A united voice
From Indigenous Peoples around the world. Saying, as true stewards, that Nature has rights.
Herminsul Lucitante, Taita, Cofán, Colombia
I want to tell you that as I breathe, the mountains and the animals breathe as well.
We must take care of Mother Earth. We all have this responsibility because she is our Mother. Mother Earth gives us everything. If we kill our Mother Earth, where are we and the children going to eat from, of the new generations that are coming? That is why we must live taking care and protecting Mother Nature.
So long as we humans continue perceiving ourselves as being different from Nature, and as long as we continue to make our decisions with ambition and self-interest as the central points we will continue to deplete the resources that the Earth, with so many years of evolution, has given us and to date, and continues to sustain us as a species.
From the cosmovision of the Indigenous peoples, health is conceived as the harmony between Mother Earth and the people who inhabit within her.
Mother Nature har rights. No one on planet Earth owns Nature. We are connected to her and united through one ancestry. We have to defend her and keep her alive.
Nature is asking for help. Nature. Mother Nature. She's asking for help. Because we live within her.
This is the gold we take care of, this water is for the benefit of ous and our future generations.
As Nature is our Mother, she has her own rights. She gives us our food, gives us life, this is where we can live and coexist with Nature.
We are her administrators and we have to be respectful. Because Mother Nature has no owner.
Without her we can't live. Without her, we the Indigenous poeple, we're nothing. Because Nature and Indigenous people are connected.
We are the defenders and the resistence of the Nature of this planet. Because there's no other planet. That's the one we have. There's no other planet to go. So we need to protect this planet all in all.
The Earth is autonomous. The Earth is savvy. The Earth is intelligent. It can't be considered something private.
We must take care of Mother Earth so that no disease reaches our Mother Earth.
We are making a call and Nature is making this call to respect her.
We need to care and respect. You have to follow the message from above. This is how we have to live as the guardians of the jungle.
In our territory, we the Saamaka people are struggling to protect and defend our forest.
The Earth, the Mother Earth, includes all the ancestral beings from the jungle.
Nature has the same full rights as us. Today we are fighting to protect Nature, but we need more support for Nature. Because it's Nature that protects us and always takes care for us.
Let us not forget that we live within her and we are part of Earth, Mother Nature needs our care.
Calling for the care of the rights of Mother Earth, Mother Nature, recognizing from there is born the life of all living beings…
I am thinking deeply how and what I should do in the conservation field, so that the vanishing wildlife including animals, birds, and plants will be increased from now on in and around the sanctuary.
We have a symbiotic relationship with Nature. With the trees, the water, the land, earth, and lifeforce.
She is our Mother. Just as our mother takes care of us, so we should take care of her too... Sometimes we should give her a gift.
Our life depends on the jungle for food, building materials, medicines, and our culture and values are based on harmony with the jungle.
The Earth is the mother of us all and if we neglect her we neglect ourselves. As she is not something separate from us but she's the essence of our being, and her rights should be recognized.
We have more value in Nature, there in the forest. We feel that this is our home.
Nature has life and feels pain just as we feel it when we are sick.
Mother Earth has rights, rights that are binding us. As her children we have responsibilities to take care of her, to protect her, to respect her.
Co-signers
Goengalla Yin JummaJumma McLeod, Songkeeper, Jaithmathang, Australia
John Brian Anthony, President of BPA, Sarawak, Malaysia
Roselene Best, Community member, Kombumerri, Australia
Leonard Mindore, Executive Director, Ogiak, Kenya
Catherine Murupaenga-Ikenn, Indigenous human rights activist, Māori, New Zealand
Shirlley Mamani, Community Member, Aymara, Peru
Yazuri Reinoza Sánchez, Community Member, Huasteco, Mexico
Orlando, Community Member, Kokama, Brazil
Olinda Tupinamba, Community Member, Yawa, Brazil
Jonas Guajajara, Community Member, Guajajara, Brazil
Hyjnõ Krahô, Community Coordinator, Krahô, Brazil
Marciane, Cacica, Kokama, Brazil
Luzia Cruwakwyj, Community Member, Krahô, Brazil
Jattöpa Rufino Antonio Ponare, Cacique and Master of Tradition, Huottoja, Venezuela
Juan Guillermo Chindoy, Taita, Inga Condagua, Colombia
Antonio Emitis, Community Member, Pastos, Colombia
Fernando Lezama, Taita, Piajao, Colombia
Johny Lopez, Presidente Vereda Tigres del Alto, Pasto, Colombia
Erick Sami Rojas, Nawan(Cacique) of La Union Indigenous community of Pueblo, Henia-kamiare (Comechingon), Argentina
Ginamarie “Tracker” Rangel Quinone, Sundancer, Apache, United States
Ana Isabell Lopez Rojas, Representative of the women's association Awa Ashampa Wamis, Awa, Colombia
Herminsul Lucitante, Taita, Cofán, Colombia
Hipólito Esequiel Jamioy Chindoy, Traditional community doctor and expert in medicinal plants, Kamëntsá (Camsá), Colombia
Nathalie Vera, Traditional Physician, , Brazil
José Modesto Beltran, Cacique, Lache, Colombia
Mama Ines, Medicine Custodian and Leader, Imantag community, Kichwa, Ecuador
Mama Dolores, Medicine Custodian and Leader, Kichwa, Ecuador
Sayuri Guitarra, Community Member, Kichwa, Ecuador
Naomi Acelga, Community Member, Kichwa, Ecuador
Josefa Kirvin Kulix, Community Member, Huottoja, Mexico
Aruák Kopenoty, Community Member, Terena, Brazil
Rômulo de Souza Elias, Community coordinator, Kambeba Omágua, Brazil
Miguel Chindoy, Legal representative of the Asociación Indígena Agro Pueblos, Kamëntsá, Colombia
José Alberto Garreta Jansasoy, Governor of the Cofán Indigenous Reservation Nariño, Cofán, Colombia
Bayron Claudino Descanse Quieta, Governor of the Cofán Indigenous Reservation Chandia Na'en, Cofán, Ecuador
Yazuri Reinoza Sánchez, Community Member, Huasteco, Mexico
Sof’ Elle Beaivvi Mira, Community Member, Sápmi, Finland
Hugo Jabini, Lawyer, human and environmental rights defender, Saamaka, Suriname
Waxy Yawanawa, Paije, spiritual leader of the Mawa Yuxyn center in the Yawanawa territories, Yawanawa, Brazil
Autu Patrick, Prince, Batwa, Uganda
V Lian Kamlova, Village council president, Mara, India
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Jattöpa Rufino Antonio Ponare, Cacique and Master of Tradition, Huottoja, Venezuela
Photo by Miguel Angel Dias
We demand that the rights of Mother Earth are respected.
“We demand that the rights of Mother Earth are respected. ” – Antonio Emitis, Community Member, Pastos, Colombia
From the ancestral Indigenous territory of the great Cumbal, an affectionate greetings to all departmental, national and international entities. From this millenary and spiritual territory, we demand that the rights of Mother Earth are respected. Especially its lagoons, its rivers, its streams, its wetlands and our moors. We demand respect for everything contained in the subsoil. For us water is sacred. All its minerals are sacred. From this spiritual and millenary territory we greet you all. My name is Antonio Emitis, a member of the Pasto ethnic group. Thank you very much.