I wondered, while reading and thinking about these North American Indigenous children’s books regarding water, about Indigenous peoples around the world and their relationships with water. Progress may have been made in 2018, but many Indigenous Peoples are tired of the false promises, racism, and discrimination that led to the denial of their human right to water. Unfortunately, the Tribe’s attempts to use the Clean Water Act and the National Historic Preservation Act in its claims to defend the water were dismissed by a judge in December ruling in favor of the Canadian mining company in violation of Indigenous rights. A new video series aims to promote understanding of Indigenous water issues and perspectives in the Northern Territory (NT). Earth Story 2014 - Writing Winner. Take a look and leave your own suggestions. We encourage thoughtful dialogue around international literature so that children can reflect on their own cultural experience and connect to the experience of others across the globe. In August the world mourned for a mother’s loss of her child. In 2018 we were awakened to the insatiable global thirst for the minerals beneath Mother Earth that is threatening the water. Key Issues for Indigenous peoples Indigenous peoples have suffered as a consequence of non-Indigenous priorities in water resources in Australia. This is the core reasoning behind a call to action issued by the Lakota People’s Law Project to boycott Nestlé and stand against ecocide. Ultimately, the fish do not acknowledge political boundaries and Indigenous Peoples are exercising rights that have existed since time immemorial and are treaty protected. CALL FOR RESEARCH PARTNERS from Indigenous Nations, Organizations, and Leaders for Great Lakes Indig. Discover how the water got to the plains here. Thus 2018 was a year of continued large dam proliferation at the expense of Indigenous Peoples’ lands and waters. Your email address will not be published. I’ve never formally introduced myself to a canoe before. Throughout the year Tribal Nations have advocated for dam removals to allow for river restoration and the return of sacred first foods. Despite these victories, it is harrowing that settler nations spend millions of dollars in litigation to try to escape their original promises made in the treaties with Indigenous Nations. On the other side of the Canadian coast at the University of British Columbia there is the Decolonizing Water Project, an Indigenous-led program for co-research on water that is also working to bridge the gap for cost-effective water monitoring tools for Indigenous Nations. On a day when the country reflects upon the past, Globe Books offers an exciting glimpse into the future, with new poems and stories from some of the most dynamic emerging Indigenous … Indigenous artists have memorialized mother and calf in a wide array of mediums including at the SWAIA Indian Market Fashion Show as a ribbon skirt, the physical embodiment of female connection to Mother Earth as it sweeps the ground. 0. These resources seem particularly helpful in reading for change and developing a stance of anti-racism. Indigenous declarations for the protection of water and land have been increasing in recent years. Or, for that matter, to … WOW is committed to creating an international network of people who share the vision of bringing books and children together, thereby opening windows on the world. In the exercise of their fishing rights the Peskotomuhkati Band are using the Desautel ruling (allowing an Indigenous man with U.S. citizenship to hunt in Canada) to advocate for the rights of all Passamaquoddy to fish in their ancestral waters. His stories conjure bustling seaside villages as he escorts us through territory where his ancestors thrived as long as 4,500 years ago. Take a look and leave your own suggestions. On the Canada-US border the Makwa and Spirit of the Buffalo camps were set up in opposition to Enbridge’s proposed Line 3 pipeline. The whack-a-mole metaphor was especially pertinent in 2017 when President Trump signed a Presidential Memorandum authorizing the construction of the previously denied Keystone XL pipeline and Dakota Access Pipeline. from Indigenous Nations, Organizations, and Leaders for Great Lakes Indig, {"items":["5fda5a4ae440cc001874a9db","5fda5a4ae440cc001874a9da","5fda5a4ae440cc001874a9d9"],"styles":{"galleryType":"Columns","groupSize":1,"showArrows":true,"cubeImages":true,"cubeType":"max","cubeRatio":1.7777777777777777,"isVertical":true,"gallerySize":30,"collageAmount":0,"collageDensity":0,"groupTypes":"1","oneRow":false,"imageMargin":5,"galleryMargin":0,"scatter":0,"rotatingScatter":"","chooseBestGroup":true,"smartCrop":false,"hasThumbnails":false,"enableScroll":true,"isGrid":true,"isSlider":false,"isColumns":false,"isSlideshow":false,"cropOnlyFill":false,"fixedColumns":0,"enableInfiniteScroll":true,"isRTL":false,"minItemSize":50,"rotatingGroupTypes":"","rotatingCropRatios":"","columnWidths":"","gallerySliderImageRatio":1.7777777777777777,"numberOfImagesPerRow":3,"numberOfImagesPerCol":1,"groupsPerStrip":0,"borderRadius":0,"boxShadow":0,"gridStyle":0,"mobilePanorama":false,"placeGroupsLtr":true,"viewMode":"preview","thumbnailSpacings":4,"galleryThumbnailsAlignment":"bottom","isMasonry":false,"isAutoSlideshow":false,"slideshowLoop":false,"autoSlideshowInterval":4,"bottomInfoHeight":0,"titlePlacement":["SHOW_ON_THE_RIGHT","SHOW_BELOW"],"galleryTextAlign":"center","scrollSnap":false,"itemClick":"nothing","fullscreen":true,"videoPlay":"hover","scrollAnimation":"NO_EFFECT","slideAnimation":"SCROLL","scrollDirection":0,"scrollDuration":400,"overlayAnimation":"FADE_IN","arrowsPosition":0,"arrowsSize":23,"watermarkOpacity":40,"watermarkSize":40,"useWatermark":true,"watermarkDock":{"top":"auto","left":"auto","right":0,"bottom":0,"transform":"translate3d(0,0,0)"},"loadMoreAmount":"all","defaultShowInfoExpand":1,"allowLinkExpand":true,"expandInfoPosition":0,"allowFullscreenExpand":true,"fullscreenLoop":false,"galleryAlignExpand":"left","addToCartBorderWidth":1,"addToCartButtonText":"","slideshowInfoSize":200,"playButtonForAutoSlideShow":false,"allowSlideshowCounter":false,"hoveringBehaviour":"NEVER_SHOW","thumbnailSize":120,"magicLayoutSeed":1,"imageHoverAnimation":"NO_EFFECT","imagePlacementAnimation":"NO_EFFECT","calculateTextBoxWidthMode":"PERCENT","textBoxHeight":26,"textBoxWidth":200,"textBoxWidthPercent":65,"textImageSpace":10,"textBoxBorderRadius":0,"textBoxBorderWidth":0,"loadMoreButtonText":"","loadMoreButtonBorderWidth":1,"loadMoreButtonBorderRadius":0,"imageInfoType":"ATTACHED_BACKGROUND","itemBorderWidth":0,"itemBorderRadius":0,"itemEnableShadow":false,"itemShadowBlur":20,"itemShadowDirection":135,"itemShadowSize":10,"imageLoadingMode":"BLUR","expandAnimation":"NO_EFFECT","imageQuality":90,"usmToggle":false,"usm_a":0,"usm_r":0,"usm_t":0,"videoSound":false,"videoSpeed":"1","videoLoop":true,"jsonStyleParams":"","gallerySizeType":"px","gallerySizePx":1000,"allowTitle":true,"allowContextMenu":true,"textsHorizontalPadding":-30,"itemBorderColor":{"themeName":"color_12","value":"rgba(136,178,219,0)"},"showVideoPlayButton":true,"galleryLayout":2,"calculateTextBoxHeightMode":"MANUAL","targetItemSize":1000,"selectedLayout":"2|bottom|1|max|true|0|true","layoutsVersion":2,"selectedLayoutV2":2,"isSlideshowFont":true,"externalInfoHeight":26,"externalInfoWidth":0.65},"container":{"width":300,"galleryWidth":305,"galleryHeight":0,"scrollBase":0,"height":null}}, The water connects us all. The only available water in a place like this lies in 100-year-old holes in the ground, and the women have no choice but to hoist it out by rope, one bucket a time. However, the difficulty that also arose was around implementation. In this book, Nibi is thirsty but cannot find any drinking water. The Indigenous term means “let’s go then” and perhaps it was a form of resistance activism to highlight the deplorable water conditions of many First Nations while other communities in Canada live without fear of what comes out of their taps. Her great aunt, Josephine Mandamin, was known as The Water Walker, as she walked around the entire perimeter of the Great Lakes in an effort to bring awareness to the importance of protecting the water. In particular, Indigenous women share a sacred connection to the spirit of water through their role as child bearers, … The Grand River — named O:se Kenhionhata:tie (“Willow River”) in the Kanien’kéha:ka (Mohawk) language — is Southern Ontario’s largest and most populated watershed. However, the Asubpeeschoseewagong Anishinabek did not issue the only Indigenous Declaration this year. In British Columbia 17-year-old Ta'kaiya Blaney (Tla'Amin First Nation) drew inspiration from the youth-led movement ‘March for our Lives’ by Parkland shooting survivors to organize a student walkout in opposition to Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain pipeline. Indigenous communities have different values and visions towards water (than public institutions), and our work is contributing to enhance indigenous knowledge and values related to water into public policies. Since May, Tribes and First Nations have repeatedly stated they are being excluded from the treaty renegotiation process. For the Indigenous people in Canada, there is a reciprocal and unique relationship with water. dreaming, visioning and creating. Such stories are deeply based in Nature and are rich with the symbolism of seasons, weather, plants, animals, earth, water, fire, sky, and the heavenly bodies. For this project, an interdisciplinary team of scientists are working to co-develop sensors and other water quality management tools that will allow Six Nations of the Grand River and Lubicon Lake First Nation to monitor drinking water quality. Indigenous knowledge systems enhance the diversity of the sciences, but mobilization for our collective benefit is strengthened by the allies who heed our calls for collaboration. This year a United Nations report found that the New Zealand government frequently ignores the Treaty of Waitangi Tribunal recommendations and has not meaningfully engaged Māori leaders for the protection of their water rights. February 5, 2020 ... Editor’s note: This story is the result of an independently produced collaboration with the Indigenous Tourism Association of Canada. The groundwater extraction activities of Nestlé on traditional Six Nations territory are especially disturbing given the lack of access to safe drinking water on the Six Nations reserve. Water Babies are very important in this story of a part Native American youth with heritage in the Ottawa and Chippewa. stretches back; i, we, us-have always been in relation to. Indigenous Arts & Stories - Earth Story Indigenous Arts & Stories. The Middle River community of Tl'azt'en First Nation was among those reserves who had a drinking water advisory lifted this year after 14 years of their water being unsafe to drink. Indigenous water protectors were also active in 2018 in Louisiana defending against the Bayou Bridge pipeline (BBP) that would connect to the Dakota Access pipeline transporting Energy Transfer Partners’ crude oil. Ten year old Aslan Tudor, a citizen of the Lipan Apache tribe of Texas, wrote a book with his mother, Kelly Tudor, to tell the story of his experience as a water protector at the Oceti Sakowin Camp on Standing Rock Sioux land. Indigenous communities around the globe have always known that protecting and repairing water is essential for our survival. Scholars are working to expand urban studies to reframe our understandings of urban space as Indigenous space. The stories of Indigenous water science prevailing in 2018 continued when the, In 2018, the world received the message that it is time to “Warrior Up” from teenage Anishinaabekwe Autumn Peltier as she. Indigenous maps, language boundaries, Dreaming stories and ceremonial places are frequently based on or oriented towards water. The world rattled at the start of 2018 with fears that Cape Town, South Africa would become the first major city to run out of water. Autumn wanted to continue the legacy of her great aunt who passed away this last February. 2020 Lists of Global Children’s and YA Literature In 2018, Asubpeeschoseewagong Anishinabek (Grassy Narrows First Nation) declared its territory to be an “Indigenous Sovereignty and Protected Area”. . This year underscored the extreme water insecurities facing Indigenous Peoples globally from water system contamination due to natural disasters, pipeline leaks, fecal material, algae, and dilapidated infrastructure. 2018 began with Menominee Tribe suing the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers for failure to review permits for the Back Forty Mine, an open-pit sulfide mine along the Menominee River proposed by Canadian mining company Aquila Resources. WOW’s Executive Board put together a special WOW Currents post around epidemics and pandemics. Indigenous Nations in the basin have used the Murray-Lower Darling Rivers Indigenous Nations (MLDRIN) and Northern Basin Aboriginal Nations Group (NBAN) to respond to mismanagement in the basin by advocating for Indigenous water rights and securing cultural flows for water protection. In 2018 good news for Indigenous science also emerged out of Aotearoa where the Cawthron Institute published findings that river health should include kaupapa Māori approaches for water management. At the end of July, Tahlequah gave birth to a calf near Victoria, British Columbia but shortly thereafter the newborn calf died, and in what many saw as the ultimate act of mourning, Tahlequah carried her deceased child on “her forehead for an unprecedented 17 days and roughly 1,000 miles.” It is unclear why J35 was named Tahlequah, but the weight of its origin is not forgotten. for 2019 Indigenous water stories @TribalWater. This year an Indigenous author, Joanne Robertson (Anishinaabe), was also recognized for her water work; specifically her book The Water Walker (Second Story Press) won an Indigenous Literature Award. There will undoubtedly be more litigation and water rights settlements of Indigenous claims to groundwater in the years to come. New Winter 2020: WOW Stories, Global Literacy Communities: Building Bridges of Understanding across Cultures. If 2018 showed us anything it was a reclamation of Indigenous power and that the future of water security is very much female. International Collection of Children's and Adolescent Literature. When the people woke up, there was no water for them. Nguthungulli, the Creator rests in the ocean - This Place A group of fifth and sixth graders in Canada are now calling themselves Junior Water Protectors, and working to inspire other kids to take up the same activism. This presents a challenge for many non-Indigenous governments, scientists and practitioners who are increasingly seeing water policy mandates for the inclusion of Indigenous Knowledge Systems (sometimes termed traditional ecological knowledge) but receive little to no guidance on how to authentically value Indigenous science and build decision-making partnerships with Indigenous Nations. However, there were also amazing victory stories in 2018. Their findings are based on a recent ruling from the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirming that the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians has a reserved right to groundwater. Hydropower has been “greenwashed” and marketed to the public as an answer to the global climate crisis, but many are unaware of the common denominator of Indigenous rights violations. In April Maori youth leaders visited the United Nations and spoke out against Chinese water bottling company, Nongfu Spring, who want to extract hundreds of millions of liters of water from traditional Indigenous territories. Without clean, healthy water, the salmon can not exist and survive. In November, Six Nations youth marched for the protection of the aquifer, which they claim Nestlé has been stealing water from as they extract without Six Nations consent. The mine would occupy and violate 1836 treaty territory where there are burial grounds, sacred sites, and sites of cultural importance. Follow Kelsey on Twitter @KelseyTLeonard. However, what was missing from much of the conversation on urban water insecurity in 2018 was the potential impact water shortages might have on Indigenous Peoples. But fear not, because 2018 gifted us with Indigenous-led water science research programs from around the world that hopefully will inspire our shared sustainable path forward. We hope that Indigenous rights are respected and that UNDRIP is implemented. But while the government presented action plans on many important topics during the speech from the throne on Sept. 23, it failed to mention its promise to bring safe drinking water to all Indigenous reserves by next spring.. In Lakota language, water is called mni wiconi, literally “it gives me life.” Without water, there would be no life. However, what occurred at Standing Rock was a resurgence of old ways built on Indigenous diplomacy and political activism that has been carried through generations. Treaties are the supreme law of the land. Whales have long been messengers for Indigenous Peoples. Lastly, we hope that our minds may come together and the world comes to know the true meaning of ‘Water is Life’. But this year the news was filled with stories of individuals calling the police on people of color for doing normal everyday tasks such as grilling for a BBQ, selling drinks at a kid’s beverage stand, and even Native American boys going on a college tour. It was selected as a First Nations Community Reads. Water is fundamental for every living being on this planet. Joanne Robertson’s forthcoming book, Nibi is Water, will be published in 2020. In February, the. . Water is essential to the human way of life. Then there was the United States who announced in May that it is committed to raising the height of the Shasta Dam despite opposition from the Winnemem Wintu Tribe whose sacred lands would be flooded. Many Indigenous victims of the spill are still waiting on compensation for their losses, and the site is listed as a Superfund site with contamination clean-up estimated to take a decade and ecosystem recovery indeterminate. In April, Indigenous declarations for the protection of water and land have been increasing in recent years. In Canada, the federal government has, Despite the progress made in 2018 to eliminate long-term drinking water advisories on reserves, many First Nations are still living in, The world rattled at the start of 2018 with fears that, Recently in Canada, many First Nations believed that a Federal Court of Appeal decision denying the Trans Mountain Pipeline would. They also inspired a new generation of water protectors through the speeches they gave, the awards they won, the books they wrote, and all the other thankless jobs they undertook to protect the water. The United States, Canada, Brazil, Guatemala, and Chile all made headlines in 2018 for building large dams while ignoring Indigenous rights. Despite the ongoing battle to quantify their groundwater rights the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians remains committed to exploring new ways to collaborate on water management and conservation issues with non-Indigenous partners in their community. Indigenous teachings explain that water connects all things, making it our most valuable and sacred resource. Recently in Canada, there has also been an increase in the creation of urban reserves (land designated as a First Nations reserve within a city or town). . However, 2018 was also a year for great triumph as the Seneca Nation and water protectors successfully launched a campaign to Defend Ohi:yo’ (Allegheny River) from harmful disposal of shale gas fracking wastewater into their sacred river. In 2018 one of the most significant victories for Indigenous Peoples trying to block the Canadian Trans Mountain pipeline occurred when the Federal Court of Appeal found that the Canadian government fell short of meeting its consultation obligations.
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