Alaska native sees culture, heritage endangered through climate change (fwd)

phil cash cash cashcash at EMAIL.ARIZONA.EDU
Tue Jun 20 16:06:39 UTC 2006


Alaska native sees culture, heritage endangered through climate change

By Dave Ranney
Tuesday, June 20, 2006
http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2006/jun/20/alaska_native_sees_culture_heritage_endangered_thr/?city_local

Global warming is squeezing the life out of Oscar Kawagley’s culture.

“It is scary,” he said. “Cold is what makes my language, my culture, my
identity. What am I going to do without cold?”

Kawagley, 71, grew up in Bethel, Alaska, a Yupiaq village where, he
said, “as a boy, we depended on seal for meat, for seal oil and for
clothing.”

Nowadays, he said, seals are scarce.

“They are getting harder and harder to find because the ice is getting
farther and farther out, and it’s not as thick,” Kawagley said. “Seals
have to have ice for their pups — so do walrus — but it is
disappearing.”

Kawagley spoke Monday at “Impact of Climate Change on Indigenous
Peoples,” a three-day symposium at Haskell Indian Nations University,
which is a first of its type for the school.

Other consequences of global warming:

• Undeterred by the cold, bark beetles and budworms are wiping out
thousands of acres of white and black spruce.

• The number of forest fires is increasing.

• Several fish species are disappearing.

• The region’s permafrost is melting.

• Coastal ice sheets are melting, exposing villages to the ocean’s
waters.

“It is a shame to see the pictures of the waves lapping against
villagers’ homes,” said Kawagley, an associate professor of education
at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks. “But it is a reality.”

• Polar bears are drowning because they must swim up to 60 miles in open
sea to find food. Some have turned to cannibalism.

• As food supplies dwindle, black, brown and grizzly bears are becoming
more aggressive.

“In Denali National Park today, they will not let you put up a tent
because of the bears,” Kawagley said.

Kawagley said his Yupiaq culture is reeling from the changes.

“I feel afraid for my grandchildren,” he said. “Already, they are in a
state of confusion.”

Kawagley’s comments struck a chord with Dan Wildcat, a Haskell
instructor and the symposium’s coordinator.

“These are major issues to face that are very disruptive to native
people — indigenous people who still take their identities, their
lifeways and their cultures from the landscapes they live on,” Wildcat
said.

“For people who are maintaining those traditions, these changes are
going to be very challenging.”

The symposium ends Thursday morning. About 30 people attended Monday’s
sessions.



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