It's great that the rest of the world is finally catching up, but it would be nice if the mainstream would acknowledge that Indigenous people have talked about climate change for decades.
Especially indigenous communities in circumpolar areas have warned of the devastating effects of global warming for over 40 years. As Larisa Pavlovna Adjedeva, the director of the Saami Cultural Centre in Lovozero said to the Snowchange Cooperative in 2009;
"When we ask the Elders and reindeer herders for example what kind of summer it will be, how much berries to expect or what kind of fish and how much to expect they answer us that they cannot predict anything because our Saami calendar of yearly cycle has collapsed completely ...
because of the changes that have taken place in the nature. They cannot foresee accurately and with precision. Before we would ask the reindeer herders and the answers would be right to the mark but now the predicted times keep on moving and changing."
At the same time, however, the fact that the ones who have done the least to cause climate change in the first place, and who are hit the hardest by it are now *also* being harmed by misguided attempts to stop it, is more often than not completely ignored.
The idea pervading Western society at the moment is that nature has to be saved, but what Western society seems to forget at the same time is that it could listen to and learn from communities that have lived sustainably for millennia.
Many people in the West seem oblivious to the fact that two of the most common measures taken to halt climate change, the production of biofuels and the building of hydroelectric dams, are directly hurting indigenous peoples around the world.
While using biofuels, often produced from sugar canes, does diminish the emission of greenhouse gases, it also contributes directly to the destruction of indigenous peoples’ ancestral homelands. As Amilton Lopez stated in 2008;
"The big sugar cane plantations are now occupying our land. Sugar cane is polluting our rivers and killing our fish. [It is increasing] suicides, mainly among young people, alcoholism and murder."
While the measures taken serve to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to a certain extent, the growing of plants to create biofuels harms nature and completely ignores the right to land and life held by the indigenous peoples living in the areas where biofuel is grown.
The Guaraní was one of the first tribes to make contact with Europeans, but now, thanks to biofuel plantations, the majority of them are driven from their ancestral homelands and forced to live in make-shift camps next to plantation roads, where people starve to death.
Another big threat to indigenous peoples and indeed nature is the building of hydroelectric dams.
In an attempt to reduce our carbon footprint and bring down our dependency on non-renewable energy sources, the building of hydroelectric dams, which use ‘the never-ending source of water and rivers’, are hailed as a massive step forward in the fight to stop climate change.
What is completely ignored, however, is the massive impact dams have on indigenous peoples around the world.
To this day, the building of hydroelectric dams have forcibly displaced between 40-80 million indigenous peoples and minorities from their ancestral homelands, leaving these people, to quote International Rivers, ‘economically, culturally and psychologically devastated’.
From the Ethiopian Gibe III dam to the building of the Murum and Bakun in Indonesia and Malaysia, hydroelectric dams destroy indigenous peoples lives, while being hailed as great investments for ‘nature’.
Any attempt to halt climate change has to involve indigenous peoples; without drawing on and using the centuries of knowledge held by indigenous peoples with regards to the areas they inhabit, we cannot ‘save the planet’.
Western activism tries to turn itself into false custodians of nature, while completely ignoring the fact that indigenous people, by virtue of relying on their ancestral homelands for their survival, already make great custodians of the same.
Western climate activism also has a troubling tendency of turning the ‘saving of the planet’ into a capitalist project.
One obvious example of this was the creation of the UN REDD (Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation) schemes.
Rather than listening to the valid concerns raised by indigenous communities inhabiting forests faced by deforestation, these schemes turn indigenous ancestral homelands into cash cows for the world’s states, if they can prove that their forests are free from human presence.
In other words, in order to get UN funding to protect forests already in the custody of indigenous communities, many states forcibly evict indigenous communities from their homes, thereby using a ‘green rhetoric’ to justify the violation of indigenous peoples’ human rights.
Before the 2009 Copenhagen meeting, the International Forum of Indigenous Peoples on Climate Change stated that:
2REDD will increase the violation of our human rights, our rights to our lands, territories and resources, steal our land, cause forced evictions ...
prevent access and threaten indigenous agriculture practices, destroy biodiversity and culture diversity and cause social conflicts."
In 2013, Tom Goldtooth pointed out that 10 of the 16 countries who had received REDD+ funding had violated FPIC.
It is important to battle climate change, but we cannot allow ourselves to let this battle turn into a wave of green colonialism.
It is important to speak up against climate change, making it the focal point of all our political discussions, but it is equally important to make sure that the people most hurt by climate change get to be heard and seen in these discussions.
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Just nu, när diskussionerna om huruvida man "borde få bränna böcker eller ej" pågår, och folk sprider all möjlig transfobisk skit på sociala medier, så kan det vara bra att ta ett steg tillbaka, och reflektera över det faktum att Hitlers bokbål påbörjades för 90 år sedan i år.
Den 10 maj 1933 anordnades ett uppmärksammat bokbål på Opernplats i Berlin. Folk vill gärna tro att de som brände böckerna var äldre, konservativa, men bokbålen leddes av nitiska studentkårer, som fick stöd av SA-trupperna i huvudstaden.
Den 10 maj förde man allt material som fanns på sexualforskningsinstitutet, som stormats 4 dagar tidigare och som hade den tidens mest framstående forskning om bland annat transpersoner, och byggde ett bokbål kring en byst av institutets ledare Hirschfeld.
Igår, i samband med midsommarsolståndet, firades urfolkens dag runt om i världen. I Sverige, däremot, glöms denna dag ofta bort.
Sverige är fortfarande en kolonial nation, som med hjälp av sin mineralpolitik, sitt skogsbruk och sin förmodat "gröna" energiutvinning fortsätter att inom Sveriges gränser motverka urfolksrättigheter, samtidigt som man agiterar för dem utomlands.
Ett sätt att uppmärksamma urfolksdagen är att arbeta för att regeringen tar sitt ansvar i urfolksfrågor, inte bara internationellt men även nationellt.
Renen var här innan vägarna. Problemet med saltet ligger hos trafikverket. Det är inte journalistiskt etiskt att publicera sina fördomar i notisform. Hur tänkte ni egentligen, @svtnyheter ?
@svtnyheter Igår stod det dessutom att renarna var dödsföraktande och renen beskrevs som "dumma jävla djur". Skriver man på det viset som reporter så har man helt enkelt valt fel yrke.
Och innan någon säger "men det var väl inte så farligt" - det här är en del av någonting större.
Den institutionella vardagsrasismen visavi samer genomsyrar hela Sverige. Å ena sidan förminskas alla samiska frågor till frågor om renskötsel, där hatet mot samer som grupp projiceras på renen, ...
Spare me people who question Trump, not because he's doing what settlers do best, but because he's asking another colonial government to sell him their colony.
Greenland has campaigned for independence for ages. Neither the US nor Denmark has any right to own Kalaallit Nunaat.
Spare me satirical texts where the "prime minister of Denmark offers to buy the US".
Spare me jokes that turn colonialism into a fun pastime.
Spare me any commentary that doesn't centre the voices of Greenland's indigenous people.
Colonial nations have bought colonies from each other for years. It's nothing new. In fact, Scotland reluctantly joined the United Kingdom 300 years ago because it borderline bankrupted itself, mishandling colonies in the Caribbean that it shouldn't have owned in the first place.
That moment when you're willing to send the special presidential envoy for hostage affairs to intervene in a fair trial in a democratic state, but you're keeping migrant children separated from their parents in border concentration camps, just like hostages, in your own backyard
Trump's involvement seems deliberate in a way that seems almost too clever for him but perfectly on brand when it comes to how the social media apparatus of the alt-right works
Now they get to pretend like they give a fuck about Black communities while at the same time pushing their entire "the west has fallen 'cause of muslims overtaking the planet and threatening the survival of good ole white™ ideals" as the boy who was assaulted is from Afghanistan