Remembering the Sago Miners |
*SINNER'S PRAYER* At some point or another they just gave up. They had found a sledgehammer and they traded it back and forth. Just like John Henry driving spikes into tack they stood on the other side of the earth whaling shots into the coal rib. The idea was to make a noise. Hopefully the rescue teams could hear a reverberation and pinpoint their location. The man with the hammer couldn't wear an air tank. The straps would pin his shoulders back to far. The others would share the oxygen in that man's machine. But eventually they would hear the dull brassy "ping" that those tanks make just before the supply is drained. They put the hammer down then and they looked around at one another. Twelve men who had just decided to die. Ironically, the people who die in coal mines are not the "humble American worker" you tend to hear about. At least not in the communities where they live. For the rural poor, mining jobs are synonymous with upper middle class respectability. Of course in central Appalachia "upper middle class" means something very different than it does here. It means your car runs most of the year or that your house is reasonably free of ants. Its hard to get a job mining these days. You don't open the newspaper to the classified section and expect to see a "help wanted" listing. Its more like an exclusive club that only opens the books occasionally. My cousin got hired on because he'd been a terrific basketball player in high school. A childhood friend got lucky because his dad used to drink with the mayor. You've got to have connections. Not just anybody gets to do this kind of thing. They sat in a circle while the gas started to rise. You aren't supposed to smell methane but it turns out that you can, at least when there's this much of it. The man named Jackie Weaver led them in a "sinner's prayer." "/Oh god I know I am a sinner. I know I have sinned O lord./ / I know that I deserve the consequences of my sin. I accept that/ /Jesus Christ is my Lord. I know he is my savior. Amen."/ They found some tarp and wrote letters back to their family. Some wrote in pen. Some wrote with the coal. They started to die then. One man who'd been sitting on a wheelbarrow just keeled over like he'd been pushed. The others shut their eyes and tried not to breathe. The "consequences of their sin" was everywhere now. As strong and inevitable as sunshine pushing past clouds. The way I heard it, Little Red Riding Hood was saved by a coal miner. I remember being seven or eight and attending the UMW strikes out in Harlan and Letcher county. A few of these routinely ended in gunfights but that was no big deal. My heroes growing up were the roving pickets. The men who blew up scab workers by smuggling dynamite in mason jars of pickled bologna. For my family, there was no higher vocation than a miner. Not a soldier, not a firefighter, not a preacher. Coal miners turned the lights on, I was reminded only about six times a day. Of course when I became working age I did the only natural thing: I ran three thousand miles away and never again spoke to my family. This winter when I watched those thirteen men die on television along with the rest of the country, I felt an immobilizing pain. A long time ago I heard someone say that "the jury is in and you are the verdict." I was found guilty and not guilty enough. The Seattle Times ran a picture a few weeks ago. It was a picture of the tarp that those men had written on just before they asphixiated. One of them wrote the words "it wasn't bad, I just went to sleep." Imagine that. Dying inside a mountain, a testament to a life and culture that society has forgotten. The rescue teams that you were promised never showed. The country you built grew up and never came back. And you aren't angry. Instead, the only thing you want is to make sure that your family knows you didn't die in pain. You can't stand the thought of them thinking that you suffered. There was another picture in the paper as well. A sad solitary shot of the hammer those men had found. The nine pound hammer that was strong enough to kill John Henry hadn't been able to save those Sago miners. No one ever heard the sounds that they made. Maybe they hadn't been been loud enough. Maybe they couldn't be. Of course John Henry died trying to build a railroad with his bare hands. He committed suicide with that sledge but it was a suicide that proved his life. Perhaps, the real sin is to not matter. To submit to the acceptable tragedy. To live your life only as a series of passing days and not as a statement, a testimony to your origins and hopes. If this is us, then in the end we are endless headstones, anonymous under the stone weight of our own name. Last winter those men swung that hammer hoping, someone, anyone, on the other side of that mountain could hear their voice. Just like John Henry, they were trying to show the world that they were there. |