Matriotism: Women and the
Fate of the Earth
Elouise Bell April 20, 2002
During my childhood, February always ranked as the most
patriotic month. In school, we seemed to spend forever cutting
out silhouettes of Lincoln and smearing brown Crayolas over our
wobbly drawings of log cabins. No sooner had the library paste
dried than it was time for cherry trees, hatchets and pictures
of George Washington with his funny ponytail and grim smile.
Be that as it may, I got to thinking about whether I am
really patriotic. And that's when I decided we need a new word.
So I coined one: Matriotic.
Now think about it. "Patriotic," of course, comes
from the Latin pater, meaning father. A patriot is one "who
loves and loyally or zealously supports his own country" or
fatherland. A perfectly good word for a perfectly good feeling.
"Matriotic," by analogy, comes from the Latin
mater. A matriot then, is one who loves and loyally or zealously
supports her motherland, her own planet -- Mother Earth.
The two words are not perfectly analogous, fortunately,
otherwise people might see conflict of interest where there is
none. Patriotism, as we use the word, is about the flag, the
government and the history of a nation -- in our case, the Bill
of Rights, free elections and the peaceful transfer of power
(even after a national trauma like Watergate or the Iran-Contra
Affair).
Matriotism, on the other hand, is yin to patriotism's yang.
It's about the Earth, not the world. It's about what those
fortunate few have seen from spaceship portals, not what we see
on a map or a globe with regularly updated borderlines and
political color-coding.
Matriotism is about one sun by day and one moon by night -- a
moon that waxes and wanes and marks months and menses whether
you live in Moscow, Idaho or Moscow, Texas. It's about what
human beings have felt since the dawn of time when they lay on
their backs on the ground and looked up at floating clouds or
glittering stars.
Patriotism has always had a lot of the zest of competition in
it -- rival teams, us and them, Britain's battles being won on
the playing fields of Eton, and all that. My country, right or
wrong. My country over the other countries.
Matriotism, by contrast, recognizes that while there may be
six- or seven-score fatherlands, there is only one motherland.
There are political divisions that have risen, prospered, and
utterly vanished, civilizations and great cities that are no
more. But while we have her, there is only one Mother Earth.
She's done a little rearranging from time to time, what with
volcanoes and earthquakes and such. But last spring, I stood on
a grassy meadow in England and was informed that the same trees
I was seeing, the same boulders, the same stream, had been seen
and touched by Anglo-Saxons, by Romans and by Stone Age Brits.
Many cultures, patriots of many nations -- but one earth.
Some call her Spaceship Earth today.
So it's not either-or; it's not a matter of patriotism vs.
matriotism. It's just a matter of bringing our matriotism a
little more to the forefront, perhaps.
For instance, we could start with a holiday. A matriotic
holiday, a worldwide day of celebration, gratitude, and
rededication to the planet. We'd need a flag, of course, and
we'd need a song -- an anthem, really.
Wouldn't it be quite a feeling to have an international
anthem (no, not the Internationale) that little kids all over
the world would learn to sing about the oceans and the mountains
and the sands and the snows of Earth?
We could certainly work up a pledge of allegiance: "I
pledge allegiance to the soil, and to the air we breathe, to
every species beneath the sun...."
We'd certainly need a Matriots' Hall of Fame someplace --
maybe onboard a ship that would sail from country to country,
celebrating the great matriots who fought for Mother Earth,
whether by saving the whales and the gorillas and the snail
darters, or by engineering new strains of seed that would feed
more on less, or by finding the key to practical mass use of
solar energy instead of fossil fuels -- and so on.
Some people might not get too excited about being matriotic,
seeing that it lacks that old competitive edge. On the other
hand, remember what Walt Kelly's cartoon possum Pogo said:
"We have met the enemy, and they is us." This fight to
save Mother Earth could end up the biggest battle of all.
Elouise Bell is professor emeritus of
English at Brigham Young University, a syndicated columnist and
the author of "Only When I Laugh" (Signature Books),
from which this article was excerpted. , Earth Island Journal,
Summer 2002- Vol. 17, No. 2 http://www.earthisland.org/eijournal/
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