We have been absolutely blown away by the huge response we’re getting from Indigenous individuals and organizations planning to attend COP15 in Denmark in December. Representatives from Canada, the United States, Samoa, Australia, New Caledonia, the Philippines, Greenland, the Carteret Islands, Uganda, Mexico and the Cook Islands have already agreed to share their stories with us in Copenhagen.
And from what we’re being told, that’s only the beginning! At Klimaforum09, global civil society/NGO conference paralleling the official UN event, a whole day (December 10th) is focused on issues of Indigenous peoples, their lands, and the Environment.
Vandana Shiva, recipient of the Right Livelihood Award for her work on behalf of women and the Earth, is traveling from India to participate in Klimaforum09, and and is one of the many who has agreed to an interview with us.
As a non-Indigenous filmmaker, I’m honoured and humbled by the opportunity to experience so many passionate, Indigenous voices harmonizing around the common dream of ecological health and responsibility.
Sadly, as the conference approaches, there is a building sense that the politicians, yet again, are going to fail us…
… However, in the face of political bureaucratic gridlock, a resolve is building amongst the global population. People everywhere are realizing it is up to them, to each of us, to be a part of the change. It is clear our governments and “leaders” are not going to do it for us.
In so many cases, the Indigenous people we are meeting are the ones on the front lines of this global battle: it is their lands being ravaged for economic greed; their crops stunted by years of drought; their islands drowning as the tides continue to rise.

More than most traveling to Copenhagen this December, many of the Indigenous delegates understand the severity of the stakes we are facing. They are coming to share their experiences with us. But more than that, they are also sharing their hopes and, so often, their solutions.
What we need to do is listen. Learn. Act. Our health and the health of the planet depend on it.