A/HRC/51/28
45.
In north-east Arnhem Land in Australia, Aboriginal women are revitalizing sovereign
birthing knowledge and practice. Yolngu and western medical pregnancy and childbirth
knowledge systems are being integrated through the establishment of culturally safe birthing
centres and programmes.38
46.
Indigenous women’s scientific knowledge is living, resilient and adaptable to new
situations, such as the global coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. Indigenous women
have treated people with COVID-19, saving the lives of those unable to access hospitals,
doctors and clinics. 39 In Mexico, indigenous medical practitioners were able to help the
community understand the symptoms of COVID-19 and promoted hygienic practices. In
Brazil, indigenous women gathered during the pandemic to share scientific knowledge of
medicines and remedies to mitigate the effects of COVID-19 in their communities.
47.
In Nepal, a study conducted during the pandemic highlighted how women were at the
forefront in organizing and performing rituals for protection from the pandemic and their
capacities to respond to the stress showed that they were more resilient than their male
counterparts were.40
48.
The Lakota (Oceti Sakowin) women in the United States of America have been able
to transmit a wealth of indigenous knowledge, passed down intergenerationally. The Lakota
acknowledge that “women are where all life begins,” they bear, nurture, and sustain life from
the sacred spirit (Wakanyeja). Oceti Sakowin women have linked gut health to traumainduced neurological imbalance and treat the imbalance by prescribing the consumption of
fibre-rich bison intestines.41 Western science research on DNA confirms what the Lakota
people have always known and indigenous spiritual beliefs support modern advancements in
biotechnology.
D.
Arts and crafts
49.
Indigenous women have a knowledge of arts and crafts that is of spiritual, cultural and
practical significance. Artistic practices have been shared among women for purposes of selfempowerment, environmental sustainability and healing from trauma. In Colombia, during
situations of armed conflict, women’s textiles represent the archive of memory and
resistance, a system of knowledge and a way for women to exercise leadership in the
collective transmission of knowledge.42 In Mexico, indigenous women possess a diversity of
cultural knowledge that is reflected in weaving, embroidery and pottery-making. 43 Inuit
women are responsible for crafting clothing for the harsh Arctic environment and for the
construction of whaling boats, an essential and revered role in their communities.
50.
In Nepal, indigenous women carry the knowledge of craftsmanship, such as pottery,
carpentry and carpet- and garment-making, and women have created entrepreneurial ventures
that contribute to the preservation and transfer of indigenous knowledge and skills, while also
enhancing economic resources.44
51.
In the United States, indigenous peoples of the plains incorporate geometric patterns
and abstract depictions meaningful to their tribes and regions in quillwork, a method of
stitching animal hide using sinew.45
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
Submission by the Australian Human Rights Commission.
Submission by the Government of Guatemala, p.4.
Submission by Nepal National Indigenous Women Forum.
Submission by Stephanie Little Hawk-Big Crow, Oglala Lakota, Oceti Sakowin, on behalf of Lakota
women.
See report of the mujeres Arhuacas de la Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta to the Truth Commission in
2020 (in Spanish only).
Submission by the Government of Mexico.
Submission by the Nepal National Indigenous Women Forum.
See Keli A. Tianga, “The next generation of indigenous knowledge keepers”, Shelterforce, 5
September 2019.
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