"The Moral Reserve of Humanity"
By ROXANNE DUNBAR-ORTIZ
"I'm convinced that indigenous peoples are the moral reserve of humanity."
Evo Morales, Aymara, President of Bolivia, Democracy Now! September 26, 2007.
Every year as October 12 approaches,       there is a  certain sense  of dread that can be felt in  indigenous        communities in the  Americas.  That it is a federal  holiday       in the United States is  regarded as hideous, a  celebration       of genocide and colonization  However,  beginning thirty years       ago, indigenous peoples formed   an international movement, demanding,       for one thing,  that  October 12 be commemorated as an international        day of mourning  for the Indigenous Peoples of the  Americas.        Informally, the day  has been appropriated  as Indigenous Peoples       Day
    
     This year feels different in indigenous communities  asthey celebrate       the great victory of the adoption of  the United Nations Declaration       on the Rights of  Indigenous Peoples by the General Assembly on        September 13, 2007, the culmination of a  three-decadestruggle       by indigenous activists at the United  Nations. The UN Declaration       was adopted by a  majority of 144 states in favor, with only       four votes  against: Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United        States. Interestingly, these are precisely the four  nation-states       where intentional genocidal policies  were pursued, policies       that sought to exterminate all the indigenous peoples living       in the lands seized by  settlers from the British Isles. The       populations of  those states should be ashamed, not only of their        horrific pasts, but of the present refusal of their  representative       governments to make amends with the  descendants of thos indigenous       peoples who survived  these genocidal policies.
    
     Perhaps those governments and their citizens think  they do not       have to recognize the rights of  indigenous peoples within their       claimed boundaries because the  populations are small. Yet, the       survival and  flourishing of indigenous communities and nations       is  important to the future of humanity and to the  survival       of habitation on earth.
    
     Speaking to the United Nations General Assembly on  September       16, Bolivian president Evo Morales stressed  the need to understand       the indigenous way of life,  saying that living well in a community       meant living  in harmony with Mother Earth. "This new millennium       must  be the millennium for life, placing our bets on  human       dignity." (UN webcast.)
 
 
 
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