Interview Generally one-sided conversation between journalist and source(s), lightly edited with no opportunity for response.
Julian Aguon Seeks Climate Justice Through Storytelling and the Law
As a human rights lawyer and founder of , Julian Aguon has spent more than a decade working to secure Indigenous rights and environmental justice for communities in his native Guam and around the Pacific. As an Indigenous Chamorro person himself, Aguon says he finds comfort in the common Indigenous insistence against commodification. This 鈥渞efusal of Indigenous people to be alienated from the rest of creation鈥 has since become central to his work.
As he writes in his 2022 book, , 鈥淲e have our ears to the ground and we are listening to our eight-spot butterfly, whose forest home is being razed for a machine-gun range. We are doing what we can to save her. We are protesting. We are working to save two rare plants whose leaves she lays her eggs on. We are suing U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on her behalf. We are not naive. We know we might not win. But we also know we owe it to her to fight at least as hard as she does.鈥 He goes on to describe the species鈥 six larval instars between an egg hatching and becoming a butterfly. 鈥淚t stops my blood to think about that. She has to die six times in order to live.鈥
Aguon鈥檚 work as a lawyer requires him to navigate what he calls 鈥渢he architecture of exclusion鈥 in existing Western legal systems, which make even establishing standing to bring forth a case difficult. He describes the process as the system holding the door shut, while he and others struggle to force it open incrementally in order to join the conversation.
But Aguon鈥檚 work is far more than just making technical legal arguments; he鈥檚 trying to change the way the law sees the inherent dignity, worth, and rights of nonhuman entities.
鈥淲e have our own version of what it means to be human on this planet. We have our own version of what good relations look like,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hat I try to do is to identify those values that I would say are our constitutive values: They鈥檙e the values that make us who we are as a people, the values that encompass the beating heart of what it means to be a true moral person.鈥
In Guam, that looks like stopping further militarization of the island. And connecting that opposition to related struggles across the Pacific and on the United States mainland鈥攖o support Vanuatu鈥檚 efforts to get climate change recognized by the International Court of Justice, to end the crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous women in North America, to oppose construction of Line 3 through wild rice country.
鈥淭hat matters. It really does. Because if we lose our ability to relate to each other, how are we ever going to mobilize our political energies in service of fighting for each other鈥檚 causes?鈥 Those relationships and alliances, Aguon says, must cross ideological, geographical, and political borders, and share a collective sense of urgency鈥攁s well as a shared celebration of each other鈥檚 victories, abundance, and joy. Because that, too, is a critical part of being able to continue doing the work.
Aguon lives in a quiet village on the island of Guam, sandwiched between the jungle and the ocean. Here he is beset by a wide variety of his other-than-human relatives: giant monitor lizards and so many species of butterflies. He says he needs to be in close proximity to the sea in order to persist in this work; the sound of the waves settles him. And when he needs a boost, he listens to Janelle Mon谩e.
鈥淚 just do this [as] a small part of what so many other people do,鈥 he explains. 鈥淚鈥檓 part of this global climate justice movement and Indigenous rights movement, and I don鈥檛 think I would be as helpful as I am if I wasn鈥檛 also engaged in exceedingly concrete work, to fight injustice, or to repair the world.鈥
Aguon does this work through the legal system and also through writing.
鈥淐limate change has put us on this unforgiving timeline,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 mean, the crisis is here and it鈥檚 banging down the door. And writers have to do battle. We have to do more than use our words, we have to wield 迟丑别尘.鈥
Aguon thinks deeply about words, both in English鈥攖he language of his people鈥檚 colonizers鈥攁nd in his native Chamorro, though he says he isn鈥檛 fluent.
鈥淥ne part of our project as writers is to do this repair work, and that work starts with language itself,鈥 Aguon says. 鈥淧eople in power are relentless in their abuse of language, in their corruption of language.鈥
He points to the example of a recent ribbon-cutting ceremony to celebrate the reopening of a Marine Corps base in Guam. He says the rhetoric deployed that day was all about 鈥渟ustainability鈥 and 鈥渟ustainable peace.鈥 Aguon laughed in the recounting, because the U.S. military, being the largest institutional producer and consumer of greenhouse gases in the world, is 鈥渢he definition of unsustainability.鈥 And how can an institution designed to engage in various war games talk about peace in any meaningful way?
鈥淚t鈥檚 the purposeful corruption and perverting of language,鈥 Aguon says. 鈥淭hese words mean nothing anymore, because we get to pretend they mean anything.鈥
He elucidates another example in the book: 鈥淲e need not worry, our leaders tell us. We are a resilient people. We need only summon that strength now. Will someone please tell them that resilience is not a thing to be trotted out in trying times like a kind of prized pony?鈥
Aguon has no patience for the ways in which people in power employ words like 鈥渞esilience鈥 in bad faith, hollowing them out and emptying them of their meaning. And he takes heart that reciprocity, so critical to Indigenous worldviews, has thus far avoided this commodification.
鈥淲riters are engaged in exactly the opposite enterprise,鈥 Aguon says. 鈥淲e want to clarify our intent, not to cloud it. We want to distribute power as opposed to hoard it. We want to write for the people. 鈥 We鈥檙e using this thing called writing to try to wake people up.鈥
The work of confronting empire is almost always loud, he explains in the book, so he wants to force the reader to lean in and listen. He says that now more than ever we need radical listening鈥攖o the voices of those more vulnerable than us, whose lives are more precarious than our own.
The words and voice are critical, as is the audience for which they are written. In describing the collection of short pieces that comprise No Country for Eight-Spot Butterflies, he says: 鈥淥ne could argue that I鈥檓 writing for an American audience because I鈥檓 trying to show people in this country what their government is doing in their name and with their dollars鈥攖his spreading U.S. war machine, and the widespread adverse impacts on frontline communities like my own. And on the other hand, I write鈥擨 have pieces in here that I won鈥檛 name, but they鈥檙e really clearly meant for my own people.鈥
He says he鈥檚 trying to take Toni Morrison鈥檚 approach to writing beyond the white gaze and extend that analogy to a colonial context鈥攖o write beyond the colonial gaze. 鈥淲e are more than our suffering. Yes, my people have suffered unspeakable violence at the hands of the U.S. military, over such a long period of time. The U.S. has engaged in massive land-grabbing after the Second World War, and has continued a project of dispossession in so many ways.鈥
鈥淏ut also there鈥檚 beauty here,鈥 he continues. 鈥淚 write of the beauty of this beach on the northern end of the island with sand shaped like stars.鈥 And so, he says, insisting on the imperative of beauty is an equally essential part of the collective work.
鈥淪o I鈥檓 also writing for that audience, to soothe as well, because we are exhausted. When a people is endlessly confronted by the U.S. war machine, which finds evermore clever, or surreptitious ways to unfurl itself, and suck up all of the air, we have to find ways to love each other through this process. And so the book sort of does both in some ways; I have both audiences in mind. And I think that it鈥檚 becoming clear that we have to have both audiences in mind.鈥
Aguon says the book is like a tasting: He鈥檚 gathered an array of different small bites of writing for readers to sample. Now, with two books and a Pulitzer finalist to his name, Aguon鈥檚 goal is to take his writing to the next level. 鈥淚 have seen men and women fully alive in the kitchen, preparing a meal with love. That鈥檚 what I鈥檓 trying to do. I鈥檓 just trying to prepare a meal with love,鈥 he says, 鈥渨hich is daunting, because I鈥檓 trying to write something that is both very clear-eyed in its critique, but also nourishing.鈥
That recipe of nourishment and critique, he hopes, results in much-needed insight鈥攁nd inspiration toward care, attention, and ultimately action鈥攁s the climate crisis brings us all rapidly toward catastrophic changes. 鈥淲e have so much information,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e have too much information. But we don鈥檛 have enough insight.鈥
To address this, he鈥檚 currently working on a book-length version of he published in The Atlantic that made him a Pulitzer finalist, 鈥淭o Hell With Drowning.鈥 As he writes in that piece, 鈥淲e who are waist-deep in that [climate justice] movement need more than facts to win. We need stories. And not just stories about the stakes, which we know are high, but stories about the places we call home. Stories about our own small corners of the Earth as we know them. As we love 迟丑别尘.鈥
So while Aguon鈥檚 ideas about uniting the entire global community to engage in climate justice may seem lofty, his methods are refreshingly down-to-earth. As he writes in the book, 鈥淎ny people who profess to love freedom permit others room. Room to grow, to change their minds, to mess up, to leave, to come back in. 鈥 But perhaps that is the whole unromantic utterly useful point: the part cannot save the whole. And I think this should not so much make us tentative, as it should anchor us in the reality of our collective vulnerability, in the immediacy of our connection. So anchored, another truth becomes plain: it is strength, not power, that must be the object of our affection.鈥
Breanna Draxler
is a senior editor at YES!, where she leads coverage of climate and environmental justice, and Native rights. She has nearly a decade of experience editing, reporting, and writing for national magazines including National Geographic聽online and Grist, among others. She collaborated on a climate action guide for聽Audubon Magazine that won a National Magazine Award in 2020. She recently served as a board member for the Society of Environmental Journalists and the Northwest Science Writers Association.聽She has a master鈥檚 degree in environmental journalism from the University of Colorado Boulder. Breanna is based out of the traditional territories of the Coast Salish people, but has worked in newsrooms on both coasts and in between. She previously held staff positions at聽bioGraphic, Popular Science, and聽Discover Magazine.
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