NAC-SNM joins Indigenous Peoples from across the world, including the Coalition of Large Tribes and National Congress of American Indians at the United Nations

NAC-SNM joins Indigenous Peoples from across the world, including the Coalition of Large Tribes and National Congress of American Indians at the United Nations

Domestic discord has prevented the United States from emerging as a leader, especially in the international field, when it comes to international indigenous rights.” [1]

~Whitney Gravelle, President, Bay Mills Indian Community

Dedicated U.N. representation to NAC-State of New Mexico Next Gen: leaders of today and tomorrow

Indigenous Peoples have the right to traditional medicines and plants, and cultural, religious, and spiritual practices as recognized in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.  The Declaration presents an opportunity and a new kind of legal authority that could help Indigenous peoples to preserve and protect cultural, religious, and spiritual practices, and to secure rights to sacred places. “Last week, our representative amplified the message at the U.N. Permanent Forum that the Declaration asserts and protects the rights of indigenous peoples to have and use their traditional medicines and plants, and to access and protect the sacred lands on which these medicines and plants grow,” said Leo Dayish, President, NAC-SNM.

What is the theme of the 23rd Session of UNPFII?

Indigenous Peoples Right to Self-Determination.  Permanent Forum Member Keith S. Harper described self-determination as follows:  If a decision is going to impact a tribal community, then it is the tribal community itself that must have a say on how to handle the matter, and to determine what considerations should be brought to bear. Simply stated, tribal communities should decide on things that impact them, their members, their land, their traditional knowledge, their medicinal plants, their language, and their ceremonies.

U.S. Indigenous Peoples entered oral and written interventions at the 23rd Session of the UNFPII

NAC-SNM’s written intervention expressed that the health and sustainability of the naturally occurring plant Medicine, Peyote, that grows in south Texas, United States is threatened due to Misappropriation of Medicinal Plants and associated Traditional Knowledge and Lack of protection for Peyote and Peyote Habitat.  NAC-SNM requested the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues to urge the U.S. to:
Seek out and listen to the voices of respected Indigenous elders, ceremonial leaders, traditional practitioners, and community experts – who are the undeniable stewards of culturally revered items such as medicinal plants – to prevent the commercialization and patenting of indigenous medicinal plants; and
Take affirmative actions to initiate and support a Peyote Habitat conservation program to protect and preserve the Peyote in its naturally occurring habitat in the desert region of Southern Texas.