Zürcher Nachrichten - Wildfires upend Indigenous Canadians' balance with nature

EUR -
AED 4.318258
AFN 77.593968
ALL 97.486019
AMD 448.916829
ANG 2.104511
AOA 1078.088492
ARS 1688.840913
AUD 1.762318
AWG 2.119143
AZN 2.00125
BAM 1.962609
BBD 2.367393
BDT 143.637092
BGN 1.955442
BHD 0.443169
BIF 3487.033346
BMD 1.175669
BND 1.520362
BOB 8.122109
BRL 6.356607
BSD 1.175368
BTN 106.094165
BWP 16.591419
BYN 3.448635
BYR 23043.106402
BZD 2.363981
CAD 1.619083
CDF 2622.916619
CHF 0.932734
CLF 0.027444
CLP 1076.606917
CNY 8.305626
CNH 8.287729
COP 4489.878742
CRC 585.325665
CUC 1.175669
CUP 31.15522
CVE 111.337593
CZK 24.203482
DJF 208.940198
DKK 7.469435
DOP 75.356033
DZD 152.819298
EGP 55.847766
ERN 17.63503
ETB 182.523003
FJD 2.675234
FKP 0.881425
GBP 0.876008
GEL 3.162486
GGP 0.881425
GHS 13.531644
GIP 0.881425
GMD 85.823724
GNF 10217.736249
GTQ 9.002154
GYD 245.870897
HKD 9.149018
HNL 30.861043
HRK 7.535447
HTG 153.932722
HUF 382.546094
IDR 19579.997913
ILS 3.77392
IMP 0.881425
INR 105.986474
IQD 1540.125989
IRR 49525.043408
ISK 148.204953
JEP 0.881425
JMD 188.314914
JOD 0.833551
JPY 182.500812
KES 151.898082
KGS 102.812572
KHR 4714.431536
KMF 496.132055
KPW 1058.136113
KRW 1730.642829
KWD 0.360577
KYD 0.97949
KZT 612.028075
LAK 25488.497473
LBP 105339.915163
LKR 363.48794
LRD 208.122753
LSL 20.057327
LTL 3.471444
LVL 0.711151
LYD 6.389796
MAD 10.878441
MDL 20.017275
MGA 5284.631056
MKD 61.540744
MMK 2468.806923
MNT 4169.761073
MOP 9.420903
MRU 46.838187
MUR 54.209864
MVR 18.108568
MWK 2041.551435
MXN 21.216364
MYR 4.831706
MZN 75.137402
NAD 20.056804
NGN 1707.459503
NIO 43.217799
NOK 11.820414
NPR 169.750464
NZD 2.02034
OMR 0.452034
PAB 1.175368
PEN 3.953745
PGK 4.996004
PHP 69.249284
PKR 329.598889
PLN 4.224571
PYG 8032.799501
QAR 4.280723
RON 5.09123
RSD 117.403464
RUB 94.345003
RWF 1707.070944
SAR 4.411832
SBD 9.676449
SCR 17.703378
SDG 707.166687
SEK 10.857476
SGD 1.517841
SHP 0.882056
SLE 28.332542
SLL 24653.182491
SOS 671.893267
SRD 45.366114
STD 24333.9683
STN 25.100527
SVC 10.2849
SYP 12999.196213
SZL 20.057183
THB 37.186857
TJS 10.837104
TMT 4.126597
TND 3.449117
TOP 2.830728
TRY 50.086541
TTD 7.976605
TWD 36.67604
TZS 2884.782974
UAH 49.61457
UGX 4179.464075
USD 1.175669
UYU 46.281349
UZS 14119.781189
VES 302.859645
VND 30952.417541
VUV 144.011339
WST 3.268474
XAF 658.234986
XAG 0.018318
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.177303
XCG 2.118331
XDR 0.819378
XOF 661.901517
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.426318
ZAR 19.823438
ZMK 10582.423162
ZMW 26.946254
ZWL 378.56484
  • RYCEF

    0.2300

    14.85

    +1.55%

  • CMSC

    0.1000

    23.4

    +0.43%

  • RBGPF

    3.1200

    81.17

    +3.84%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    0.6800

    76.92

    +0.88%

  • AZN

    -0.8300

    90.68

    -0.92%

  • GSK

    0.2600

    48.67

    +0.53%

  • BP

    -0.2800

    35.6

    -0.79%

  • BTI

    -0.3250

    58.435

    -0.56%

  • NGG

    0.2400

    74.88

    +0.32%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    12.58

    +0.16%

  • RELX

    0.1650

    40.245

    +0.41%

  • BCE

    0.2650

    23.455

    +1.13%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.74

    +0.15%

  • BCC

    -1.0900

    75.92

    -1.44%

  • CMSD

    -0.0310

    23.249

    -0.13%

Wildfires upend Indigenous Canadians' balance with nature
Wildfires upend Indigenous Canadians' balance with nature / Photo: Mathiew LEISER - AFP

Wildfires upend Indigenous Canadians' balance with nature

Adrienne Jerome is heartbroken.

Text size:

Her house survived Canada’s record wildfires this year, but everything that made her and many other Indigenous people in the area feel at home -- the spruce forests that enveloped her town, providing not just food but protection, everything from game to medicinal plants -- is gone.

"An evacuation in the middle of the night, with sirens blaring... it was a great shock," the former leader of this Anishinaabe tribe told AFP. "Children were crying and didn't want to leave their mothers.”

As they recover from this summer’s fires, isolated Indigenous communities surrounded by vast forests and often reachable only by air or a long, winding road are now facing big questions about their ability to maintain traditional ways of life.

"The forest that protects us has disappeared," Jerome says in a quavering voice.

"Our pantry has disappeared. There are no more small game animals, no hares, no partridges. All of the medicinal plants have burned."

All that remains now are blackened trunks.

A record number of wildfires, topping more 6,400 at last count, scorched almost 18 million hectares (nearly 70,000 square miles) this year, and forced thousands of Indigenous people to flee for their lives. Although they only represent five percent of Canada's population, they nevertheless constitute one in two evacuees.

Some communities had to evacuate multiple times over the spring and summer.

- 'Our church has disappeared' -

Wildfires are now "so dangerous and fast-moving" that evacuations are increasingly necessary, says Amy Cardinal Christianson, a Canadian Forest Service researcher who studies the effects of burns on Indigenous communities.

This poses particular challenges for remote northern villages with few or no links to Canada's large population centers in the south.

Anxieties are compounded by "a lack of trust that wildfire agencies will protect what the person or community values the most," says Christianson.

"That might be a trapline, a ceremonial site, a herd of cattle."

But the fires have become so big and numerous of late that authorities have been forced to prioritize saving homes in larger towns or cities under threat, over all else.

Everything Indigenous people do is rooted in "the forest, our territory," says Lucien Wabanonik, leader of the Lac-Simon community, his own home just steps from the woodland.

"Other people don't realize the loss that this represents for us. It's not a loss that we measure on a financial scale," he explains.

"Sacred sites, burials, meeting places have disappeared with the fire," he laments. "Our church had disappeared. It's an immense loss."

- 'It smells of death' -

This year marked the first time the Lac-Simon community had to evacuate due to forest fires.

Fires have flared in the region before but never on this scale: lightning sparked hundreds of fires at once during a weekend of storms in early June that lit up tinder dry forests.

"It smells like death," says Jerome, adding that she sobs when she thinks of all the wildlife that got trapped by advancing fires.

The community has mourned their deaths in several ceremonies.

At the same time, however, the fires have prompted renewed interest in reviving Indigenous practices that are currently curtailed.

Several Indigenous communities are calling for a return to prescribed burns to prevent wildfires, which involve setting a specific area on fire under controlled conditions to clear dead branches, brush and other materials that could become fuel for massive blazes.

Their ancestors used cultural burning practices for millennia, but there are legal barriers to who can do it now.

"These burns produce a mosaic on the landscape, creating or keeping meadows open, and promoting earlier succession forests with lots of deciduous trees that are less likely to cause crown fires," says Christianson.

Firefighters can use these "natural fire breaks to fight an out-of-control wildfire," she adds.

Adds Wabanonik, "a major shift must be taken."

O.Hofer--NZN