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Indigenous Kani Efforts To Promote Indigenous Medicinal Knowledge In India

Indigenous communities often hold invaluable knowledge about medicinal plants and healing practices rooted in the environment and resources of their traditional homelands. Anoop Pushkaran Krishnamma is working with the Kerala Kani Community Welfare Trust in partnership with Indigenous communities in India to record and preserve this knowledge, allowing for healing practices to be utilized by future generations.

MUSIC
"Remember Your Children," by Salidummay. Used with permission.
Introduction: "Burn Your Village to the Ground" by A Tribe Called Red. Used with permission.

Reforestation Model From Philippines Indigenous Communities

Lakes and forests in the Mt. Talinis area of the Phillipines are under threat from recent expansions of the energy industry. Apolinario Carino is working with the organization PENAGMANNAK, a federation of 17 Indigenous Peoples’ community groups, to pioneer community management strategies of reforestation designed to empower the Indigenous groups to shape the future of their lands. Apolinario hopes to share the knowledge that they have gained from these experiences in order to better combat climate change on a global scale.

Lessons From Honduras On Indigenous Biodiversity Work + Partnerships

Indigenous communities in Honduras have stewarded the Muskitia, a rain forest which includes one of the richest concentrations of biodiversity in the world, for centuries. Osvaldo Munguia is a representative of MOPAWI, an organization that partners with Indigenous groups to protect this UNESCO world heritage site from being overtaken by logging, mining, and forestry business interests.

MUSIC
"Remember Your Children," by Salidummay. Used with permission.
Introduction: "Burn Your Village to the Ground" by A Tribe Called Red. Used with permission.

Indigenous Resiliency Amidst Changes In Fire And Ice

A close relationship with local environments and ecosystems is more critical than ever in the face of a rapidly changing climate. This program features two perspectives from Indigenous communities that are practicing resiliency to global warming by adapting their traditional knowledge and science to put a changing climate into the context of their communities' history and lifeways.

INTERVIEWEES
Elizabeth Azzuz (Yurok), Cultural Fire Management Council
Jannie Staffansson (Saami), Arctic and Environment Unit of the Saami Council

Indigenous Science Is Lifesaving And Rights To It Must Be Protected

Though collaboration is crucial to finding solutions for climate change, Indigenous People must be able to maintain, protect, and control their cultural heritage, sciences, and technologies. The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples provides a legal framework for intellectual ownership by Indigenous communities of their traditional knowledge. However, many additional cultural barriers to equal-footed climate change collaboration exist, such as the automatic devaluation of Indigenous science by Western science practitioners.

Abanderando la Defensa de la Madre Tierra en el Día Mundial de la Radio

En este entrevista especial con Ada Villareal, Representante de la Red Centroamericana de Radios Comunitarias Indígenas de la que también Cultural Survival y nuestro programa de Radio de Derechos Indígenas es parte; te contamos la importancia que tienen la Radios Comunitarias en su función educadora, promotora y defensora de los recursos naturales para la garantía de la preservación y el buen vivir de las comunidades.

Radio Comunitaria y Días de Amar la Tierra

En este programa especial conoceremos de una Radio Comunitaria en Boca de Sábalo, Rio San Juan, Nicaragua quienes al igual que muchas Radios Comunitarias Indígenas están ocupadas en abanderar la lucha por la madre tierra y nuestros bienes comunes.

Musicalización

  • Días de Amar del Duo Guardabarrando, con su autorización
  • Casa Abierta, Katya Cardenal, con su autorización 

Entrevistado:

Javier Jaime Rodríguez (Nicaragua)

Edición
Teresita Orozco Mendoza

Bears Ears At Risk

The reduction in size of the Bears Ears National Monument by the Trump Administration runs contrary to the principles established in Article 26 of the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. We spoke to Braidan Weeks, the Communications Coordinator for Utah Diné Bikéyah, about the importance of Bears Ears, the unlawfulness of the actions taken by the Trump administration, and the advocacy currently underway to defend the monument led by the Tribes of the Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition.

Día Mundial del Agua, 2018

El agua es vida. El 22 de marzo de cada año, celebramos el Día Mundial del Agua para honrar la importancia crucial de este recurso para la vida y la cultura por todo el mundo. Las comunidades indígenas son sostenedoras de y sostenidas por el agua. Aprende más sobre lo que los grupos están haciendo para proteger esta fuente de vida en este anuncio corto.

Entrevistada
Soledad Grefa (Kichwa), Mujeres Amazonicas

Corte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos sobre Consentimiento Libre, Previo e Informado

En este programa te contamos sobre el Consentimiento Libre, Previo e Informado y que establece la Corte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos sobre esto.

Voces

Gloria Amparo Rodríguez, profesora e investigadora en la Universidad del Rosario, Bogotá Colombia 

Musicalización

​-  ​Sik´inik , ​K'oxomal Winaqil. Utilizado con su autorización

​-  ​Nan Tat,  ​K´oxomal Winaqil. Utilizado con su autorización

​-  ​Canmandalla, Yarina. Utilizado con su autorización

Día de la Madre Tierra

Todos los 22 de abril desde el año 2009 Naciones Unidas conmemora a la «Madre Tierra», esta es una expresión común utilizada para referirse al planeta Tierra en diversos países y regiones, lo que demuestra la interdependencia existente entre los seres humanos, las demás especies vivas y el planeta que todos habitamos. Te presentamos este especial donde reflexionamos sobre la amenaza eminente que representa el cambio climático para la tierra que habitamos.

Recursos

UN Special Rapporteur Victoria Tauli-Corpuz on UNPFII Theme 2018

This year's theme for conversations at the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues was "Indigenous Peoples Collective Rights to Lands and Resources". Victoria Tauli-Corpuz (Igorot Kankanaey, Philippines), UN Special Rapporteur on Indigenous Issues, says that the theme connects to many important conversations happening now in the world, including the threat that extractive industries pose to resources located on Indigenous-owned territories.

Segundo Encuentro Centroamericano de Radios Comunitarias Indígenas

Estamos listos y listas para el segundo encuentro de Radios Comunitarias Indígenas a realizarse en Panajachel, Guatemala con la participación de más de 40 radios Indígenas. Ya puedes anunciar en tu radio que siete países estaremos uniendo voces que tejen la región en favor de la democratización de la palabra para los pueblos Indígenas.

Musicalización:

 Música de fondo: Wuarmigu de Yarina, usada con su autorización.
Música de Introducción: “Burn Your Village to the Ground” por A Tribe Called Red. Usado con permiso.

Noticiero Julio 18

10 comunidades Indígenas están poniendo su empeño a revitalizar su sistemas productivos tradicionales  para garantizar su seguridad alimentaria. En este corto informativo te damos a conocer sobre esta buena nueva. 

Musicalización:

Música de Introducción: “Burn Your Village to the Ground” por A Tribe Called Red. Usado con permiso.

Voces: 

Esther Camac , Líder Indígena Quechua del Peru

Realización

Rosario Sul Gonzalez

International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples: Victory in Nepal

Indigenous Rights Radio Program on a case where  the Newar indigenous community in Nepal obtained a victory in their legal battle against the government after about 7 years of continuous struggle.

Interviewees: Advocate Shankar Limbu

Music: Remember your children: by Solidummay.

Introductory Music: "Burn Your Village to the Ground" by A Tribe Called Red. Used with permission.

2019 is The International Year Of Indigenous Languages

The world will indeed be a poorer place without the languages and cultures of Indigenous Peoples.
So it is necessary to celebrate and promote Indigenous Languages, thereby improving the lives of the peoples who speak the languages.
Producer:  Shaldon Ferris (KhoiSan, South Africa)

Interview: Kaimana Barcase, Hawaii and Denver Breda, South Africa.

Music : Whispers by Ziibiwan, used with permission.

Picture:  A man plays a Khwe finger piano, West Caprivi Strip. Photo by Julie Taylor 2007, Courtesy of Cultural Survival

Intercambio de Conocimientos Indígenas para el Futuro de las Semillas

Los pueblos Indígenas, expertos en agricultura y líderes comunitarios alrededor del mundo están preocupados por el tema de la alimentación. Algunos están realizando buenas prácticas de guardar e intercambiar semillas para garantizar la seguridad alimentaria bajo su propia soberanía, ya sea en sus propias comunidades o bien en los países a donde han tenido que migrar.

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