Maurice Strong Wizard Baca Grande 1990
Maurice Strong Wizard Baca Grande 1990
Maurice Strong Wizard Baca Grande 1990
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dqeit a, and, a threat ao'tlie'l.ai,.tlings az, If'those people.6p iichs f iUie *rey calt rhe liaca. an iniernational spiritual commgnity - t}rev are foreigner!. and iI rhey are rilking abdur gJ<ibal harmo
ptan. Togethei th'ey havi established in tlie Colorado
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:. suspicion t}at rurdJ ugrankind' 1: manlo{th9.localst}Lefundofxenophobiqsusiptcionthalruril' , . .I 'tfroliOb4-i1i, *ni1.say, unaslbe-if huryran-tirltiis.to survi1re, .r many of *re locals the kind of:enophobic And if these foreign, ' , I ,X dfurtcd in 1978 r&en :i mys.teiiousmqn is to suruirr. . America soiretimes fi:-e.ls tow4rd ptrimgera. foreignr Hame Hanne ; 4merica soriretimes fi:dls toward strangers. lviritdd :lt 'iousriiqn lvi5ited
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plete with monasteries and devotees of the Vedic mother goddess and amulet{arrying native American shamans and even Shirley Maclaine and her NewAge followers, then such dreams can be seen as an af{iont to the Baptists and bom-again erangelicals for rvhom Jesus Christ is the Answer. And if, again, these foreigners rvere to discover. quite to their surprise, *rat the eDormous tract ol iand theljve acquired to fulfil their plan happens to sit atop what could be the largest untapped reservoil of rvater in the U.S.-4..-smack ln the middle of the parched and booming southwest-and tl,]e couple, together \lith some parrners. form a companr, to sell some of the billions of dollars wo.th of nel\"found \\'atcr to folks in Denver and downstream along the Rio Gr^ande, enrv and srspicion and bigotrt can courbine into a potent for(e. And rhat is exactlv $,har has happerred. 'l-he : e have been
no coincidence, she felt, that'The OId Man"-as she calls Anderson nolv-came to her. His message could not be ignored. She wouldwith her hrisband's support and his international connections-trv to
do what Anderson directed.
strange rlrlrlors and puhlic protests. There ha\e been death threais. \{istrusr and the \{ater nray.jeopardize the dream.
he Strongs are the latest in a line of dreaners rrho havc
knoiv that he, too, had had unrealistic drearns" that he had global
visions, that he conld be $,on o-ver
along Cottonrvood and r,{'illon, and Spanish creeks. But the gold mn out. The boom lo$n of Crestone withered. N-ext came a scheme in the 1970s to build a giant retir-enent communitl', cailed Baca Grande after- the nearby 57.760-hectare Baca GranL Rarlch. Thirn miilion doilars were sunk into roads alrd Lrtilities to service the 10,000 iots. llrrt onlr afe!\' hundred settled. Few [ow.emain. h 1978, logether with the othe, int esto1,s. -qiro!1g b,ruqhi dre Baca Grant-sight Llnseen-as parl o{ a lDoca larger lanci prir.hase. He and his rvife u'alked the atpen-1inec1 cr-eeks and climbed among the 4,20llmetre peaks abole the Ba.a. The), iiked the solitude, the silences, the sunseLs. Thev knerv nothing about the hidden water. Thev couldn't have imagined what trouble it would bring. One evening a grey bearded stranger arrived uninvited at their to1\'nhouse. He inroduced himself as Glen Anderson and told Hanne, *I've been wairing for you." He described ro her the visions he had had while wandering in dre nearby mounrains. He saw that the leaders of all the world's religions lvould gather at the Baca. They'd build their temples and monasteries and churches, and political, educational, and corporate leaders would follow. Together, he told Hanne, these people would give shape to a new planetary order which would evolve from the economic collapse and environmental catastrophes that would ${eep the globe in the years ahead. Hanne grew up amid wealth and risk in llartime Copenhagen. Her mother worked in the Danish Resisrance, helping to ferry European Jews out of Germany. And Hanne knew from earliest childhood that she was different, that she had mystical abilities. She saw angels. She could recall past lives. Something made her feel she rvas once an Indian and rhat she should go to the U. S. to find her ancestral home. After an education of industrial and interior design, she went to America. And so when she heard Anderson telling her about his voices, she took it as prophecl She headed alone uphill into the
T ffi
Alazasi lndians and the Spanish conquistarlors passed this wa,v centuries ago on rhe traii to oblivion. In the 1880s, mlners came, beliering ther'd lbund El Dorado in the veins of gold that ran into the grev quartzite
mountains carrying an Indian pipe and a pouch of medicinal herbs and found a promontory above the Baca. For three days she stayed there, fasting, meditating, observing rhe land. It was
ISTTMAY 1990
llris
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i)rErrrtrrs Fol rirc Stlongs. ir is a iifctil.ne proje.l. I lind mvsell l,ondering rvhat dcdication, what jdeaiisni colnllels thenr rollai.d such :ur turlikeh.dream. And the rnor.e I learn. Lhe nlole a$,are I bccolre that I't,e entercd a lvorld ol illrtsions, \he1c the sLrrfa.e c()nceals ihir1gs unlathomable. I can,t hcliele thorrsh l (ould like r(F-ltre stiperDatural storjcs Hanne r, 1.. I,'und, rllr, r. .afle*ir, an,l,altrr'arinq h r.irr,srrran ti(, Str-ong can also bc a mlstic. I can'L fisure out ltol shit.ley \l r, L i'rc '\il ntri rll 8", , r.lrer .ne nore. i.r. \nrl I , r-.r qr the zaatll.-the billions of dollars'worth of nater _our o1.ml mind. I l-, 1 e,,i'r- u,e, rhe , u|\rr..rrur in \\t i, l, rl,r Sr..oJre, desc.il)ed to Dle the !er\. llrst \(n-ds that passecl betr.r,een Lhem. At rhe parq iD Nerr'\br.k Cin,over 20 vears ago Nher.e thev,d been inrroduced. H;rnne, l,ell arvar.e of Strong,s r-epLltiLtion, had ." d ro her' I rr,r.e lrrr.hand. .\olt F pcof,, .n, ,6,1 ,, n q., ; q..
,i ..1stals, anothea ocaripicd b\' an !5-1,sl1r-old ned\'c ihaltlarl. is rhc Baca rodav. But torlar,, I.m cliscor.e[ilq, is.)nl\ !lt?
For, as the Stlongs mcotion. rhev see the Baca as a pal.adistr the endt e plancr and sar the fare ol rhe earrh rs at stake.
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al nte ai that ntoDienl and said, ,,And she's stlll rr,.onder-ingl,, I ger the impression rhat ther enjoy rhis arnbigui."-, this flir.ta tion ben{een rcalin and illusion. I get the intpression ahat the tables cotld ha\.e been tru-ned, that Strong could have confront, ed Haiine: geliius? or fake? The masus and the nistic, I tell myself. lt s inrporLant to figure it all out. The ans\{ers rrarrer.
sorue pcople sar'\'ou're a fake. Hanne laughed at rhJ nen-r, orr and laughed har-der at her husband,s rebutral_ Sronp looke{l
\arrd, rfll. Or c,la, in 194.i. arer , Lrg,i,trr .i,1, r r,r ,,per coal car he loLrnd hiniself back at Oak Lake, colcl. lol]elr,: He r,'rrld .en rrrr- li-lrr, in rhe r,in,lurr ,,r hi. hor,.e hrrr .onrrrl,ir 4 told him he couid noa go hone again. He rodc further on, srop_ ping in Broadviclr; Saskatchewan. As he sat besidc the lracks. a ne\!'sprlpcI ble1\ p:rsr. He caught it. On the front paqe he read that Churchill and Roosevelt had agreed that therl r,,ould, ai.ter the \\at lbnn a nel\ illicrnational organization dcciicarec] ro l,orld.justice and peace. ft rlould be callecl thc United Nations. The concept hiL hiDr like a rhunderbolr. .,I knew ar thar moment,' Strong Lold me, .,I rvan ted to be part of it.., In the tiro decades rhat follorcd, he clisiovered thar althotgh
i9
ening his pubescent mustac:he for ellecL, he \\'orkecl lrlth the merchant marine along the B.C. ,ll:r becarne an aPprentice ftrr rracier in rhc High :"".: IIe Arctic. lI.. clirl a lirtie prospecting. He lived amons rhe Inuit. He
hen Srrong lelt (lak Lake in 19.13. haling skippecl lorLr glades fbl his scholastic abilities and sradrut ed at age 1.tr, he carriecl wirh him an abidiie scnse of rh-"urlrl srnJ,r. t, a|:d a dr,r,, rlr\c,.rqrtnl^ ". be poor. lle bolrght a dcker on a traii out of town. For a tthile, adding lile vears Lo his age ancl d:rrk_
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his lack of university education prevented him fiom doing some*ring of consequence at the intemational level, his shrewdness
brought him success in money matters. He arrived in Alberta during the boom of the early '50s as a young frnahcial analpt specializing in resource development, He befriended oil
entrepreneur Jack Gallagher and later joined Dome Petroleum as its third employee, He met and married Pauline, his first wife, with whom he had four children. By investing in oil and gas properties and founding a series of resource-based companies, he earned his first million within a few years. He then moved on to the presidency of the Power Corporation of Canada, a leading energy-investment firm. Financial success, corporate connections, and powe. were his*and he hadn'l turned 32. But inside him, still unfulfilled, lay the seed planted by his mother-that he could do something to better the world. Then, in 1965, he rvas asked to meet Prime Minister Lester Pearson. The PM wanted to know if Strong was interesred in bringing his managerial skills and his long-held international concerns to the organization now knou.n as CIDA. Strong became directorgeneral of External Aid, which put him in charge of a-ll Canadian foreign aid. He left, willingly, a $200,000-a-yearjob as a corporate executive for a $27,00Ga-yearjob as a civil ser\ant. It didn't matrer He knew he nould hnally get to fulfil his dream ofbecoming invohed rvidr the United Nations. From there, through his subsequent friendship with Pear-
He has sat at the table with many of the earth's most powerful people. He has tried-in a rational and political way-to change the world. And yet, he shares with Hanne a sense of the profound mystical possibilities *rat exist for those who are prepared to retreat from the
hubbub and listen to the moan
happened. According to
Strong: "We'd been walking, talking, heading back to mv parked car. Suddenly, this
son's successor, Pierre Trudeau, the millionaire energy ent.epreneur-turned-international do-gooder found the cause that has come to dominate the past 20 years of his life. With the support of the Canadian government, he has pa-rticipated in or directed practically every major environmental initiative that has come ont of tl-re United Nations from that time to this. He or-ganized the fi1st 1{olld Conference on the Environment in
1972. Then he n.roved to Kenya, where he established and headed the U.N. Environment Program. ,A.fter that, he joined the \4rorid Commission on the Environment, which produced the epochal 1987 Brundtland Report, the incendiary that has ignited the present global "green" mo\,'ement. Three months ago, he was appointed secretarygeneral of the U.N.'s world conference on the environment and development to be held in Brazil in 1992. From such pladorms, he has proposed a new economic order based on the redistribution of the developed world's industries and \yeal& to the Third World. He has called for a massive retooling ofwestern economies away from short-sighted consumption and toward long-term conservation, On occasion, he has said that the one factor that may spare humanity from its environmental folly is a worldwide spiritual reawakening. He
bush
some sagebrush-
erupted in flames in liort ofusl Itjust burst into flames. I was astounded. Moyers was, too. A btsh brirsting iuto flamesl" He shakes his head at the memor!. He knows it sounds, well, flaky. But it did happen, he reassures me. It is the most inpressive mystical experience he has had. He is concerned, above all, about man's extinction. The words of Percy Shelley's ironic 1gth-century poem Ozlmandias-memorized in his youth-have seemed, of late, more and more like the epitaph of human civilizationr I met a trattell.er from an antique lnnd
Wo
oJ
slone
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in
swr
of cold, command,
that
ih stulptor uell
those passions
read
suraire, stamped an tfuw hlelzss things, Tfu hand, that nocfud thzm and, the heart that fed,: And, on th2 pedpstal.these ds appear-
Vhich
yt
name is Ozymand.ias, hing of hings: Looh oru trry uorhs, ye Migh$, and, dupair!
"lv\
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Nothing beside remains. Round th.e detal Of that colassal ureck, bound,less arul bare Tfu lone and laul sands stretch far away Along the way during the past 20 years, not unnoticed in his home country, he agreed in 1976, at Pierre Trudeau's request,
YISTTMAY 1990
to set up and become CEO ofPetro-Canada. The country was in tlre midst of the OPEGinduced oil crunch. Strong had energyindustry connections and well-known doubts about unfettered capitalism. He took the job. His old Alberta Oil Patch friends
30
"I'm a maverick," says Strong, explaining his willingness to leave the international field for a controversial corporate job. "I've always been regarded as a peculiar qpe. I've been iz the business community, but not o/it." This observation, I soon discover, holds true for Strong's involvement in the Baca spiritual community: he is ,r, it, but not necessarily o/it. By nature, he is philosophic and a little shy. He stammers at times. At the Baca, he affects the look of a westerner-cowboy hat, sffing tie, pointy boots. But his interests are primarily global. He travels endlessly, speaking on the need for environmental legislation in one place, attending a board meeting in a second, visiting influential friends along the way. As Hanne says, explaining their unusual relationship, "Maurice is out there, txYir,g to save the world. He's out there, speaking, his diplomacy, his global visions. But you've got to have examples. There have to be places where his ideas come to earth. His is *re naaro-the world. The Baca's the mino.lf there's
glimmer of hope for the future, that's what this place is about." Hanne prefers to remain in the couple's new adobe house that sits on the lowest slopes of the Sangre de Cristo foothills. The two-bedroom building, like the Baca itself, is a protot?e for the future: the basement, a large cold cellar for storing vega
fruit, and Hanne's growing collection of seeds from rare and endangered plants; in the pantry, a mulching system with is compost-digesting earthworms; throughout the house, passive solar heating and triple-glazed windows. As well, the house is crammed with religious obiects: African mask, sacred Nepalese stones, a half-dozen antique Tibetan wall-hangings called tanhas.It was.beneath one of these, I'm informed, that a visiting associate of the Dalai Lama, the Ta Lama, died nine years ago while sitting cross-legged in deep meditation. According to Tibetan custom, Hanne tells me, the dead lama was left untouched in an upright position for four days until his spirit had departed. When tlle body was finally moved, she adds, the
etables,
attending doctor noted that it didn't smell and that its heart-and she put her fist against her chest-was still ivarm.
From the house and the nearby ranch headquarters, the Strongs oversee the religious community's development, the progress of which has not always been smooth. In 1979, at the Strong's invitation, the first groups moved to the Baca-the Aspen Institute and the Lindisfarne Association, a humanistic American think-tank and a spiritual society, respectively. Later, they wi*rdrew in the face of the site's remoteness. Some of the locals were happy to see them go, for they imagined-in the presence of such visitors as Henry Kissingel the World Bank's Robert McNamara, and *re presidents of organizations like IBM, Pan Am, and Harvard University-a clandestine, left-wing con43
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WISTi1,4AY i9S0
-rcetrertrl hirilrlings ol rhe u.adiLioual rclisions. ultil I see Ilanue,s rnap l:rbclleci ..The \hller of the Reluge of\lorld Tr uths', that I rlimpse the Big pictule. \4,e Lrliloll it on Lile lloor ol her-sruch, clireitll beneath thc trzlfuz rvhele the lanra died. 'Here.s rvhere the libetaD ulonasteri.s surr g lrr pLr. {h- .d\,. poir i e. ..Here.. rrhere n rahhi trr,.n r.,.rel \ !uill\ ro du a renrre Jo, rlr- .r d, ot ler,isl nrr,r,r i.rn. The Taoists ar.e conling in ig!10. So.s a Sufi leader ancl hjs glorp. And her.c's Shirlev \laclaine,s place.,,
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cltita(]\ t() aslalllish Lltc Ba.i as a ltase lor a tl,orjd ga^.crtrrrcDl. Rrrrror.s cir.crrlatcd fc)r.a rritile t.h2tL Strurg liad a hiig-e *,al:housr: nr ( lltnirda lirll ol trorlr desigtrecl ancl rritrtecl crrr.i.Jrcr. rcaril t,,
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voice rnorherlr. ,.lCs srili a seecl.
all rhere, ol tJlc Dtal). S() are dre namcs ofa .Rr, |lp..r.rd l. rrr.rrri.rr, ,,rt. rl|i,r arc .l.t-rl l,,t lLl'll an,l brro, .i. llri. i..rirl /.r r..o, ii i,rJ.rnr....lr_..1,. rrer ofa re1! fitture_that, too,
r\,hat
ollr dmes-Lhe loneliness. tlre secr. ..r- iati.rr .,r..t n one\.t,,,.,,-,,: l::::]::; I ;,ll:'i.: ] ]1, \r li, I l,orJ rlre nrrrrr-al rt\rlrj r. r,.l rlre po..ilrilirr r,.ruruir.rrie. rlro orhe,. rr orher rirncr lrare ri,ir. \r,l ,.,..., ,i,.,lf'.",, 'l.t'ot,l: l;+"t. l. hr 8", , r-rlrr ,. 11r.rnd .l ,i.;,. "^p;;i mcnt. o. a clcler real estate schelre ft!. aging \ierv Aeers?'.\nd
\rili lrappen ivjth thc
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,iia: n!. io ir,in lr,:r ir hrt. llliL :.iurai oi lil!.ilr ihe,:Lut dr,rrl. 'r\t g{) o,-u:,idr arri stalcl sirit br sldc rrr tlrt poirl:. i..u.rg,ucrt. She chanrs iret. Dranrra. en lncic,nr Yccljc t.,it, she erplai,i. tiiai goes ba.k t() the clnrr of civilizariolt. I dor,1 ur.le,..talcl ,r r,.o,.ci, l,r. I krrur, rlrJ ll,rnr,c I,., ,. ,. ,,lie, \ ,r, | t'.11, , .,r,r,,t ror, F.. I .l,i.n,l rlrr lr. rrritr..,.,rrq llanne I.,\ ,, Jr.. .. irerl l,_,ur.< rrrr rart. pJllt,. l,-rr1Jtt,,l tlrc.r.n. li..et.rnu .u f. f ,,,j,1,i fir*
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come here, it,ll be overrLrn \\ith c.!,stal people., Birt Shiriey feels^the Baca's the place fbr hel He. ust olng". tuld h". to
hesi'r' rerulling dre rr.ap. It'ontr \,,rr\.' \l,c.J\.. ll. ll- l: '" l\ ihdl tlte gI r, and h reLrcr. rrrlj . orne hcre rrtd he,,,.ne\.r sort ofmecca. That's \rh\ I,\,e hesiratecl so tung ut out Stri.t.,, i iotJ
he, , cr nt.na'tun .-rr, rcr.,l,l, .rr' .,-1'11.", l, al\.ltd. tot.e. h_rond lr_r , u_nLr,,l nr"r urer ,.'1,, lm Lurlr rhr Bar" /,rd.lre Ilaner. . fhe et^ lr,e. .m l:nq or rr,r , eouiri.r,r. I .Lrn |]Fnt un rcr tolr.
hale a kei role in the future ol mankinrl .. ,.,, lrrlrerc I cr'. I lrrnrr. l,oqerer. .har tL ellinq
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sh- s .,, ro, herirts. de:t r ihing hi-r I F/, r.on lo rhe ru_oage". nr Ndin Sueer. Brrr irra.d(dllt no un" -
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American \{hter Development associates, Alabaina-born Buddv \\hitlock, reminding valley residents he's an environmentalist, rhat he has his home rhere. thar he
wouldn't jeopardize rhe region's ecosystern. He has reassured people that-if llater is primped o t-its limt use !!i]l bc to revitalize the valle\,. Bur the ranchers laJ'n-r.. ,nd ro, al rar J,,r,rcr: remain
fhe\ (lon t I ust him. Thev hare li)rmed a coalition. called (litizens lor San I uis \hllei \\atcr. Lto.ler
Lrnim]lressed.
the leadership of 52-r,car-olcl grain and cattle I_a.rner (lreir llosat '\\'e know thc
lta1r's
ther're applicd to l)Lri in 100 rrrlls. prunp in,o, fronr ?.500 fret tleep. 1{r k;ror rho lc
Iiive veals ago. the L.S. governnlent. noting rhe dwindlir.rg srtppl\ of }\,aier in thc.lnerir:an s(rllh\\,cst. begatr chilhng test \\,eli.s in the \alleY to dctc.niine rhe potcDtial (rf irn aclrrili'r tliat e\pcr-ts had long belier.cd lar benearh rhc desert. ,\lei Led hr thc g()iel11nlrnt s ilcli\,it\. slloIl3 sLaftL-.l io()king into Lhe u:rtcr bcieath thc hrrge traat ol tl)e Bliaii i:ti1nr Rxlr.h. ir'ltel tlrr enginc,-'tilLg lel)0ri!,:tLrrlr j!t l1n(l :he rjza 1)l iltr :liilri1i .i!:. ia!a,ilaal lr;.;,;11,111',. iriltit::.i,:1,.'tr:il 11,ir:ir,.ltlltl r.rn \.{alct I)e.,thltmr:nr ir: t---,rIrir tit.- t,]s()ur'aa fhe] prl_rposr(i ilr tLirliza sonre i)f Lhr iln.la rgr.,Litrrl ir.lt,iI iLn loatjl rltrriopnieiL pr_ojects and to sell a lot ruore ol ii to intelested jlar.lies else \\4rere in the reqion. Re?lctiorr tas sr,ift. flattle ltnchers and grain farmers feareal that valcl plrmped lrorD beneath t]rc Baca wouid inevitablv be replerished lith ilater.from beneath lheir o!\n properties. Thev felt ccltain rheir rvells ivonld go drr'. Ar.rcl people like tlte Siselnores heard rrrmors that Stt.oni planned tcr dam the tealby creeks. Public meetit'rgs $,ere called.
than B.C.'s Okanagal Lake; cornparable i1l size to the Ogallala Aquiler rvhich currentlv noul-ishcs eight lnid!\,estern states. It
contains approximatelv svo billioD ac.e feet (nearl),three quad rillion litres) of rvater. Strong and his par.tners, as the largest landorvners in dre vallel', have fbund Lhemselves personallv sitting atop 120,000,000 acre feet of rfarer, llorrh an esrimated $5,000 an acre loor. It's enoligh to turn a felio\v's head. \{hat began as local suspicion tolrard the spiritual com muniqv has become hostilig ro &e p.oposed drilling of the rvater. If the locals kno\\, anytl'ring abour the Canadian ivho bought the Baca, they kno'lv he has made his nonev deleloping iris countrt,'s natural resources. Sure, he claims to be an environmenralist, thel sa). Sure, he claims to believe in spiritual things. But they can do a little arithmeric themseh,es. Thet .a multiply 120,000,000 times $5,000. Thar cones to $600 Dilllor. Strong has travelled up and doivn the valle1,, as has one ofhis
33
nlenrlte.s didn t lik. rhe i,.lei ol rirr: spir.i[r:il iirsr piace. Bui 5r'otg r\'as the lar.gest iitdi!id, ual in\estor. He'd cajoled thcnr to go along \litit the schclre. Holeler. rvhen i!ord citculated rhat Shirlev Nlaclaine rright rr ore 'lrerr. .o.rre of rhe Chri.ria tLtrdamFnrali.r) ,rr rhL board and the hard-headed, botton line-oriented Belzbers resisted. Belzberg feared that Maclaine could antagonize the locals. The conflicr leached a head last year \!,hen Strong, under pressure fi-om liis board, r emoved 640 hectares for the spiritual communitl frorn the larger-Baca Grant Ranch propert) and handed these Lo Hanne lor her to control. He theD donated his shares in Anierican \{ater-to a Michiganiased bio-energl research foundation and later quit rhe board, relinquishing any future infltencc or,er' the trarer developtrent plans. Despitc the imbroglio .r,ithin American \{arer Development's board, the project continues. The companl,is moving alredd orr i. Sl26-million propo.al r,, drill rhe r,.ll. and con struct a pipeline to serve Denver. The local coalition plans to fight every step along the rvay. The ironv is thar Strong, as a Iongtime spokesman for the water project, is still seen as a target ibr criticism and suspicion. Local people leel he betrayed them and is non trying to salvage things for himself and Hanne. In a poor desert region, you can-so the saving goes* mess with a man's l{ife perhaps, but you don't mess with his water. Strong u,ould rather not talk-nor have me talk-about the recent death threats made against his liiend and former business associate, Buddy \{ihirlock. It is uith this sobering perspective rhat I explore the territory
Tircre ar_e people rfho ar'e narrol-mildcd enoirgh to r.-sorl lo \iolenae." 11 the lo.al people knel\'\.,,har \fas r.e:1lh iloirlg on bchind thc scencs belrr'een Strong ancl his finalcial parrlcrs. inclucling nealth\ \'anaolrler ir!estme1]t llnancier. Sanr BclTberg. the\ n,ou1(l bc crcli ttor. \,ol rie(l|he hct jr: Srrong. as chuirntan of the boar'cl ()f -\mericali 1,\'iiler Dcf.'ii)D .nt. has lilrl e riatirti .)1 .1i;a.qr rcru:nts o|tr.his il]:rir'.19i'!rlalii al tllii 13aa11 Liti])cri-r ir_: :ltr liisi il.,rri r.et-r. I,L, ct.irl other
b,-.u1.1
Den\er. Pcople lie1 NIit1Iric. rislecl ilrenr lle said thc wilLcr wrnrld bc Lrsed at lirsr to benrlit thc vallei. The peoplE her( lrlc aL least 99 peicent opposed t0 thc rrlttcr der'elopurcnt. It s en itl_front it) Lls. lt \rill rier ,.r. t, rh- ,.r ,,. lr . ll ,lr 1,'p r rr, ".
.ournrrrlitr
il
,.lte
lllS,lr
[1
tY ]990
of the utopian dream, trying to weigh the significance of the tial Baca retirees. They have come of dleir ovm accord, unbidoccasional passing pickup truck with a rifle slung in a rack den and unassisted by the Strongs. They have spurned the
across the rear window.
I stop and climb uphill to visit the Haidakhand.i Universal Ashram, a Vedic temple that sits on a
high bluff amid a piion pine forest. It's impossible to overlook the adjacent l4-square-metre solar panel, rlhich heats the stone floors within the ashram. In the future, says Ratn Loti, a priestess of the temple, rhere'll be l]yd.o-elecric porver frour a small turbine in nearb,v Spanish Cr-eek, high-tech toilets, and drip-warer-fed organic gardens. Bnt as of norr,. onh thi ee devotees iive here. She gives me a glossv brochure ttrat tells about ftttttre plans. I
trendiness of Taos, New Mexico, or Arizona's popular psychic centre, Sedona, where thousands arrive daily hop' ing to get their astrological charls read and to find their bliss. Nevertheless, at the Baca these days, psy" chic Darvn Taylor Carlson offers in-depth instruc-
stop at Lhe []arnreiite llonaslerv. nhcre eight Catliolic nronks-qornen artd men. ail lair1v rotlng
1Ta11 tlteil lime in Lotal scchrsion. For $35 -spend a visiror c?rn stav in one of the hermitage s a uight, i0 srnall aclobe bungirL)rvs, joining thr monks iihervishes at
srop at rhe Clrestone Mountain Zen Centcr, rvhere ;r half: rlozen studi:nrs and Buddhist monks sil. 'l he discussion turns to Shirlcl Nlaclalnc. Randy fox, a long-time student of Zcn, ac knorvledges that the actress is a door for niiilions to a more spir itual orld. But, he adds, "The spi tual path takes the Nhole lile. ft s not lonnd rn a weekend." I also stop at some of dre homes of the 100 or so ,r.,ew Agos 1\iro ha\'e in re.ent lears been lt ,vitrg the properties oi the i1'ti-
1ahor.
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journalists that Hanne lears will come To the south, I know, another of rhe Strongs' friends, Hisal'oshi Ota. a 34,vear old architect and the son of a Japanese i,rcoon, lives the life of an American corvbov, running a herd of
1,400 buffalo on a ranch adjacent to the He has decided to lor-sake the pelime1l life of \el, York to join tlie Strongs
Baca.
wrote parls of the Brundtland Report and who in 1992 will try to get the wo'ld s leader.. meerirg in Bra-zil. ro sign just such an agreeme[t, savors the ques.
tions hanging in the
:-
air Wi thE do it? WilL tl,,e nch counties age. to r?tLuce their inpacl an lhe enttronment? WiLt thE agrce to stfte tha eartll?
The Residences at Port Sidne,Y are a linited colleclion ol 29 exceptional r{;rterfronl homes in the beautilul
in their spiritual quest. Belo\t me. benerrh rhe deserl s dtrst: a sea of liesh rvater, hidden. untappeil, unfathomable. l)rrarns:rnd lealilv. drearns ancl reali
tr. I think. lluL Nhere docs ihe tl llth lie? I rl''ait ibr an arts*er. e portcnl, a loice. I kno,,r IIanlc rvould hear sorrcthilg. But nottri]ig. .llrst the iai tL-'st rvhisper oi rvincl irr thc irott{rllr,,()ods along rhe drr
Strong resumes his storr. "The groLlp's conclusion is 'no . Thc rich corrntrics won't do iL. Thcv rton'r change. So. in orcier to sare thc planel. thc group decirles; isn't the orzh hope r,,r rl,e patrlt rlr.'r rl,. ilL.|,,,, i,/,,I' ''
:iiz iwr'. , 1..' i , r,r r..Pu'r'r "llal^,,aboLil:' bilii\ to i).ing that "This ilr.rup of rtolltl iearlels. ' Itr:
,i"n' ltlr
becl of f-ot(rnwood (lleck far belo* lr er tlrF ':n,^ lrn, ' i||^ng. !c lr.rl,Ol , at.)d, ,-d.,. , nm,. I'i1' . - \J\ "r,, .. Oztntandias, hil1g of kin!\: Look on m\
lIisltl"i, lnd dtst)ai{' I pick at the peeling p:rinr or tlle zisslirat. I \\'onder lic-,l long it ilill take lor tl-re r.)ots ol'rhe ','cru to \.tilr" l, t,,r., r . lt .r rr,. crecks. \\rhv shortid ihc latcsl drearD to
iLnrhs, "sc
aonr.inues. "foLtrt a -.ecLeL soaiet! io bring aboLlt au cconorrtic coll:rpse. It's Febr.l arr,. I'hev re a1l at Dalos. These arcn t Lef r or isls. Thet re ;L'orLrL lea,fur.s. Tl!e\ ha\e positioned themsel\'.s in the
rt,r;rld s
cornnodi ' and stock markets. fhe-v're "-nglneered. using their access to stock exahangcs irnd coniputers and golcL supplies, a pirnic. fhen. thcr pre1en
L
Priced from 3190.000. these 140015i0 square Ioot homes oifer a wood'burning fireplace. vista kitchen with custo!n cabinetry. in-suite Iaundri,: storage, and
the \rorld
two lullbaths Occupanc], Jttly 199u. Sales Centre: 9820 SeaPort Place
be clreamt here larc art! hetter than those oi ihe fetirtrrleltl aornmLlllitl 5
clelelopels ind lhe gol.l nlirlers tuld th indian hunlcl_! an(l erarr lhe rir'tlrttl li'
ing. Theljam ihe gears. Ther hlre lnrraen:rries rr,l,o hold Lhe resl of dle
lht
t":
Sirotrg,
lorld ieirclcrs .lt Dalos as hostages. The r,.:.1... I ./.. ll,Fri " ,..r.rfi-. .. t ,..,.. , 1,. .rrsl,, r. ,i, ., . iril lilgri s ii! ll hc lrere fliciitg, e
lrigiaetlc blltl oul
r_alr'aci11g
\\e
Liiz\ U Ratlch anci turn solllh on High*ar'17. The desert slides b).
pass the
is
not
a/r'r
Srrong telis rne hc has often wisheci he could wlite. He has a novel he'c1 like to do. lt's sotnething he has lleerl thinking aboLrt lor a decade. k lvould be a cautionar) tale about the future.
Each vear, he explains as background
sar
inq
ro the telling of rhe no\'el's pjot, tl,e \\orld ELorlonr:c fnlttrr r or'rene. in
Davos, Switzerland. Over a thousand t l'O. prillre rriri\1, r.. lllldn.e minisler( a rd leddrng ar:denrirr ta'lr, r in Fcblu?lr) to altend lueetings and sct ecc nomic aqendas for the year ahead. With this as a setting, he then says: '\{hat if a small group of these rvorld lcaders were ro corclude drat thc p.incipal risk to the earth corres fi'om the actiolls of the Iicll (olrntrie\: .\n.l 'f lrre \or1d is to srlr\ivr, rlro.e i, lr iollnrne. \'ould hnte to .ign an agreenent reducing their impact on the environment. Will thev do it? ' And Strong, dril,ing as I take notes, looks at me. Then his eyes go back to Highwa,v 17. The man rvho founded the United Narions Enrironrtotlt Pi.,errm and rho
!, i "
\then lhc
tr trLlt
and Llanne Strong lear thc tvor-ld Niil come to this. No secret societies. No hostage-takings at Davos. Ilut it rvill come
to the same conclusion: the global econorny, sapped bv cledit and debt loads ancl cnvirorunental disasters, till sinpil come
unstucl. And
nothing-[ot
even the
inspiration of the Baca-can save hurllankjncl lrorn itself. The,v see the struggles and Irtoblenrs nt rlrr B.r,a a. r'lletrion:
SIDNEY
; :-.'t.
.:.
: : "
4l
lYlSIril IY
1990