Guest guest Posted February 11, 1999 Report Share Posted February 11, 1999 Karma goes mainstream International Wildlife Sept/Oct 1998 RESURRECTION IN THE WIND by Rick Steiner; photographs by Hiroshi Hasegawa Nearly wiped out by feather harvesters, the short-tailed albatross is now poised for what may be the recovery of all time [excerpt:] The albatrosses [on Torishima Island off Japan] were easy to harvest, as they had never known predators. As Hattori reported in 1889, "at the approach of men, they only clack their bills with anger but never leave the nest. We could not make them quit their nests even by lighting a fire in the nearby grasses and they remained even though their plumage took fire." The hunters used wooden clubs to bludgeon thousands to death each day. In 1899 alone, 39.2 tons of feathers left the island - the equivalent of more than 260,000 individual albatrosses. Exports form japan in some subsequent years totaled more than 350 tons. Ornithologist Yoshimaro Yamashina estimated that from 1887 to 1902, at least 5 million albatrosses had been killed. By 1902, things seemed to be going well for the feather hunters. But to the Buddhist way of thinking, they had been accruing a great karmic debt. In August, while the birds were at sea, the debt came due: The volcanic island exploded, and all 125 villagers were buried in their sleep - the "revenge of the albatross," as it is known today. The next year, other feather harvesters built another small village, but when the killing resumed, it was at a much reduced level. By then, the preceding 15-year slaughter had taken its toll. In 1932, only a remnant bird population remained, and in December of that year, malicious villagers killed the last 3,000 or so albatrosses on learning the government was designating the island a sanctuary. This became known as "the last great massacre." As if in response, the volcano erupted again in 1939. While all but two villagers escaped this time, the village itself was completely destroyed by the lava flows, and the only remaining protected anchorage filled with rock and debris. When American ornithologist Oliver Austin circled Torishima in April 1949, unable to land due to rough seas, he reported that "the island was birdless" and sadly concluded that the "once fabulous colony of Stellar's Albatrosses may be considered to have vanished forever".... [Editorial inside front cover:] "The Bird that Made the Breeze to Blow" In Buddhist teaching, there is a strong interest in causality and the consequences of every action. This idea shows up in a classic tale of atonement and resurrection that starts on page 12 of this issue - our coverage of the breathtaking comeback from near extinction of the short-tailed albatross (photo, left). As our article by marine expert Rick Steiner outlines, the demise of the largest seabird in the Northern Hemisphere at the hand of feather harvesters was followed by a karmic payback: a series of volcanic eruptions that buried the feather harvesters in a natural tomb. In helping to bring the species back in more recent years, the hero of Steiner's story - Japanese ornithologist Hiroshi Hasegawa - turns to his Buddhist tradition to come to terms with both the birds killed and the people who killed them. Almost hauntingly, the message in these actions mirrors the theme in *Rime of the Ancient Mariner*, the eighteenth century epic of the West by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Having taken the life of an innocent albatross following his ship, the mariner is becalmed along with his fellow seafarers. Suffering without food or water and facing death, they hang the dead albatross around the mariner's neck as a burden of penitence. Not until the mariner realizes and accepts the utter beauty and sacredness of "all things great and small" is he reborn into reverence of life and saved. His revelation affords him a second chance. Today, thanks in large measure to a quarter century of help from Hasegawa, the short-tail, too, has a second chance. It s population now numbers about 1,000 birds. If all goes well, the species will slowly build back to its historic numbers, thought to exceed three million. Only then will a tale of horror, paybacks - and forgiveness - have come full circle as a master of the winds returns to the endless sea. - The Editors **************************** Hare Krsna dasi comments: It is interesting to see how the idea of karma has now become accepted in a magazine like International Wildlife, which is read by many upper-class, mainstream Americans. Especially, if you re-read the editorial carefully, you will note that the editors do not dismiss the idea of karma as mere superstition. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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