Mark Dubois

A new short film tells the remarkable story of the man who risked his life to save a river he loved. One of International Rivers’ founder and river guardian extraordinaire: Mark Dubois.

Would you risk your life to save a river? This man did.

In 1979, Mark Dubois chained himself to a rock behind New Melones Dam in the USA’s Stanislaus River Canyon and threw away the key.

This was no empty gesture: if the Army Corps of Engineers continued to fill the reservoir, Mark would drown.

42 years later, Mark’s story has been told in a short film released for Earth Day 2021. It’s hoped The Voice of a River, will remind everyone that one person’s actions can make lasting positive change.

Video created by Citrix Systems and My Green Pod, and produced by Carlos Gonzalez

“With humanity amidst the greatest transformation of our evolution, accelerating our basic operating system’s shift to love, from fear, is our greatest challenge, and a tremendous opportunity.” –Mark Dubois

Local to national

For a dozen years, Mark had connected to the life of the Stanislaus River and engaged in politics to change what he saw as ‘outdated ideas of development’. Each campaign was unsuccessful.

When Mark chained himself to a Stanislaus River canyon, it was a desperate act of protective love for a threatened river to which he felt deeply connected. His actions forced a pause, but the reservoir was ultimately filled.

In a different form: he hit the headlines and brought nationwide attention to the threats to our rivers, plus broader issues around river and water conservation. The growing movement to protect rivers brought a halt to major dam building in the United States.

Going global

Mark’s deep sense of connection to one river in his youth rippled out to a love for all rivers; co-founding Friends of the River in 1974 and International Rivers Network in 1984.

Mark extended his actions and impact further when he and Teresa McGlashan acted as international coordinators for Earth Day in 1990 – the year Earth Day went global. That year, an estimated 200 million people in 143 countries actively participated in the event. Mark and his colleagues received the 1990 Beyond War Award for organising ‘the largest peace event in history.’

The theme for this year’s Earth Day is Restore Our Earth™. If every individual engaged in one small act of restoration – whether planting a tree or throwing a seed bomb – the impact would be huge.

In 2015, to celebrate International Rivers’ 30th anniversary, we devoted a series to the people who have shaped, and are still shaping, river movements around the world. Board member Patrick McCully interviewed Mark, I’m Here to Speak for Life: River Guardian Mark Dubois.