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The importance of indigenous rights and knowledge in conservation

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    (chanting)
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    ♪ (music) ♪
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    (chanting)
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    It's the danger of forgetting
    that is the road to extinction.
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    Our salmon are endangered species now.
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    The Winnemem Wintu would also be
    on the endangered species list.
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    As the salmon reduce in number,
    so do the Winnemem Wintu.
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    ♪ (music) ♪
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    I came to Congress
    to plead the case of the Kalash Tribe,
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    which is endangered due to climate change.
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    The community is 6,000 years old
    and only about 4,000 people.
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    The whole community
    is at risk of being wiped out.
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    Respect for
    the traditional ecological knowledge,
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    unlocking opportunities to learn
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    from people who continue
    to live close to these landscapes
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    is an opportunity for all of us
    to boost our knowledge
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    of what's happening with this planet.
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    Knowledge is not just academic.
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    The knowledge that comes
    through being in one place
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    all this time, is different
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    than when somebody comes in and
    studies it for 5 years or even 20 years.
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    I am representing hundreds of years
    of indigenous traditional knowledge.
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    For us it's very important to see
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    how the younger generation
    can protect more the environment.
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    But how all this knowledge
    can be protected
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    to protect us and to protect our future.
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    (speaking Spanish)
    We, the indigenous peoples of the world,
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    know how to live in harmony
    with our Mother Earth.
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    Because we respect it.
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    Because we understand that it is necessary
    to maintain equilibrium.
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    Equilibrium and harmony.
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    ♪ (music) ♪
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    Let us remember that
    what was once an oppressed voice
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    is now the intellectual speech
    of the landscape.
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    I believe for tomorrow,
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    for our grandchildren
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    and your great-great-grandchildren,
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    it will be a vibrant one,
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    because we are committed
    to making it so.
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    (speaking Spanish)
    It's important to create change now,
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    because we don't have much time.
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    We are fightingto make that change.
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    And the world, the IUNC and its members,
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    need to realizethat a change is urgent.
Title:
The importance of indigenous rights and knowledge in conservation
Description:

Indigenous leaders and other participants at the IUCN World Conservation Congress 2016 discuss the value of indigenous rights, knowledge and leadership in creating more sustainable ways of life on Earth.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Amplifying Voices
Project:
Indigenous Peoples' Rights
Duration:
02:46

English subtitles

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