Cultures, Climate, Care: Indigeneity & the Nature of Global Change
Mar 08
Apr 05 2022
event: talk in-person

“All of our values are expressed through Nature, and then Nature teaches us how to behave.”

— Herb Nabigon, Anishinaabe healer & author of The Hollow Tree

“If the eye were not sun-like, how could we ever see light? And if God’s power did not dwell within us, how could we delight in things divine.”

— Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Preface to his Scientific Studies

The Goethe-Institut Toronto has invited Prof. Tim Leduc, associate professor in land-based social work at Wilfrid Laurier University, and elder Gae Ho Hwako Norma Jacobs to open their new Goethe Air Space in downtown Toronto. Designed along biophilic concepts to facilitate explorations between the natural, cultural and digital realms we inhabit, the Goethe-Institut’s new green plant wall will guide this workshop series into reflections on the interrelation between cultures, trees, climate and an ethic of care. An exchange with respondents from Germany will connect insights from Canada and Europe.

This three-part conversation ‘Cultures, Climate & Care’ is concerned with the interwoven pattern between the quality of how we live and how the world responds to us. While the opening quotes by Nabigon and Goethe point to the potential of culturally fostering mutually beneficial relations with nature, we are experiencing the destructive potential of uprooted ways of living. In Europe, record wildfires and floods have raged, while in Germany a coalition of activists protects the Hambach Forest and confronts climate injustice. On Turtle Island (North America), forest fires brought a smoggy haze to large swaths of the continent, while Indigenous Land Back and anti-pipeline protests call for resistance and renewal. Arising with these calls has been an awareness of how systemic racial injustices haunt us with ongoing colonial abuses against Indigenous and Black peoples, women of colour, their children and the Earth.

Session 1: Culture

March 8 @ 12 noon EST

Our first session looks at cultural ways of activating our knowledge and practices of care through the natural relations around us. After a rendition of the Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving Address by Norma Jacobs (virtually), Tim Leduc will, against the backdrop of the Goethe Air Space’s green wall, reflect on connections between her teachings, her culture’s Tree of Peace and the European Tree of Life, the oak in German culture. Most poignant for this talk will be Goethe’s approach to “active seeing” of plant relations and the plant spirit that he termed Urpflanze. With Tim Leduc and Norma Jacobs.

Session 2: Climate

March 22 @ 12 noon EST

Looking at all the fallen white pines and oaks that crisscross Toronto’s ravines, it is clear that we live in a time of more extreme weather events; expanding losses in biological life that is the planet’s sixth mass extinction event; quickening uncertainty for Indigenous peoples in a melting north; and conflicts over energy extraction and consumption highlighted by pipeline protests across Turtle Island (North America). Session 2 considers the cultural responses to our climate of change. With Tim Leduc and Stefan Soldovieri.

Session 3: Care

April 5 @ 12 noon EST

The sense of medicine(s) is innate in every being when they are connected to their source, and people can draw upon healing medicines like those found in plants through fostering good relations with nature. There is medicine in the German oak and the Haudenosaunee onerahtase’ko:wa (white pine).

We can learn much from the trees and nature around us, as Anishinaabe healer Herb Nabigon explains in his book The Hollow Tree: “My culture embraces universal values [e.g., Peace, Kindness, Sharing, Respect] that are treasured by all … major cultures and religions. However, the traditional Native culture expresses these values in a unique way. All of our values are expressed through Nature, and then Nature teaches us how to behave.” The significant challenge today is to renew our diverse cultural medicines in the midst of a turbulent climate, and we will reflect on the value of re-learning to root our ways of living and caring in our land. With Tim Leduc, Kerstin Ensinger, Norma Jacobs.

Participants

Goethe-Institut Toronto, Prof. Tim Leduc (Wilfried Laurier University), Elder Gae Ho Hwako Norma Jacobs, Dr. Kerstin Ensinger (Black Forest National Park)

Acknowledgements

Accessibility

Who should visitors contact with questions regarding accessibility?
Victoria Rebelo
Is this venue accessible by wheelchair or similar mobility devices? This includes access to washrooms and all aspects of programming/events.
Yes
Can people get to the venue using accessible transit?
Yes
Young copper beeches on dead wood in the Steigerwald photo N. Uhde courtesy BUND
Copper Beech in Spessart Mountains photo H. Heidecke courtesy BUND
Biodiversity_thick dead wood in Steigerwald photo N. Uhde courtesy BUND
Donkey hike Thuringia Green Belt c BUND Dpt Green Belt
old copper beech in Sababurg primeval forest photo N. Uhde courtesy BUND
2018 protest at Hambach Forest, Germany, courtesy BUND