In 2022 Indigenous leaders from around the world answered the question, ‘What does the world need to hear right now?’. Their advice ranged from following the law of the land - not the law of man - to providing universal education.The World Economic Forum says the world is at a crucial stage where it needs to ensure that the transition to clean energy is irreversible.
The so-called ‘Earth Overshoot Day’ fell on 29 July 2021, according to the NGO Global Footprint Network – the day when all humans have collectively used up more natural resources than Mother Nature can reproduce in a year. If every citizen lived like those in the US, says the NGO, humans would require the resources of five planet Earths. |
So, what does the world need to hear right now? This was the question posed to indigenous leaders for a Rooted Messages interview. _________________________________________________________________________ 1. Don Sebastian of the Inca People in Peru “We have to restore our harmony with Mother Earth in order to enjoy a harmonious and full life. If we don’t do this, we will continue to live with hatred, jealousy and sickness. But before that, Mother Earth has to forgive us for having hurt her so much.” 2. Vandria Borari of the Borari people in Brazil “When Mother Earth gets sick, we get sick. The river, the forest and the animals - they complete our lives, and they are the reason of our existence.” 3. Carlos Barrios of the Mayan people in Guatemala “Mother Earth and human beings have the same purpose - to grow, to go towards an evolutionary moment. The most important thing in this life is your own self. If you take responsibility and you create the development of your own self, you’re going to help not just you, you’re going to help humanity.” 4. Anne Poelina of the Aboriginal people in Australia “Indigenous wisdom right across the planet is grounded in what we call ‘law of the land’ not ‘law of man’, and what we are saying as wisdom keepers is that unless we are factoring in indigenous wisdom, indigenous knowledge, indigenous science, indigenous law, we will not be able to right-size the planet post-COVID.” 5. Fadimata Walet Alassane of the Tuareg people in Burkina Faso “The current distress is caused by the abandonment of cultural and moral values. If you do bad things that your ancestors never did, you will face the consequences. People must exchange and develop mutual aid.” 6. Ayan Ayangat of the Chonos people in Mongolia “It is unveiling the true faces, not only of people but also countries and nations. We need to love and respect each other. Diseases and suffering don’t appear out of nowhere.” 7. Adam Ole Mwarabu of the Maasai people in Tanzania “I came across a dream about a pandemic and in the dream, it was all about our co-existence, living in harmony with nature.” 8. Te Ngaehe Wanikau of the Māori people in New Zealand “To go back to what we were prior to COVID-19 would only be a testimony to our collective stupidity. We have opportunities now and other pathways … that hold this world the way it should be, and pathways that sustain and treasure and nurture. Be the generation that said, ‘No. Enough’. We’re not lost anymore. We’re finding our way home.” 9. Kazumi Ohishi of the Kaminchu people in Okinawa, Japan “The shape and form of human beings as we know it, will change. There will also be polar shifts and changes in the revolution and the rotation of Earth, which means that human beings must find a way to cope and adapt to the abnormal mutations that are happening.” 10. Chief Phil Lane Jr of the Ihanktonwan and Chickasaw Nations in North America and Canada “As long as 50% of the world's population is being oppressed and not allowed to express their full potentiality there will not be solutions, not only to the climate issue but to world peace. If we want to change this whole context, we have to provide universal education to all members of our human family.” |