LETTERS
To the editor: Important issues do not always cease to exist when mass
entertainment media eventually give them less or no attention. The destruction
of the Brazilian rain forests by multinational corporations and others
is such an issue. Multinational Monitor has admirably covered key aspects
of this subject in the recent past. Please accept the following poem of
mine just as a reminder that the horrendous ruination of these precious
lands continues. The Forests of Brazil The forests of Brazil have harnessed
Time, Through seasons in their millions come and gone And bounty prime.
These live to form the world's pure waters, drawn Through filters come
of steady rains. Their rarities of beast and plant May give humane research
essential gains Where hope is scant. The thousand thousand species of these
lands Survived in symbiotic damp and wild With primal bands. What now of
trees ablaze and streams defiled; Of regal jaguar, tapir, boar; Mahogony
and red macaw; Of sylvan innocents at death's own door; Of Nature's law?
They come in westward floods of needy souls, Traversing, biking, driving:
mules and loads Of sacks and bowls. They disappear down ruddy scrapes of
roads. The boomtown, sluice, and parcelled wood Bring would-be miners,
planters, hands All there to make their mark where Eden stood, But Babel
stands. Deforestation by the slash and burn Ensures that all the varied
good that was Won't soon return. It seems that man is only as it does Within
a newly lawless clime: Some kill for trespass, kill for gold. When few
police in vastness miss its crime, It takes a hold. The wrong was not in
widening frontiers, But in a chronic failure here to lead The pioneers.
The hopes are that as ravages proceed, Reserve grounds grow with full patrol,
And that despite persuasion's arts, Should it be clear that we're to lose
the whole, We save all parts. In leafy canopies, in faunal cries, In green
Para, Rondonia, Acre, now, A wonder dies. Its ancient soils soon prove
no good to plow. We must not reap with wanton will And lose at once what
eons bore. We must not lose the forests of Brazil, To reap no more! -Kevin
Goldbarth Tallahassee, Florida