growing up, ruth miller\u2019s parents taught her that injustice is the product of choices some people make for others. it wasn\u2019t long before she figured out they weren\u2019t speaking hypothetically.<\/p>\n
as a dena\u2019ina athabascan, ruth stood on the ashes of centuries worth of decisions made for, not by, her people: the visitors who had pockmarked her tribe\u2019s ground and polluted their waters; the visitors who had come and gone on their boats and airplanes; the visitors who had, she soon noticed, never really left. melting permafrost. vanishing caribou herds. oil rigs sprouting faster than the beets and broccoli. the impact of decisions was palpable\u2014all she had to do was take a look around.<\/p>\n
ruth grew up in anchorage, the de facto capital of alaska, nestled 180 miles into the cook inlet (tikahtnu<\/em> in dena\u2019ina), a small body of water shaped like a knobby finger stemming from the susitna, matanuska, and kenai rivers and spilling off into the gulf of alaska. <\/p>\n
the cook inlet basin is alaska\u2019s oldest gas and oil basin. during its heyday in the \u201870s, production topped 230,000 barrels per day, but by the early \u201890s, operations had all but sputtered out, and by 1996, chevron corp. and marathon oil, the two big players in the region, ceased all activity. a year later, ruth was born to two indigenous rights lawyers. one could say she had it lucky.<\/p>\n
\u201cgrowing up i think i had the safety of innocence in that i saw our state blooming and thriving,\u201d ruth said, now 22. \u201ci knew what fresh wild salmon tasted like, what fresh moose meat tasted like. you know, we had access to our subsistence foods and our lifestyles.\u201d<\/p>\n
but every now and then, ruth would catch glimpses of industrialization. in 2009, cook region inlet, inc., started the construction of 11 wind turbines on fire island, a small uninhabited island near the head of cook inlet. in 2012, the turbines began feeding into the anchorage electrical grid. still, these projects could hardly deserve the name \u201cindustrialization\u201d and anchorage\u2014a city that in 2000 measured 250,000 people and to this day barely cuts 300,000\u2014was a far cry from your typical metropolis.<\/p>\n
and yet, the city has long been hailed alaska\u2019s \u201cbiggest native village,\u201d home to alaskan native communities from across the state, including yup\u2019iks, inupiats, alaskan athabascans, tlingit-haidas, aleuts, and tsimshians. <\/p>\n
\u201cwe joked that either all of us are cousins or all of us have like 100 mutual facebook friends,\u201d said ruth, who grew up immersed in this indigenous diversity, an experience that would later inform her advocacy work on behalf of these populations.<\/p>\n
\u201ci was gifted knowledge and wisdom and gifted relationships with people from all across the state,\u201d she said. \u201cand the stories they chose to give me are ones that i have to carry with care in my advocacy work while maintaining, you know, specificity and making sure that i’m not speaking stories that aren’t mine to tell.\u201d<\/p>\n