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Canadian teen tells UN 'warrior up' to protect water

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Canadian teen tells UN 'warrior up' to protect water

Autumn Peltier, 13-year-old from Manitoulin Island, tells leaders world must stop polluting water

Melissa Kent · CBC News

Autumn Peltier

It's time to "warrior up," stop polluting the planet and give water the same rights and protections as human beings. That's the message Autumn Peltier, a 13-year-old Canadian, delivered personally to the United Nations General Assembly on Thursday.

"Many people don't think water is alive or has a spirit," the Anishinaabe girl from Wikwemikong First Nation told the diplomats gathered in New York City in her speech on World Water Day. "My people believe this to be true.

"Our water deserves to be treated as human with human rights. We need to acknowledge our waters with personhood so we can protect our waters," Peltier said, her five-foot frame standing on a stool behind the podium so she could reach the microphone.

The teenager from Manitoulin Island, Ont., was invited as the "representative of civil society," joining UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres and other international dignitaries for the launch the UN's International Decade for Action on Water for Sustainable Development.

"By 2050 at least one in four people will live in a country where the lack of fresh water is chronic or recurrent," Guterres said during his address, adding that states need to better manage and preserve world water resources. More than 2.1 billion already lack safe drinking water at home, according to UN figures — and that includes people in Canada.

"No one should have to worry if the water is clean or if they will run out of water," Peltier said in her speech. "No child should grow up not knowing what clean water is, or never know what running water is.

"We all have a right to this water as we need it — not just rich people, all people."

"It's definitely not very common to see a 13-year old girl addressing the 193 member states of the United Nations," said the Brenden Varma, spokesperson for the president of the General Assembly.

"We're used to having world leaders … often speaking very bureaucratic language."

Varma said hearing Peltier give such a heartfelt address was a treat for everyone in the room. "We were all very moved," he said. "She was amazing."

Henk Ovink described Peltier's speech as inspiring and "in our faces as leaders of the world." The Special Envoy for International Water Affairs for the Netherlands said collaborating with those who will inherit the Earth is essential.

"It's the young that can help us leap forward, so we have to listen to the young and implement their ideas," Ovink said.

"I wasn't nervous because I felt like they all wanted to hear what I had to say and I felt heard," Peltier told CBC News after her address. "It's just a great feeling to be speaking in front of world leaders."

She said it took her three days to write the speech, which she very nearly didn't get to deliver.

Autumn's mother, Stephanie Peltier, said she was in the middle of an email purge when the UN invitation arrived. "I said this is probably a scam, and I almost deleted it."

Then their flight from Toronto was cancelled three times. So she and her mother ended up driving all the way to New York City — a 15-hour trip.

"I am really proud," said Peltier, who is a single parent. "I never imagined I'd be sitting here with her speaking at the United Nations."

Water advocate

This wasn't Peltier's first speech — the resident of the Wikwemikong Unceded Territory has become a well-known advocate for safe drinking water for Indigenous communities and clean waterways in Canada.

She attended the 2015 Children's Climate Conference in Sweden, is the only Canadian nominated for the 2017 Children's International Peace Prize, and had a tearful encounter with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in 2016 where he promised to take steps to protect water in Canada.

"We are working to ensure that ‎everyone has access to safe, clean, and reliable drinking water," Louise Blais, deputy ambassador at the Canadian Mission to the UN, told CBC News on Thursday. That includes working with First Nations communities to ensure their water is safe to drink.

Blais described Peltier's address as a further "call to action" for nations around the world to protect water for future generations.

Experience of a lifetime

Peltier herself is a very composed and thoughtful teenager. Her mother says people often aren't sure how to take her.

"My mom even used to call her little old woman girl," said Stephanie, referring to Autumn's grandmother. "Sometimes we joke around and tell her to smile a little."

The 13-year old insists she has a social life outside of her activism, but that pollution and water scarcity scare her. "With what Mother Earth is going through right now, imagine that in 10 years ..."

"Where I come from I am so fortunate — I can still drink the water from the lakes," she told the delegates at the UN on Thursday. She pointed out that many others around the world, and even across Canada, can't do that, including several communities near hers that have had boil-water advisories.

"I actually cried about it. And it makes me really mad when I think about it," she said in an interview at her home prior to the UN visit.

She has continued to speak out about the problems, even in the face of bullying from some of her peers at school.

Her mother Stephanie has ensured her children follow their traditional path of water protection by instilling a strong sense of identity and culture. Autumn adds that she was also inspired by her great-aunt Josephine Mandamin, a water walker who trekked the shores of all five Great Lakes to bring attention to issues threatening Canada's largest natural resource.

"What I've been told through ceremonies is Mother Earth has been surviving for millions of years without us. And it's taken us less than a century to destroy her - and Mother Earth doesn't need us, but we need her," she says.

Peltier said she has already received a lot of positive feedback from people in the audience at the UN who heard her speech, which she hopes will translate into action.

"This was the experience of a lifetime."

Peltier left the gathered international dignitaries at the UN with this message: "One day I will be an ancestor, and I want my great-grand-children to know I tried hard to fight so they can have clean drinking water."

CBC News asked Autumn Peltier what being a water advocate means to her, and what her advice would be for young people who want to follow her example as a "water keeper." Here's what she said:

My experience as a water keeper is more of an honour to the water and Mother Earth. Doing this work is very spiritual, and I feel connected to the water in spirit.

I also am proud to represent my people, and especially my community.

I enjoy meeting new people and travelling to new places and learning about their issues, and seeing if I can help in some way. I hope I am making a difference for our future and our great grandchildren.

If you want to become a water keeper:

Learn as much as you can from your elders and your teachers.

Learn your history. Learn your language. Listen and ask questions.

Pay attention to the climate and the animals. Have respect for all living things.

Talk with Mother Earth, sit with her and thank her. Make offerings of tobacco, pray and give thanks.

​Have fun and be a kid as much as you can. Get your school or class involved in a type of activity to help the land.

Talk to your friends and share ideas. Inspire and encourage others.

If you have a idea, act and make it happen. Don't be shy, there are no rights or wrongs — anyone can do this work.

Just do it!!!

http://www.cbc.ca/beta/news/canada/autumn-peltier-un-water-activist-united-nations-1.4584871
 

Aardvark154

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Jan 19, 2006
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A United Nations budget of 5.4 billion dollars so a thirteen year-old girl can pronounce that "Our water deserves to be treated as human with human rights. We need to acknowledge our waters with personhood so we can protect our waters." Given that Canada pays but 2.9 percent of it perhaps it is fun for the giggles but when like the U.S.A. you pay 22 percent ($1.2 billion) of it, you can understand why people are resentful.
 
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