Aligning with our Power During Climate Crisis: An Indigenous Action List

PennElys Droz, Sarah Sunshine Manning · September 25, 2019

Aligning with our Power During Climate Crisis: An Indigenous Action List

We hold the solutions to our greatest ecological challenges, and we also hold within us the power to ensure that our future is one that is just and beautiful for future generations.

While the world engages in important conversations around the climate crisis, Indigenous people are faced with especially unique experiences, challenges and opportunities. As the result of centuries of colonialism and disenfranchisement, Indigenous lands and life ways have already been deeply impacted by environmental degradation. With the growing climate crisis, Indigenous cultures, which are inextricably connected to the land, are now being threatened in unprecedented ways.

During this critical time, our values and inherent responsibilities call upon us to take action.

Some may ask themselves, “Well, what can I do,” which is an incredibly important question to ask ourselves as Indigenous people and good relatives to our Mother Earth. But we must also be mindful to stand in our power as we reflect on this.  As we actively resist the ongoing destruction of our Mother Earth and our precious ecosystems, we must align ourselves with our personal and communal power, and take action! creating solutions for a sustainable, regenerative future.

Here are a handful of things that you can do to channel all of that valuable energy and anxt into something positive for the Earth, our communities, and all our relations: 

Engage and Resist to Protect Land, Air, Water, and Families

  • Are your lands and waters in danger of contamination and degradation?  Conduct research in order to find out what the source of this contamination or degradation is, and mobilize with like-minded people to take action.
  • Talk to your elders, peers, and community members to learn, share, and build the power of your voices!  
  • Research what other Indigenous communities have been resisting in order to protect their lands and waters.  Reach out to them to learn strategies.
  • Build creative partnerships to clean up toxic sites.  Who might be interested in protecting and cleaning up the land?  Neighboring communities? Non-Indigenous farmers, hunters, and fishers? Downstream water users?  Find your allies!
  • Support the struggles of others!  Sign that petition, make those phone calls, donate money and supplies if you can, and if you are able, join calls for action!

Reconnect to your Lands, Waters, and Community

  • Learn or re-learn traditional harvesting and land care.  Do you know any harvesters, farmers, hunters, or fishers? This will build your relationships with the spirits of the land and help to restore balance to the land.  With that knowledge, you will be able to help your community. If you don’t know people, go out on the land and begin learning the shapes, patterns, plants, and animals.  Read. Learn from whoever you can! 
  • Pray and fast on the land.  Visit your sacred sites. 
  • Imagine new economies. What do we need to provide and thrive?  How can this be done in a way that honors the land?  Don’t be afraid to dream! Talk with your friends, family, elders, community members and share ideas!
  • Localize our trade. The more local we get, the more responsible and caring we can be.
  • Reduce energy use. Talk to your Nations’ planners, housing, leadership about the absolute necessity of renewable energy. Build a team in your community to advocate for this.  Work with the schools and youth! Learn how to produce energy yourself! 
  • Learn how your ancestors built homes.  What materials did they use? What architecture did they use?  How can we make sure any new housing reflects local material use and energy saving measures?  
  • Honor water. Use a water well, and learn how to work with plants to purify water.
  • Use nontoxic cleaning supplies.  Baking soda, Oasis soap, and Citrasolv eliminate most other cleaning supply needs.
  • Plant seeds and support local food systems!  
  • Learn your language! The understandings that will help us be resilient and thrive are within our languages. 
  • Teach our children the beauty in the world and in their cultures.  Help them to feel strong, disciplined, and gentle.  Outreach and connect to other parents who are trying to do the same. Parenting is a challenge, and we need to support each other!
  • Take children outside and help them open up their creative vision to learn from the Earth.  Excessive technology removes their minds from this creativity, so try to make sure they are required to be outside without screens for periods of time throughout the day.  We are raising the next generations’ elders. 

The possibilities here are endless! 

Whatever you do, remember that as an Indigenous person and as Indigenous communities, we are uniquely equipped to create solutions that not only stem from time-honored traditions that honor the Earth and all our relations, but we also descend from some of the most innovative and resilient people on this Earth!  Our love for the land, for the ancestors we descend from, and for our communities today, can fuel us with rich inspiration.

We hold the solutions to our greatest ecological challenges, and we also hold within us the power to ensure that our future is one that is just and beautiful for future generations.

To learn more about the NDN Collective and our recommendations around climate justice, check out our Position Paper: Mobilizing an Indigenous Green New Deal.

PennElys Droz
by   PennElys Droz

Dr. PennElys Droz (she/her), Power Building & Curriculum Coordinator , is Anishinaabe/Wyandot from the US-Canadian border. Droz directs the planning, execution and evaluation of the NDN Fellowship & Prize. Droz brings two decades experience in the Indigenous environmental and regenerative Nation building movements to re-develop ecologically, culturally and economically thriving and resilient Native Nations. She has a Bachelor’s degree in Environmental Science and Technology and a Master’s degree in Environmental Resource Engineering from Humboldt State University and a PhD in Biocultural Engineering Design, American Indian Studies from University of Arizona.

Sarah Sunshine Manning
by   Sarah Sunshine Manning

Sarah Sunshine Manning, NDN Collective Director of Communications, is a citizen of the Shoshone-Paiute Tribes of the Duck Valley Indian Reservation in Idaho and Nevada, and Chippewa-Cree of Rocky Boy, Montana. Manning directs NDN Collective’s communications strategy and impact. She also serves as producer of the NDN Podcast While Indigenous and as editor of the NDN blog. Manning has Bachelor’s degrees in American Indian Studies, Social Science-History, and licensure in Secondary Education. She has a Master’s degree in journalism and mass communication.

March 2023 Edition

Stay Informed. Take Action.

Subscribe to the NDN allies newsletter

Sign up to get our newsletter. Delivered once per month.

We care about the protection of your data and would never sell your email or share it with anyone without your permission.

NDN Collective Responds to Forest Services Commitment to Study Mining Impacts in the Black Hills Posted 7 months ago
“This is a victory for Tribal Sovereignty. The fight to protect ALL of the water of the sacred Black Hills continues and we remain vigilant and committed to this duty. We stand in solidarity with communities that have been defending Ȟešapa for generations, when our treaties are honored it protects the water for everyone.”
NDN Collective Slams Biden Greenlighting Willow Oil Project Posted 7 months ago
“The Biden administration’s decision to greenlight the Willow project is a climate disaster in the making. Today’s decision completely contradicts not only the administration’s climate goals, but also its commitment to consider Traditional Ecological Knowledge in federal policy making."
Willow Project Threatens Traditional Caribou Hunting: Naqsragmiut Tribal President Writes Letter to the DOI Requesting Consultation Posted 7 months ago
"Residents of our community described concerns about potential impacts to our primary diet, Caribou, to global warming, and to our way of life. BLM has not come back to our community this time and we feel our people and their concerns have been overlooked."
Consultation Process Inadequate: New Letter from Nuiqsut Community Leaders to Department of Interior Posted 7 months ago
It seems that despite its nod to traditional ecological knowledge, BLM does not consider relevant the extensive knowledge and expertise we have gained over millennia, living in a way that is so deeply connected to our environment.
Paying Respects to the American Indian Movement, 50 Years since the Occupation of Wounded Knee

Brandy Calabaza

Posted 7 months ago
NDN Collective joins hundreds at the American Indian Movement 4 Directions March commemorating the 1973 Occupation of Wounded Knee, and members of the team share reflections on the power and purpose of the day.
Lancement de la bourse Imagination radicale de 1000 000 USD du Collectif NDN pour les artistes/porteurs·euses de culture de toutes traditions, médiums et genres Posted 7 months ago
Des bourses allant jusqu’à 50 000 USD par an sont offertes aux artistes, aux porteurs·euses de culture et aux conteurs·euses autochtones de toutes traditions, médiums et genres œuvrant à la défense, au développement et à la décolonisation des peuples autochtones et de la planète. 
NDN Collective Joins Tribes, Organizers, and Activists Across Turtle Island in Mobilization to #StopCopCity

Sherrie Anne Hart , Angelica (Angie) Solloa

Posted 7 months ago
"Building Cop City on stolen Indigenous Lands, to inflict violence in a Black neighborhood, on a piece of land that is essential for air quality and much needed biodiversity to combat climate change is racist, unjust and the opposite direction that we need to be heading in."
NDN Collective Announces the 2023 Radical Imagination Grant Open Application Period Posted 7 months ago
Ten Indigenous artists, artist collectives or small nonprofits of all artistic traditions, mediums and genres will be awarded $100,000 grants over two years.
Police Assault Indigenous Youth with Disabilities at Central High School Posted 8 months ago
"We must prioritize resources and solutions that promote restorative justice, mental health services, and other interventions that address the root causes of conflict, rather than relying on punitive measures that perpetuate the cycle of violence and harm."
“Medicine in a world of violence”: Shining Light on Community-led Efforts to fight the MMIR Epidemic

Janene Yazzie

Posted 8 months ago
Challenging the commercialization of February 14, NDN Collective’s Southwest Regional Director Janene Yazzie calls attention to the MMIR (Missing and Murdered Indigenous Relatives) Day of Awareness, National Day of Action, and grassroots efforts to fight the MMIR epidemic. Yazzie also shares future MMIR programming from NDN Collective coming soon.

United like never before, we rise together—arm in arm—to equip all Indigenous Peoples with the tools needed to become architects of our future. Through a holistic approach to infrastructure, funding, advocacy, movement building, and philanthropy we are fostering a world of justice and equity for all people and the planet.