In light of the current climate crisis, hopes appear from an unlike section of the population of the world and that is the indigenous people. People who were often called savage and lived in a place called undeveloped now seem to show the world how their way of life living close to nature is one of the answers which could help combat the climate crisis.
The guardians of lives on Earth
Even though millions more species are yet to be discovered, indigenous
people who live in a territory that covers about 25 % of the world’s land
surface, and has a population of 370 million only, are the custodian of about
80 % of the global biodiversity. With just a small population comprising less
the 5% of the world’s population, and living in just a quarter of the world's
total land surface, the indigenous people had done commendable work in
conserving the biodiversity in their region. In India, the northeast region of
the country is also known as a biodiversity hotspot of the country.
The question that follows is why and how can this happen. How
are the indigenous people able to protect the rich biodiversity in their
respective regions? Thanks to the indigenous people and local communities who
are the world’s biggest conservationists, more than 30 percent of the Earth’s
land and water are already conserved. The UN Environment Program, World
Conservation Monitoring Centre/ICCA Consortium’s new estimates suggest that
Indigenous peoples and local communities conserve at least a fifth of all land
on Earth.
UN source states that there are currently about 476 million
indigenous people in the world in 90 countries, they live and occupy
approximately a quarter of the world’s land and water. The area holds about 85
percent of the world’s biodiversity, and the indigenous people can therefore be
called the keepers of the biodiversity.
The future is the indigenous way
of life
“The future of our planet lies in indigenous ways of living
on the Earth,” says Jon Waterhouse, Indigenous Peoples Scholar at the Oregon
Health and Science University and a National Geographic Education Fellow Emeritus and Explorer. Waterhouse also says “As a global
community, we have lost our way; we forgot what it means to have a relationship
with the land.” It is however not easy to understand the complex relationship
that the indigenous people relationship with nature. The indigenous
relationship is much deeper than just conservation. The indigenous way of life
is not only living in partnership with nature but it has to do with the
holistic relationship the people have with nature.
The importance of the traditional
knowledge system
Indigenous communities the world over lived in isolation and
oftentimes it was because they live far from the crowd that they were able to
protect their biodiversity. They protect their biodiversity because for them
living in balance with nature is crucial for their own survival. Hence on a closers
look at their way of life concerning the environment, it is found that they
possess knowledge that connects them which the nature around them. Their
traditional knowledge about changes in the weather pattern and other elements
which influence the ecosystem they live is appreciated by many.
In the village people still have traditional knowledge which
helps them predicts the weather and decides on the time they sow their seeds or
plant their crops. They were able to read the sign in nature by reading the
changes in the plants or even in the way birds sings and insects make their
sounds. These biological indicators have held them in good stead and recently
during the lockdown due to the CoVID-19 pandemic, their knowledge of indigenous
wild edibles help them survive the pandemic.
The living Nature
The first nation people shared another common value that
animals, plants, and the spirits of nature are alive. Human is not seen as
separate from nature but, as part of the earth, human are as important as animals,
and plants and they share a very close kinship relationship with their fellow
beings. Hunting or fishing is done in calculated ways taking into consideration
their breeding and eating habits. In Jaintia hills, people will not go fishing
when the fish were breeding and in the past when people hunt, they perform
rituals that go with it, and also obeisance was paid when the animal was
caught.
In the indigenous concept, human is not seen as superior to
nature, or rather nature does not exist to serve humans. Human is supposed to
live in peaceful coexistence with fellow beings. The idea that nature exists to
serve humans is foreign to the indigenous people they believe everything in
nature coexists to support one another and not to serve the other. The word is
coexisting not service as service is a capitalist idea that sees everything
measurable in money terms or everything can be monetised. In a traditional
context, the human relationship with nature is both profound and
complex.
Indigenous people are their enemy
In the global scenario, indigenous people find themselves on
the front line of the attack by industrial agriculture and logging. Their
ancestral lands were seized for industrial purposes and in the process destroy
the biodiversity in these areas. Their mountains and rivers which they
considered sacred were exploited often living hills barren and rivers
polluted.
While in many cases, the environmental terrorism against the
indigenous people was executed by outside forces, in some cases like in Meghalaya,
it was carried out by the indigenous people themselves. No law or no amount of
enforcement can succeed in preventing the destruction of the environment when
the people themselves are hell-bent to destroy nature.
Our relationship with our values
In the case of Meghalaya the question is when we have chosen
to detach ourselves from our relationship with nature; can we still call
ourselves the indigenous people? When we only see natural resources as
something to exploit, the question is what kind of relationship we have with
nature. Can we still call ourselves indigenous people when the relationship
between ourselves and nature has broken?
The Sixth schedule which is supposed to protect us is used to
exploit land and river for the benefit of the few. The Autonomous District
Councils which are empowered to protect our culture, tradition, rivers and land
are more often than not misused to serve the few. ADCs are now seen as just
another government agency and not institutions that were empowered to protect
the rights and the way of life of the indigenous people of the state. The need
of the hour is to go back to our rich culture which includes living a morally
upright life and living closely with nature.
Indigenous values
Traditional values of the people comprise living a morally
upright life, a caring and sharing community, and a life living a close
relationship with nature. This value system is intricately woven into people’s
way of life and it embodies the three cardinal principles of ‘ka tip briew tip
blei, ka kamai ia ka hok, bad ka tip kur tip kha,’ which literarily translates
to know man know god, live righteously, and respect one’s relation both on the
father’s and mother’s side. The general purpose of a tribal’s way of life is
also caring and sharing ‘ka bhalang uba bun balang’ or ‘ka bhalang ka imlang’
which translates to ‘common good or well-being of all.’ The other important value
is ban bat ia ka burom ka akor (to hold
on to propriety and honour), Ban bat ia ka nia ka jutang, ka shikyntien ka hok
(word of honour) and u thylliej ksiar, u thylliej rupa (upholding the honour of
spoken word).
The tribal also consider nature or the earth their mother
(mei ramew) and it is also the dwelling place of ‘ki ryngkaw ki basa’ or the
deities of nature. They consider river and mountains their gods; hence have a
very profound relationship with nature. The question is why people are not only
losing their culture, but have sadly distanced them from their roots.
The indigenous people still have a way of how they manage
their NRM and it is now for the government to recognise the practice and make
use of the wisdom.
Urgent need for an NRM
policy
The state government needs to think outside of the box and
come up with Natural Resources Management policy, which is based on strength of
the people’s way of life. When the world's richest country, the G7 are looking
at the lessons they can learn from the indigenous people to conserve at least
30 percent of their land and river by 2030, the state of Meghalaya with a huge
population of indigenous people needs to go back to its roots and come up with
lesson they can offer the world in combating climate change and that will be
our gift to the world.
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