• Good Fire in Guyana with Kayla de Freitas and Nicolas Cyril

  • 2022/08/29
  • 再生時間: 1分未満
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Good Fire in Guyana with Kayla de Freitas and Nicolas Cyril

  • サマリー

  • Good Fire Podcast by Amy Cardinal Christianson and Matthew Kristoff

    Stories of Indigenous fire stewardship, cultural and social empowerment, and environmental integrity

    Good Fire In Guyana with Kayla de Freitas and Nicholas Cyril

    Episode highlight

    In this episode, Kayla and Nicholas talk about the cultural burning practices in Guyana.

    Resources

    SRDC

    Kayla De-Freitas

    Sponsors

    The Canadian Partnership for Wildland Fire Science

    Support from:

    ●       California Indian Water Commission

    ●       Firesticks Alliance Indigenous Corporation

    Quotes

    41.54 - 42.04: “So much of that knowledge about fire and fire use and farming, hunting, is learned by doing and by living there and living that life.”

    Takeaways

    Fire since time immemorial (04.02)

    Nicholas has worked for 10 years at SRDC as a part-time researcher. He explains that fire in his territory has always been used and continues to be used for various reasons.

    The changing face of fire (10.55)

    Kayla’s research focus is the changing practices of Indigenous fire management and local fire governance.

    Timeless wisdom, current realities (13.17)

    Kayla describes who was interviewed for her research study and the regional fire management plan.

    Indigenous land rights (17.17)

    Nicholas notes that Indigenous peoples are allowed to burn in the villages. Kayla adds that Indigenous communities can make their own rules concerning resource governance.

    Towards the creation of a fire policy (19.35)

    The Indigenous communities in South Rupununi are working to create a local fire policy appropriate to their landscape.

    Burning season (23.46)

    Kayla highlights the seasonal fire calendar that the district council uses and a collection of interview responses on putting fire on the landscape.

    Beyond fire (25.53)

    Kayla shares how enriching it has been to work with Indigenous communities alongside Nicholas, learning about the landscape, experiencing hospitality and developing connections.

    Bringing fire back (33.46)

    Nicholas mentions how management of fire is changing in the communities to a direct style where the council makes decisions for the community.

    Valuing Indigenous knowledge (35.52)

    Nicholas speaks about how people are moving away from the traditional way of life. Kayla comments on how Indigenous knowledge was erased by settlers, but is being reclaimed.

    Following in the ancestor’s footsteps (41.40)

    Nicholas delineates the process of a burn, when traditional knowledge is relied upon. Kayla laments that the government only pays lip service to Indigenous knowledge and practices. 

    The sum of the parts (49.44)

    Kayla narrates how fire management plans are being updated in consultation with Indigenous groups, and how opt-in arrangements work for their lands.

    Looking ahead (54.25)

    Nicholas says the Indigenous communities are mindful of burning in the right seasons and work with nature’s cycles. He describes how burning assists animals in breeding.

    Preventing brain drain (1.04.57)

    Kayla mentions that the SRDC is creating opportunities for trained Guyanese people to stay in the country and serve the community. Nicholas’ work with SRDC is inspired by the desire to keep Indigenous knowledge alive and affirm Indigenous land rights.

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あらすじ・解説

Good Fire Podcast by Amy Cardinal Christianson and Matthew Kristoff

Stories of Indigenous fire stewardship, cultural and social empowerment, and environmental integrity

Good Fire In Guyana with Kayla de Freitas and Nicholas Cyril

Episode highlight

In this episode, Kayla and Nicholas talk about the cultural burning practices in Guyana.

Resources

SRDC

Kayla De-Freitas

Sponsors

The Canadian Partnership for Wildland Fire Science

Support from:

●       California Indian Water Commission

●       Firesticks Alliance Indigenous Corporation

Quotes

41.54 - 42.04: “So much of that knowledge about fire and fire use and farming, hunting, is learned by doing and by living there and living that life.”

Takeaways

Fire since time immemorial (04.02)

Nicholas has worked for 10 years at SRDC as a part-time researcher. He explains that fire in his territory has always been used and continues to be used for various reasons.

The changing face of fire (10.55)

Kayla’s research focus is the changing practices of Indigenous fire management and local fire governance.

Timeless wisdom, current realities (13.17)

Kayla describes who was interviewed for her research study and the regional fire management plan.

Indigenous land rights (17.17)

Nicholas notes that Indigenous peoples are allowed to burn in the villages. Kayla adds that Indigenous communities can make their own rules concerning resource governance.

Towards the creation of a fire policy (19.35)

The Indigenous communities in South Rupununi are working to create a local fire policy appropriate to their landscape.

Burning season (23.46)

Kayla highlights the seasonal fire calendar that the district council uses and a collection of interview responses on putting fire on the landscape.

Beyond fire (25.53)

Kayla shares how enriching it has been to work with Indigenous communities alongside Nicholas, learning about the landscape, experiencing hospitality and developing connections.

Bringing fire back (33.46)

Nicholas mentions how management of fire is changing in the communities to a direct style where the council makes decisions for the community.

Valuing Indigenous knowledge (35.52)

Nicholas speaks about how people are moving away from the traditional way of life. Kayla comments on how Indigenous knowledge was erased by settlers, but is being reclaimed.

Following in the ancestor’s footsteps (41.40)

Nicholas delineates the process of a burn, when traditional knowledge is relied upon. Kayla laments that the government only pays lip service to Indigenous knowledge and practices. 

The sum of the parts (49.44)

Kayla narrates how fire management plans are being updated in consultation with Indigenous groups, and how opt-in arrangements work for their lands.

Looking ahead (54.25)

Nicholas says the Indigenous communities are mindful of burning in the right seasons and work with nature’s cycles. He describes how burning assists animals in breeding.

Preventing brain drain (1.04.57)

Kayla mentions that the SRDC is creating opportunities for trained Guyanese people to stay in the country and serve the community. Nicholas’ work with SRDC is inspired by the desire to keep Indigenous knowledge alive and affirm Indigenous land rights.

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