The Saboteurs
By Chris Hedges
Calgary, Canada—Oil and natural gas drilling in the province
of Alberta has turned Calgary into a boomtown. Glittering skyscrapers,
monuments to the obscene profits amassed by a fossil fuel industry that is
exploiting the tar sands and the vast oil and natural gas fields in Alberta,
have transformed Calgary into a mecca for money, dirty politics, greed and
industry jobs. The city is as soulless and sterile as Houston. The death of the
planet, for a few, is very good for business.
The man who waged North America’s first significant war
against hydraulic fracturing was from Alberta, an eccentric, messianic
Christian preacher named Wiebo Ludwig who died last year. He, with his small
Christian community in the remote north of the province, sabotaged at least one
wellhead by pouring cement down its shaft and blew up others. The Canadian
authorities, along with the oil and gas barons, demonize Ludwig as an
ecoterrorist, an odd charge given that they are the ones responsible for systematically
destroying the environment and the planet. And as the ecosystem
deteriorates—and the drive by corporations to extract the last remaining
natural resources from the earth, even if it kills us all, becomes more and
more relentless—the resistance of Wiebo Ludwig is worth remembering.
“Wiebo felt that our
society was in a spiritual crisis, rather than an environmental or an economic
crisis,” David York, whose film “Wiebo’s War” is a nuanced portrayal of Ludwig
and his fight with the oil and gas industry, told me when I reached him in
Toronto by email. “He felt that our addiction to fossil fuels, rampant
consumerism and materialism, addictions, breakdown of family units were all
symptoms of a society that has lost its root connection to God. Further, he
felt that we are in a kind of end times state, where the forces of good are in
a terrible struggle with the forces of evil. He wasn’t so crass as to put a
timetable on it, but in his view ‘any fool can see the times.’ ”
That one of our era’s most effective figures of resistance
against the oil and gas industry was a devout Christian is perhaps not
coincidental. I do not share Ludwig’s Christian fundamentalism—his community
was a rigid patriarchy—but I do share his belief that when human law comes into
conflict with God’s law, human law must be defied. Ludwig grasped the moral
decadence of the consumer society, its unchecked hedonism, worship of money and
deadening cult of the self. He retreated in 1985 with his small band of
followers into the remoteness of northern Alberta. His community, called
Trickle Creek, was equipped with its own biodiesel refinery, windmills and
solar panels—which permitted it to produce its own power—a greenhouse and a
mill. Its members, who grew their own food, severed themselves from the
contaminants of consumer culture. But like the struggle of Axel Heyst, the
protagonist in Joseph Conrad’s novel “Victory,” Ludwig’s flight from evil only
ensured that evil came to him.
Ludwig’s farm happened to be atop one of the largest oil and
gas reserves in the world. In Canada when you own land you own only the top six
inches of soil; the mineral rights below it belong to the state and can be sold
without the knowledge or acquiescence of the landowner. Beneath Ludwig’s farm
lay a fossil fuel known as sour gas, a neurotoxin that if released from within
the earth can, even in small amounts, poison livestock, water tables and
people.
“Wherever a man goes,
men will pursue and paw him with their dirty institutions,” wrote Henry David
Thoreau. And this is what happened to Ludwig.
The oil and gas companies soon began a massive drilling
effort. At first, like many other reformers and activists, Ludwig used legal
and political channels to push back against the companies, which were drilling
on the edge of his 160-acre farm. He spent the first five years attending
hearings with civil regulators, writing letters—he even wrote to Jane Fonda—and
appealing in vain to elected officials, government agencies, the press,
environmentalists and first nations groups. His family—he had 11
children—posted a sign in 1990 that decried “the ruthless interruption and
cessation” of privacy; “the relentless greedy grabbing of Creational
resources”; “the caloused [sic] disregard for the sanctity of the Lord’s Day”;
the legislation of land and mineral ownership policy “that does violence to the
God-given ‘right to property.’ ” Ludwig then presented the offending oil
company, Ranchmen’s, with a bill for the sign.
“He was primarily
motivated by his love for his family and a strong sense of justice,” said
Andrew Nikiforuk, the author of a good book on Ludwig called “Saboteurs: Wiebo
Ludwig’s War Against Big Oil.” I had dinner with Nikiforuk last week in
Calgary. He told me: “It did not seem right to him that the oil industry could
park a drilling well for sour gas in view of his family’s communal dining room.
‘Is a man not even master in his own house, let alone his own land, on matters
like these?’ ”
“His war against
industry illustrated the cost of our addiction to hydrocarbons: Our
materialistic way of life is based on the destruction of groundwater, the
devaluing of rural property, the invasion of rural communities, the poisoning
of skies with carcinogens, the fragmentation of landscapes,” Nikiforuk said.
“Urban people do not understand the sacrifices now being imposed on rural
people.”
Ludwig’s first acts of sabotage were minor. He laid down
nail beds on roads. He smashed solar panels. He blocked roads by downing trees.
He disabled vehicles and drilling equipment. But after two leaks of hydrogen
sulfide sour gas from nearby wells—which forced everyone on the farm to
evacuate and saw numerous farm animals giving birth to deformed or stillborn
offspring, as well as five human miscarriages or stillbirths within Ludwig’s
community—and after the destruction of two of his water wells, he declared open
war on the oil and gas industry. He began to blow up oil and gas facilities. He
said he had to fight back to “protect his children.”
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police, accompanied by private
security agents hired by the oil companies, spent millions to investigate and
attempt to halt the sabotage. Ludwig’s farm was occupied by police five times
and searched for incriminating evidence. The police and Encana Corp.
infiltrated Ludwig’s tight community with an agent provocateur who, to prove he
could be trusted, blew up a well owned by what was then Alberta Energy Corp.,
now Encana. The explosion, although orchestrated by the police and Encana, was
publicly blamed on Ludwig. The oil company also brought in a “terrorism expert”
from Toronto to speak at local town hall gatherings—York captures one of those
talks in his film—and the expert warned residents of the rising “terrorism” of
religious cults led by fanatic, charismatic leaders.
Ludwig was undeterred. “People are talking here that maybe
someone should be shooting guys in pinstripe suits to get them to stop,” he
said.
Ludwig, whose knowledge of the terrain allowed him to outfox
hundreds of police officers, was never caught in an act of sabotage, but he
probably had a hand in damage at hundreds of remote well sites estimated at $12
million. The federal government in Ottawa, in desperation, considered sending
in the army. Ludwig was finally arrested in 2000 on five counts of property
damage and possession of explosives and imprisoned for 18 months. He spent his
time in prison reading a treatise in Dutch on the nature of hell.
Ludwig referred to the biblical story of David and Goliath
in justifying his struggle against colossal forces, saying “the war is won
before it is fought.” He believed that if you fought for righteousness you
always were ensured spiritual victory, even if you were defeated in the eyes of
the world. “It’s not size,” he said. “It’s whether a man is right or not. The
fight is won on principle.” In his home he kept a poster of activist and
journalist Ken Saro-Wiwa, a Nigerian hanged in 1995 after he campaigned against
Shell Oil’s exploitation of his country. The poster read: “The environment is
man’s first right. Without a clean environment man cannot exist to claim other
rights be they political, social or economic.”
Ludwig once invited visiting civil servants who worked for
oil and gas regulators to dinner. He fed them homemade cheeses, preserves, jams
and wild cranberry wine. The pièce de résistance, which Ludwig unveiled with
his usual flair, was the skull of a horse killed by sour gas. “It’s just a
symbol of all the death we’ve had around here,” he informed his startled
guests.
On another occasion he dumped noxious sour crude on the
carpet in the office of local regulators to see if it “bothered” them.
The sabotage did not end with Ludwig’s 2012 death. There are
reports of ongoing sabotage along the path of the XL pipeline and in the
Alberta oil fields.
“I’d also say that sabotage
in the oil patch is one of the oil and gas industry’s dirty little secrets,”
York said. “It is widespread, and to many landowners it is a natural
consequence of the industry’s attitudes and behavior to those whose land they
are occupying. The industry doesn’t make a big fuss because they don’t want to
encourage the response.”
But violence begets violence. And the more Ludwig blew up
facilities the harsher became the intrusion of the state.
“Meeting industrial
violence against livestock and families with more industrial violence against
oil and gas installations is not the answer,” said Nikiforuk. “It is an act of
frustration as well as a reflection of the captured state of regulators. And it
submits an entire community to a reign of industry- and state-sanctioned
terror. A second war broke out in the bush in the 2000s during an intense
period of hydraulic fracking. Six bombings occurred at Encana well sites in
northern British Columbia just 50 kilometers from Ludwig’s farm. The government
sent in 250 officers to investigate. They treated rural citizens like members
of the Taliban. The campaign ended as mysteriously as it began and had all the
earmarks of Ludwig. It did not change industry practices.”
Ludwig’s gravest mistake was his decision, or the decision
of someone in his small community, to fire on two trucks carrying rowdy
teenagers. The sons and daughters of oil and gas workers roared through the
group’s compound at about 4 a.m. on June 20, 1999. Karman Willis, a 16-year-old
girl, was fatally shot by someone on the farm, and a second teenager survived a
wound. York in his film shows Ludwig family members repeating like automatons
that they thought they were under attack because the backfiring of the vehicles
sounded like gunshots. No one on the farm took responsibility for the shooting,
and no one was charged. The killing of the girl saw the neighboring communities
cut off Ludwig and his band in revulsion. Local businesses put up signs that
read: “No Service for Ludwigs.”
Ludwig, before he died at age 71 after refusing chemotherapy
for esophageal cancer, turned away from violence. The renunciation came a year
or two after his final bombing campaign. He would read, with his family,
Jacques Ellul’s 1969 book “Violence: Reflections From a Christian Perspective.”
Ellul, like Ludwig’s Dutch father, had fought in the resistance against the
Nazis in World War II.
“What constantly
marked the life of Jesus was not nonviolence but in every situation the choice
not to use power,” he wrote. “This is infinitely different.”
“The Christian should
participate in social and political efforts in order to have an influence in
the work, not with the hope of making a paradise (of the earth), but simply to
make it more tolerable—not to diminish the opposition between this world and
the Kingdom of God, but simply to modify the opposition between the disorder of
this world and the order of preservation that God wants it to have—not to bring
in the Kingdom of God, but so that the Gospel might be proclaimed in order that
all men might truly hear the good news,” Ellul wrote.
Ludwig said: “We feel weak in all the things we are
fighting. I think the match is very unequal. But it’s all right. Instead of
griping about it, we might as well give ourselves to it.”
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