Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumGrowing up Maasai and the art of healing the Earth
For some Indigenous Maasai tribes in Kenya, birdwatching is not so much a leisure activity as it is a survival tactic. The sight of an oxpecker, a gray and white bird with vivid yellow eyes, often indicates that dangerous water buffalos roam nearby. Meanwhile, the brown flash of a honeyguide bird might be the ticket to a calorie-dense meal these birds can literally guide humans to honey.
The honeyguides and oxpeckers of the world illustrate a key tenet of Indigenous knowledge, according to Kimaren ole Riamit, a member of the Maasai community in Kenya. Nature takes care of us when we take care of it, said ole Riamit, who has on several occasions followed honeyguides to beehives.
Lessons like this are essential as the world faces a crisis of wildlife extinction and climate change. Yet Indigenous knowledge and those who wield it are often an afterthought in major efforts to protect nature, from the Paris Agreement to a big UN treaty on biodiversity loss.
Ole Riamit, the executive director of a nonprofit called Indigenous Livelihoods Enhancement Partners, is among the Indigenous leaders pushing to elevate voices like his in these initiatives. He sees himself as a bridge between the Maasai world an Indigenous world, rooted in nature and the Western approach to conservation, which has a history of subjugating tribes in Kenya, the US, and elsewhere.
He told Vox about growing up in a Maasai community and how the lessons he learned can make wildlife conservation stronger and more equitable. Our conversation has been edited for length and clarity.
https://www.vox.com/22977369/indigenous-maasai-wildlife-conservation
___________________________________________________________________
Wonderful, thoughtful interview. Please read the whole thing before commenting!
cilla4progress
(24,589 posts)Indigenous wisdom is the only way through this mess of wreckage we have created.
Thanks.