A/HRC/51/28
Adivasi women manage community seed banks and their custodian role strengthens
resilience to climate change by preserving threatened varieties of seeds.32
40.
Among the Inga in Colombia, indigenous women’s knowledge has been vital for food
security, sustainable agriculture and the health of their communities. Their role as seed
custodians has earned them respect for nurturing and sustaining the family and community.33
The indigenous Kuna women of Panama are involved in rescuing and preserving native seeds
threatened by climate disasters, rising sea levels and flooding and Maya women in Central
America have developed methods to select maize varieties with high nutrient contents.
41.
In the Arctic, indigenous peoples’ culinary traditions and food processing systems are
based on seasonal cycles and with their rich knowledge, herders, hunters, fishers and
gatherers have sustainably supported human and animal life over thousands of years. Saami
women have developed sophisticated techniques of food preparation and conservation that
promote food sovereignty while preserving their ecosystems. Saami reindeer herders’
knowledge illustrates the technology they have developed to secure the sustainable and safe
consumption of reindeer meat. The correct use of salt and moisture is achieved by selecting
specific plants and firewood that produce a dense white smoke. That penetrates the meat
tissue without requiring very high temperatures and the combined antibacterial effects protect
the meat from degradation.34
42.
Around the world, indigenous women call for their inclusion and participation in
research on natural resource management, seed conservation and pollination. When the
authorities use technical terms, it often appears that they are referring to new discoveries, but
for indigenous women such “discoveries” are often not new as they have been nurturing and
developing that knowledge and those practices for thousands of years. If research is discussed
and explained in more practical ways, then technical terms become more accessible for
indigenous women who relate them to their daily practices and livelihoods.35
C.
Health and medicine
43.
Indigenous women have scientific knowledge of community health related to physical
and mental well-being. That includes a significant body of robust knowledge of women’s
sexual, reproductive and maternal health that they share to ensure continuation of their skills
to future generations.36 Community members often prefer to seek advice from indigenous
medical practitioners, who are held in high regard and trusted for their specialized knowledge
and care.
44.
In Guatemala, indigenous women have different medical specialties, including
midwives who focus on the sexual and reproductive health of women; bone
setters/chiropractors; and those who balance energies to heal minds and bodies. All
specialties derive from indigenous cosmovision. Midwifery is essential to indigenous
medicine and in many cases is the only option where there is little to no access to hospitals
or medical personnel. Midwifery also provides a more comfortable environment for
indigenous women, who receive services in their mother tongue. Indigenous women promote
and defend scientific knowledge inherited from their ancestors, knowledge that has often
been proven to work by academic institutions and the medical community. They ask that
academics and others studying their knowledge help them to legitimize and vindicate their
knowledge.37
32
33
34
35
36
37
10
See IFAD, The Traditional Knowledge Advantage: Indigenous Peoples’ Knowledge in Climate
Change Adaptation and Mitigation Strategies (2016).
See https://www.kfw-entwicklungsbank.de/Our-topics/Climate/REDD/Indigene-V%C3%B6lker.
EALLU project, “Indigenous Youth, Arctic Change & Food Culture. Food, Knowledge and How We
Have Thrived on the Margins (2017).
Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services, Task Force on Indigenous and
Local Knowledge Systems, Indigenous and Local Knowledge about Pollination and Pollinators
Associated with Food Production. Outcomes from the Global Dialogue Workshop, (2014) p. 39.
Submission by Government of Mexico, p. 3.
Submission by National Movement of Midwives, Nim Alaxik, in Guatemala. See also
A/HRC/39/17/Add.3.