2022
DOI: 10.1111/anhu.12420
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Feeding the Land: The Importance of Paying Attention to Sakha Language with Traditional Ecological Knowledge

Abstract: SUMMARY Through (auto)ethnographic research in the Amga and Megino‐Khangalas uluses (districts) in the Sakha Republic (Yakutia), in this article, we discuss the intrinsic importance of paying close attention to Indigenous languages when exploring Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK). Here, language refers not only to vocabulary but also to the kinds of communicative practices or speech acts used to transmit or talk about TEK, especially those that reveal the indivisibility of the physical and spiritual eleme… Show more

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“…Indigenous Knowledge enables stewardship of land, a reciprocal relationship of respect and care for things and beings created to inhabit Mother Earth. In Sakha worldview, language is key to understanding Indigenous Knowledge, and transmitting it to future generations through many traditional rituals with spirits, ontologies, and ecological practices take place in Sakha language, which thus helps to maintain the sustainability of the Sakha people [42]. Finally, and very importantly, Indigenous understandings of human-nature relations are underpinned by Indigenous spirituality manifested through ceremony and reverence to the human and non-human worlds.…”
Section: Indigenous Understanding Of Sustainabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indigenous Knowledge enables stewardship of land, a reciprocal relationship of respect and care for things and beings created to inhabit Mother Earth. In Sakha worldview, language is key to understanding Indigenous Knowledge, and transmitting it to future generations through many traditional rituals with spirits, ontologies, and ecological practices take place in Sakha language, which thus helps to maintain the sustainability of the Sakha people [42]. Finally, and very importantly, Indigenous understandings of human-nature relations are underpinned by Indigenous spirituality manifested through ceremony and reverence to the human and non-human worlds.…”
Section: Indigenous Understanding Of Sustainabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%