Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you for the technical help I've received.
I have listened with appreciation to the other witnesses as well.
I acknowledge with respect the people and lands of the Snuneymuxw First Nation, where I am at present, and indigenous peoples across Canada and beyond. I want to recognize with deep gratitude the many indigenous knowledge-keepers who have generously shared their knowledge and wisdom with me over the last 50-plus years.
I am an ethnobotanist and ethnoecologist trained in western biological sciences but also in anthropology and geography. I have worked in many indigenous communities and have come to appreciate the importance of language and communicating knowledge, in particular about plants and environments. I also recognize the importance of traditional food, cultural materials, medicines, narratives and ceremony based on relationships with other species and their habitats. I have been out on the lands and waters with my indigenous colleagues and teachers, and I have been able to observe first-hand the deep historical connections to species and locales of people's homelands.
It's important to recognize, as I know you do, that cultural groups living in their own homelands have their own particular knowledge grounded in place, often reflecting residency over thousands of years. The habitats and places within their territories—the wetlands, shorelines, mountain slopes, forests, lakes, rivers, trails, camping places and healing sites—all have special meaning, often with their own place names, stories, history and proprietorship.
I've been learning for years and years about the importance of plants and other life for first peoples, but it took a very long time before I began to realize just how deep the relationships have been between indigenous peoples and other species and the sophistication and complexity of their knowledge and caretaking practices relating to other species and their habitats, as well as how much communication, exchange and adaptation of knowledge have occurred across nations over time.
For example, the clam gardens, now recognized ancient beach features up and down the northwest coast, were unrecognized as anthropogenic features by the scientists who first described them. It was only after Kwaxsistalla Wathl’thla, clan chief Adam Dick of the Dzawada’enux Kwakwaka'wakw community, explained what they were and how they were created and maintained over generations that they came to be identified as such.
Traditional ecological knowledge systems of indigenous peoples are often compared with western scientific knowledge, but in fact they extend into many other realms, from language to education and governance, and they almost invariably embody a world view of stewardship, respect, reciprocity and relationality with other species and with the earth. They've supported the development of a range of traditional land and resource caretaking approaches that have included careful use of landscape burning, selective harvesting, replanting propagules and many other techniques, learned, shared and adapted over time and space.
With time constraints, I will skip over the examples I have of programs that I've worked on—the scientific panel for sustainable forest practices in Clayoquot Sound; the Nuxalk food and nutrition program in Bella Coola; and the Reconciling Ways of Knowing online forum—which have attempted to use both western science and indigenous knowledge equally in developing solutions to particular problems.
The commitments that Canada has made in ratifying, adopting and creating a draft action plan based on the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the calls to action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission provide an obvious and appropriate starting point in your work. With full participation and leadership from indigenous knowledge-keepers, educational programs and courses for all government members can be developed to inform them about indigenous peoples' history and languages and about the underlying principles of indigenous cultures and environmental knowledge systems and how these differ from and/or connect with scientific beliefs or understandings.
At least some parts of these educational programs should take place on the ground as participatory learning and in consultation with the indigenous nations affected by the policies being developed.