First Nations, Inuit, and Métis communities have always nurtured a deep and reciprocal bond with the land, drawing life and wisdom from it while offering care and protection in return. But current environmental realities have affected Indigenous youth and their communities more deeply than others, and they have something to say. Our new report amplifies their urgent call to ground efforts in healing the planet by applying Indigenous ways of knowing and through collective and cooperative action.
To protect and restore the land, we must first mend our relationship with it and each other. The fourth volume in our Voices of Indigenous youth leaders on reconciliation series offers practical recommendations for holistic environmental reconciliation. Its insights can help corporate, government, and environmental decision-makers to integrate Indigenous knowledge and perspectives into boardroom strategies and support Indigenous-led climate action.
It's time to listen, learn, and act together.
I feel that if we want to save the land and our future, we need to bring back traditional knowledge and help our Elders pass on the teachings and traditions.
- Indigenous youth leader
For a more sustainable existence, we must value Indigenous knowledge and establish respect with both the land and its original caretakers. Indigenous youth are calling for governments and industries to acknowledge the wounds inflicted on the land and heal them with traditional guidance in collaboration with Indigenous Peoples.
Improve understanding of and respect for Indigenous traditional knowledge and connections to the land by:
Facilitate meaningful partnerships between First Nations, Inuit, and Métis communities and non-Indigenous partners on environmental decision-making by:
Reconciliation isn't a journey we walk alone. It's one we must travel together. With Indigenous voices leading the way, we can establish equitable partnerships and rebuild our relationship with the land.
What to learn more? Let’s connect.