Monday, February 13, 2012

Rez Vignettes: At the 'Indian Furniture Store'

08/07/2007
Bernice Pember

When my mom, Bernice Pember, was growing up she was asked out by a handsome young man. Her double date took place at the dump. Here she's with my uncle, Donald Rabideaux, on the Bad River Reservation in Wisconsin on the shores of Lake Superior. This photo was taken in the early '80s.

Initially I was a little embarrassed by my family's dump stories — landfills to the more refined. I thought we were the only family with this strange affinity for the dump. As I grew up and met Indian people from other tribes, they would inevitably share some sort of story about the local dump serving as a source of household items and/or entertainment. My other Ojibwe friend says of the dump from his childhood, "It was like a rummage sale except everything was free."

We are, of course, talking about the open landfills of old, in which all sorts of wonderful stuff was dumped into a giant hole before burning. A terrible practice environmentally, the dumps of my childhood have mostly been replaced by the less interesting sanitary landfill.

Ah, but before the junk burned — and sometimes while it burned — the dump could be depended upon by the poor to provide household goods and entertainment. With our long history of living pretty close to the margin, Native people, early on, created a highly developed sense of dark humor about life and its unpredictable events that dampen the spirit. Therefore, we embrace our landfill stories. We roar with laughter recalling the importance of the dump in our lives. We laugh and we soar high above the dump, so high it doesn't really touch us.

I begin with my mother's dump story, which according to a friend, accounts for my visceral affinity for landfills. As a pretty young teenager on a reservation in northern Wisconsin, she was asked out on a date by a much sought-after and handsome young man. The other girls were clearly jealous as she dressed carefully for the outing, putting on her precious silk stockings. She had a job cleaning house for a white lady in town and had purchased a real pair of silk stockings with her earnings. The boy arrived and they crowded into an old car with friends and headed out toward"¦ the dump! Once at the dump, the boys began shooting at rats that were nosing through the garbage, all to much laughter and fanfare. The girls stood idly by in a small group. With a start, my mother realized that this was the date destination. In typical deadpan form, she later observed, "Well, I think I WAS a bit overdressed."

I recently asked an Iowa Indian friend if he had any dump stories; he responded, "Oh, you mean, the Indian furniture store!" Rueben's family moved often and at each new home, his father would announce, "We need some furniture kids, let's go to the dump!"Mary Annette Pember, age 2

Me, age 2.

My friend Mark recalls the dump of his youth as a multi-service entertainment center for himself and his eight siblings. It was a place filled with boxes of old letters, mostly in perfect little old lady handwriting and wrapped in faded ribbons. These were quickly discarded, but the juicy ones were read aloud on idle summer afternoons to the sniggering delight of the boys. His brother, Gerard, always carried the old radios home and plugged them in, never flagging in his hope of finding a working unit. At best, they were silent, at worst they sparked and blew all the fuses in the house, causing his father to bellow at them, "You guys are no damn good!"

Other friends recall outings where the dump was a family's fun destination. On slow evenings, parents loaded kids into the car and drove out to watch bears wade through the garbage. The family would sit in the car, like they were facing a suburban drive-in screen, laughing and eating snacks.

Native people are born to "making do" with what life offers us. We did so long before non-Indians arrived in America. We go to the dump when we need to and we go without shame. We go with humor and a genuine spirit of discovery.

Comments

No Shame at All

Surprisingly much can be gained from landfills. Sometimes brand new stuff not even opened yet still in the box. For some unknown reason even tribal historical documents. But in today's technology those landfills on tribal reservations can be converted either into much needed energy for all of America by the year 2016 will need 70% more electricity. Tribes with their landfills, biomass, solid waste can become energy independent from what is considered waste. In some cases, the waste is a environmental problem which can be converted into a energy producing landfill just from the stuff we throw away. If we as tribal members view landfills as an asset instead of a enviromental problem so the "Indian Furniture Store" can make monies for tribes instead of only collecting waste. Waste into energy is much needed and tribes can be producing energy parks to meet the high demand for electricity. Just look at the population growth near Indian Reservations that are close to urban settings. Profits from waste can be a reality by sequestering of carbon; so it is no shame at all to be at the "Indian Furniture Store" that can be turned into a gold mine for the tribes, by the making of a durable good that replaces Aluminum, Copper and Steel. A product 10 times as stronger then steel and lighter then aluminum. So the "Indian Furniture Store" can become a successful mall of producing products for companies and corporations that use Aluminum, Copper and Steel. This in of itself impacts nine major industries so Tribes consider the possibilities. So Mary, your story is of much worth to let it be known the possibilities and help change our tribal economies, Thanks.