The Christian Science Monitor

Canada gets serious about water woes. Will Indigenous voices be heard?

Brenda Greene, right, says she heads out on the Grand River to fish every weekend she can, and would welcome an entity like a Canada Water Agency to ensure water remains clean. "Water is life," she says.

Makaśa Looking Horse has been protecting the water since she was a child – as part of her spiritual beliefs, in protest against Nestlé’s extraction of water from her nation’s traditional land, and today as a youth advocate of Ohneganos, an Indigenous water research project that, in the Cayuga language, means “water is life.”

She doesn’t consider herself an activist. “It’s more like my way of life. And I do it every single day,” she says. It was passed down from her parents. “But it doesn’t stop there. My grandmothers and my ancestors, that’s what they always did, too. So it’s not just me and my activism in a little compartment. It’s me and my whole lineage and my people and my way of life, of always protecting the water.” 

Yet it’s exactly that worldview

“We have not protected our groundwater”Questions about a new agency“Water is everything; it is life”

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Christian Science Monitor

The Christian Science Monitor4 min readAmerican Government
Democrats Are Worried If Biden Stays – Or If He Goes
Gary Roush is the kind of progressive who spends his retirement protesting former President Donald Trump.  On Friday morning, the former technical writer rode the Metro from his home in College Park, Maryland, to the U.S. Supreme Court carrying a pos
The Christian Science Monitor4 min read
Meet The Coast’s Living Fossils. Horseshoe Crab Gets An Image Boost From Artists.
With its dome shape and spiky tail, the horseshoe crab might at first look like a fearsome visitor from another planet. But for artists like Heidi Mayo, the ancient creature is an approachable muse. A collection of 13 brightly painted horseshoe crab
The Christian Science Monitor3 min readPolitical Ideologies
Readers Write: How America Can Learn To Trust Elections Again
Thank you for the story “How America lost trust in elections – and why that matters” from the June 3 Weekly. It is very long and thorough. Unfortunately, it focuses on many details, rather than on the most important principle of a democracy. Two of t

Related Books & Audiobooks