‘We are nature': Indigenous women come together at the United Nations
'We care about nature, and so we ensure that there is connectivity in land titles so that communities continue to move from place to place to allow land to regenerate, but also to allow space for wildlife to move in and out of our lands,' said Mako.The event's final speaker, Casey Camp-Horinek from the Ponca Nation in Oklahoma, has been a crucial supporter of the rights of nature movement—the principle that ecosystems and wildlife have rights, just like humans.In 2018, she said, the Ponca Nation passed its own statute recognizing this principle, declaring that 'the inherent rights of nature are inalienable in that they arise from the same source as existence.'Galina Angarova, who'd come from Siberia representing the Buryat peoples, advocated hope as a way forward. 'It's not a time to despair, it is a time to press our palms to the soil, to dream in the language of our ancestors and to plan visions no regime can uproot,' Angarova said as she recited a poem written anonymously by someone in her community. 'The cracks are widening, and we say, let them. We are nature, and what we birth will outlive empire.'
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