Kahnawake's 1st youth delegation heading to COP26 climate conference
CBC
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Four youth from Kahnawake are heading to the United Nations climate change conference next week, hoping to bring back knowledge to help mitigate climate change in their community.
They're a part of the first youth delegation from the Kanien'kehá:ka (Mohawk) community located south of Montreal to attend the global summit.
Taking place in Glasgow, Scotland, Oct. 31-Nov. 12, COP26 will bring together parties from across the globe to accelerate action on the UN framework convention on climate change.
CBC Indigenous spoke to the four youth about what they're hoping to gain from the experience, and why it's important for Indigenous youth to be represented.
"It's a space where all of these massive climate policies are being negotiated," said Carlee Kawinehta Loft, one of the youth attending.
"It's a way to learn from each other on how we on a community level are addressing the climate crisis and how we can work together to be even stronger."
Loft attended COP25 in Madrid in 2019. At the time, she was the only Indigenous person in a delegation of youth in Quebec who attended, and felt more youth from Kahnawake could benefit from the conference.
It's why she organized this delegation through her role as the youth engagement co-ordinator at Kahnawake Collective Impact, with support from Indigenous Climate Action, the Climate Reality Project, and YMCA Quebec.
She said in preparation for the conference, the delegation has been attending training from Indigenous Climate Action and has also been meeting on their own for the past few weeks to prepare and construct a message that they hope to deliver at the conference.
The message will be in Kanien'kéha, or the Mohawk language, said delegate Ohontsakéhte Montour.
Montour is a cultural development officer at the Kanien'kehá:ka Onkwawén:na Raotitióhkwa Language and Cultural Center, and said it was an important decision the delegation made as the language is directly tied to the land.
"If you understand our language and culture, the land is so important. The Earth is so important. There's a clear connection between climate change and who we are," said Montour.
He said every day he recites the Ohén:ton Karihwatéhkwen, an address to give thanks to the waters, Mother Earth, and everything in the natural world.