A/HRC/21/53
J.
Children and youth
80.
Indigenous children and youth have an important role as progenitors of indigenous
languages and cultures. Many indigenous children and youth have no or limited access to
education in their languages or to curricula reflecting their history, languages, creation
stories and teaching them how language and culture reinforce their identity and their
relationship to the land and all of Creation.
K.
Assimilation
81.
The perceived threat of indigenous cultures to “the national identity” has led many
States to counter-factually deny the existence of indigenous peoples and to implement
policies directed at assimilating them into mainstream society. Assimilation of indigenous
peoples and individuals into mainstream cultures is a violation of international human
rights law and especially indigenous peoples’ and individuals’ right to culture.
82.
The forced and sometimes violent separation of indigenous children from their
families and placement in boarding, residential or day schools or orphanages, with the aim
of assimilating them into mainstream culture, constitutes a serious and ongoing breach of
indigenous peoples’ rights to culture, contrary to article 8 of the Declaration.
Indigenous peoples’ rights to engage in economic activities associated
with their culture
L.
83.
Indigenous peoples’ economic activities embody much of their culture and often
involve the application of their knowledge, skills, technologies and values, as passed down
to them by their ancestors. They may also contain information about the sustainable use of
the natural environment.
M.
Importance of indigenous cultures and languages for indigenous health
84.
The importance of indigenous languages and cultures to their social, mental and
physical health has been highlighted. The dislocation and disaffection experienced by
indigenous peoples who have been colonized, dispossessed, urbanized and assimilated has
had a devastating impact on the health of many indigenous peoples as collectives and as
individuals. In contrast, strong cultural affiliations to cultures can be positive and,
“protective factors against the high risk of suicide in indigenous communities”.70
N.
Cultural relativity
85.
As the Independent Expert has noted, “there is a misplaced tendency to equate
cultural diversity with cultural relativism.” 71 Equally, it has been noted that the full
promotion and protection of cultural rights has been hampered by the perception that these
support cultural relativity, undermining the universality of human rights. As outlined
above, cultural diversity is of universal value, with each culture and language contributing
to our understanding of human capacity. Similarly, cultural rights are of universal
70
71
18
Submission from Inuit Circumpolar Council (Canada).
A/HRC/14/36, para. 32.