder.

In most cases, alcohol is always involved.

Nate Peeters, a public affairs officer for Huron-Manistee National Forests, told the Detroit Free Press this past February, while a Michigan group was trying lead a petition drive to ban alcohol on three of the state's popular waterways, that intoxicated individuals on the river have needed to be rescued from the water, have assaulted others, and pollute the rivers with cans and bottles.

"This behavior is really excluding families and youth groups and other community members from experiencing safe and enjoyable recreation on the rivers," he told the paper.

Other conflicts may arise with paddlers vs landowners in respect to river access with one of the most extreme events being The Burro Incident, where Arizona kayakers faced a gun-toting landowner. Paddlers should know their rights about navigable rivers, but also should recognize private property.

And maybe the most alarming case was the 2016 investigative report furnished by the U.S. Department of the Interior that showed that women in the rafting industry have been the victims of sexual misconduct for years. Since the release of that report, thousands of more women from all facets of the outdoor industry have stepped forward to share their stories of some form of discrimination, retaliation, or a sexually hostile work environment.

As you can see there are many concerns when comes to making the river a safe haven for everyone. But the days of "What Happens On The River Stays On The River" should be over for good and the paddling community should not try out paddle these banjos anymore.

As Nobel Laureate and Holocaust survivor, Elie Wiesel said, "I swore never to be silent whenever and wherever humans endure suffering and humiliation. We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormenter, never the tormented."

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