85-Year-Old Says He is Still in Good Health and Spirits and Will Continue to Fast

85-year-old Roland Micklem is still fasting at the West Virginia Capitol Building. He began his fast ten days ago to draw attention to the effects of climate change, and he says he will continue to go without food. Since July 7th, Micklem has eaten no food and has consumed only water, juice and coffee.

“My health is excellent. I am very much encouraged and motivated by the reception I’ve been receiving by the people we’ve run across. Everyone has been supportive and cooperative,” says Micklem.

“Our support person Cat is providing us with a variety of juices. Grape, apple, and some vegetable juices. And that is the closest thing to food that we are taking.”

A retired science teacher and environmental activist, Micklem is fasting to express what he calls his grief for the loss of creation as a result of mountaintop removal mining.

“It’s not a protest, it’s not a hunger strike. It’s a witness, a witness that I’m making by being there every day and not eating. The campaign needs love and respect for one’s advisories, as well as one’s friends.”

In the past, Micklem has fasted for as long as thirteen days, but he says he plans to go on longer than that this time. Micklem says two trained medics, named Natalie and Noah, have been checking on his health. Aside from a little dehydration, he says they have found no indications that he is experiencing and serious side effects due to the fast.

85-Year-Old Veteran and Environmental Activist Begins Extended Fast

Inside the West Virginia Capitol Building, Roland Micklem sits on a marble bench, holding in one hand a handmade wooden cane. In his other hand is a small poster, a kind of manifesto, which he wrote to explain his reasons for going on an extended fast, without consuming any food except water, coffee and juice.

Micklem hopes that his quiet campaign will in some way inspire more awareness for the various causes of climate change, which he says include mountain top removal mining. Activists Vincent Eirene and Mike Roselle are joining the 85-year-old army veteran in this fast.

Micklem grew up in Virginia in the 1930s. Over the years he’s watched as some of his favorite animals and birds have slowly disappeared from the landscape. He remembers first noticing these changes in the 1950s, and this is why he become an environmental activist.

But Micklem, an environmental writer and a retired science teacher, is quick to point out that the type of activism he believes in is non-violent, civil disobedience.

Credit Roxy Todd
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“It has to be conducted by people who have love in their hearts and absolutely no animosity toward the people who would oppose them,” he said.

Micklem admits that his fast alone cannot help inspire the type of environmental change he would really like to see. He isn’t asking for anything except the chance to express his opinion through this fast.

“I don’t like to call it ‘protest’. But it is a witness and an expression of my genuine grief for the loss of creation. I’m quite willing to fast here until I can’t do it anymore…or until I die,” he explained.

Volunteer Shenna Fortner has also been assisting the activists during the first days of the fast. She brought her juicing machine to make them fresh juice.

At the end of each day as the Capitol Building closes, Fortner drives the three activists back to a hotel in Downtown Charleston, where they’ll rest until morning when their fast will continue indefinitely. On Tuesday night, Micklem joined about 200 others at a community meeting to rally against a proposed mining operation near the Kanawha State Forest.

Credit Roxy Todd
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Activists Vincent Eirene and Mike Roselle are joining Micklem in the fast.

WVU hosts peace activist Kathy Kelly

Kathy Kelly is an a peace activist, a pacifist, and an author. She’s been nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize three times. Her life’s work has been traveling to war zones around the world to be a voice for people who are endangered and trapped by the political games of governments battling over economic bones. She’s visiting Morgantown this week talking with students from West Virginia University, members of the media, and community members.

    

Path of the Pacifist

Kathy Kelly grew up on the southwest side of Chicago. She says she gleaned a lot about poverty from the members of her community who embraced it:

“One thing about the nuns was that they never showed the slightest interest in acquiring personal wealth. And we were pretty sure that among their numbers there were people who were selflessly helping people in other parts of the world who were much needier than we were. So those were good guidelines.”

Kelly says she was especially affected growing up by what she came to learn about German concentration camps of World War II. She resolved at a young age not to be complacent. That set her on the path of the pacifist.

  Since then, she’s toured many war-torn zones of the world, protesting.

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Kelly was in Baghdad during the United State’s initial invasion into Iraq in 2003. She says she had an experience there that changed her:

“The bombs were relentless. If you can imagine mother’s faces and children’s faces with these ear splitting blasts, and sickening thuds, and gut-wrenching explosions. And I didn’t have any medical skills to bring to this situation at all.But we did have living in our peace team living in a small family-owned hotel—just a five-story hotel—a medical doctor, April Hurly.”

Kelly worked with Hurly and was able to get her back and forth to a hospital. It was there where Kelly encountered a woman who’d lost nearly her entire family when a bomb hit their family home.

“She just quivered and wept and I put an arm around her. Then she spoke a little bit of English. She was asking, ‘How I tell him?’ ‘What I say?’ She was trying to figure out what she would tell her nephew that not only had he just lost both of his arms—the surgeon had to cut them both off at the shoulder—but she was now his only surviving relative,” Kelly recounts. “And apparently when he woke up he asked, ‘Will I always be this way?’” “The impact of that question, ‘Will I always be this way?’ just sent me into something like fury and grief that I thought I’d never get out of it. So I didn’t want to leave my room, I didn’t leave my room, I just pounded pillows.” “When I did come out,” Kelly continues, “I was going down the staircase and there was one man who had stayed in the hotel as a chef—a big roly-poly, almost a cross between a polar bear and a teddy bear. He was such a dear man. And he saw me and he started to cry.” “He said, ‘I was so worried about you, I knew there was something wrong,’ and, ‘I’m so glad to see you.’ And I know it’s not normal for a woman and a man to embrace each other on a staircase in that culture but we just shared a tearful embrace.” “That loving kindness, that care, stays with me in many ways.”

Kelly says these moments of human kindness amidst great tragedy and grief ground her.

“I’ve been so fortunate to be surrounded by some of the finest people in the world,” Kelly says. “It seems like just about wherever I’ve landed whether it’s been in a federal prison or in a war zone coming from the country that’s dropping the bombs, (if you can imagine). I’ve still been surrounded by people that you so easily fall in love with. You can’t imagine.”

Pacifist Agenda

Kelly’s agenda is to end war. She works to combat fatalistic attitudes and educate individuals and communities about the possibility of a reality that doesn’t require bloodshed. Kelly believes one important key to a peaceful future is de-funding the military, but she’s equally passionate about derailing other trains, as well.

“We’ve got to stop the pillage, the pollution of our ground, our air, our water, and the depletion of our resources,” Kelly says. “It’s almost as if, when you step back and think of it, you know the train is going over the abyss. And by some irrational Dominance it’s like we’re all on the observation deck looking out and saying, ‘Oh yeah we know we’re going over the abyss, but the view is great! Don’t stop the train!’”

“We have to stop that train,” she concludes.

When it comes to guiding human interaction, Kelly preaches the Golden Rule. “Do unto others…” she says. When deliberating about the future, she says there’s a ready-access moral compass that’s tried and true:

“I think we have to stay with what we know. We know we love our children. We know we want the children to survive. And then [we need to] really think about what distracts us from being able to reasonably and in an adult way fashion a better world for the children; and also, how we might be manipulated into thinking that by putting everything into the baskets of ‘sports’ and ‘entertainment,’ we might somehow give our children a better world.”

Kathy Kelly is giving a lecture tonight at WVU entitled “Courage for Peace, Not for War.” 

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