Pawankafund

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Karen indigenous women in Ban Huay Hoi, Thailand

Learn about inspiring stories from the seven regions of the world: Africa, Arctic, Asia, Latino America, North America, Pacific, Russia.

Our land is our life, we sow our way

There is less deforestation and less damage to biodiversity in areas protected by indigenous peoples. Indigenous peoples maintain an ancestral bond with their territories; their lives depend closely on the natural resources of the places where they live, where they obtain food, medicines, construction materials, and where they develop their spirituality. They see in their

Aloha ‘Āina Fellowship Program

Young adults are trained in indigenous natural resource management, cultural resource management, and in promoting a traditional and holistic approach to caring for the land and building capacity in young leaders to revitalize food sovereignty in Hawai‘i.

Ancestral Wisdom

We share with you a video that shows us the art, spirituality, community work, rescue and importance of the ancestral wisdom of Indigenous Peoples and their challenges and adaptation to climate change.

Responsability to Mother Earth

Lessons of Indigenous Governance Indigenous peoples practice numerous governance systems based on their ancestral traditions and incorporating innovations. While these systems vary from community to community, they share many characteristics: a collective sense of responsibility for nurturing, protecting, and defending the territory and the balanced use of their resources and participation in decision-making. During these

Pawanka Podcast – Episodio 1

In our first episode we have as guest, Namaka Rawlins, Nāmaka, originally from Hawaii . All her life she has fought for the revitalization of the Hawaiian language. Namaka has always believed in education as a means of preserving native languages Listen on Listen on web:

Subscribe to our Podcast

Hello and welcome to the Pawanka podcast! This space has been created to share the knowledge of indigenous peoples through stories and interviews from around the world. Pawanka is an indigenous-led fund that supports indigenous peoples’ initiatives dedicated to promoting and protecting traditional knowledge, wellbeing, rights and self-determined development. Subscribe to web version

Indigenous languages, our life, our culture, our identity

Language is more than a means of communication, it is nature and the world we inhabit, it is collectivity, it is being part of a community, of a history. Language is the possibility of sharing a cosmovision, of giving continuity to our ancestors and sharing knowledge, recipes, wisdom, sensations and emotions. It is the soul

Behind Pawanka, There is a Great History

Eight years ago, in the midst of the United Nations World Conference on Indigenous Peoples, Pawanka Fund was born as a Fund for indigenous ways of knowing and learning. Throughout its existence, it has built relationships of trust, creating networks and promoting the articulation between local and global processes. With the direction of a Guiding

Swidden Cultivation in Gawaan, Balbalan and Limos, Pinukpuk, Kalinga

With the objective of documenting environmentally sound and detrimental practices in the farming of swiddens – known as kaingin in most parts of Luzon and uma in Northern Luzon – we conducted interviews with key informants and case respondents, and did some photo and video documentation in two sample barangay within the Kalinga culture area: Gawaan in the municipality

Traditional peoples hold key to healthy ecosystems, Vatican official says

by Barbara Fraser The Earth’s warming temperatures are having a disproportionate negative impact on Indigenous peoples, those of African descent and migrants, but their ancestral wisdom is essential to efforts to reduce the impacts of climate change and preserve biodiversity, a top Vatican official said. Speaking at a virtual conference May 27 sponsored by the Vatican