How #Indigenous #FoodSovereignty can improve #FoodSecurity

Sustainable Bites: Food and Our Future What can we do to help make our food systems more sustainable? UBC researchers share small steps that can make a big collective impact. 

March 24, 2025

"Indigenous households experience food insecurity at rates two to three times higher than non-Indigenous households in Canada. #Agroecologist Dr. #JenniferGrenz, an Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Forestry and Faculty of Land and Food Systems, studies Indigenous food sovereignty and food systems, and how to revitalize them.

Did you know?

#Kwetlal, or #camas, a lily-like plant with a starchy bulb, was an important staple for #IndigenousPeoples along the #SalishSea.
Kwetlal was cultivated in Garry oak #ecosystems by #W̱SÁNEĆ and Quw’utsun Peoples, until #colonization nearly destroyed these unique food systems.

What does Indigenous food sovereignty mean?

" 'Indigenous food sovereignty is the reclamation and revitalization of our food systems,' says Dr. Grenz, who is Nlaka’pamux of mixed ancestry, whose family comes from the #Lytton First Nation. She grew up and lives on the coast of BC.

"The lands across #BritishColumbia, Dr. Grenz explains, were purposefully shaped since time immemorial for foods, medicines and technologies by the Indigenous Peoples who lived there until colonial settlers dispossessed them of their lands, culture and traditions.

" 'Indigenous food sovereignty is also about #CulturalResurgence: being able to access those foods and medicines again and find new ones as we face a changing climate,' said Dr. Grenz. 'Heal the people, heal the land. Heal the land, heal the people. I think that’s really what food sovereignty is about.'

"Revitalizing Indigenous food systems can help diversify and localize food systems in ways that could buffer against #FoodInsecurity in a changing climate.

"Dr. Grenz’s research team is working alongside Indigenous communities impacted by the 2021 heat dome and wildfires to understand the effects on culturally important plants.

" 'If you think of land as just vegetation and an aesthetic notion of what belongs, you’re going to have very different approaches and different outcomes to recovery than if you see that land as a food system, not just for humans, but for our animal, bird, fish and insect relations,' says Dr. Grenz. 'We’re working alongside communities to develop those Indigenized processes around wildfire recovery that honour Indigenous food systems, sustainability and resiliency.”'

How can #Settlers support the revitalization of Indigenous food systems?

"Learn about the histories of the lands you live on and what the traditional food systems were, what they are now and what they could be, says Dr. Grenz.

"Incorporating reciprocity into your relationship with the land is also important. 'Learn about the plants of those lands and find a way to invite them into your life. How can you take care of them, nurture them and steward them?' asks Dr. Grenz.

"One way might be to Indigenize your own back yard or community garden. Or learn about Indigenous food system protocols and the concept of '#HonourableHarvest.'

How can land-based learning support Indigenous food sovereignty?

"Land-based learning is an opportunity to get students and people out on the land—and start taking steps to give back while they are learning.

"At #UBCFarm, Dr. Grenz and students are starting two different Indigenous food systems to work as part of the agrarian food system that exists there — 'essentially bridging two food systems, #decolonizing and #Indigenizing our understandings of what foods are and how those two systems work together to benefit both.'

"In one, they are establishing a Garry oak ecosystem and growing camas, which is a traditional food system of the W̱SÁNEĆ  and Quw’utsun Peoples. Another type of #ForestGarden, similar to other Coast #Salish, #Tsimshian or #Haida food systems, will see the forest shaped by different plants like beaked #hazelnut, #elderberry, #salmonberry and #thimbleberry.

The students will be able to practice how to care for plants ordinarily thought of as forest plants, and 'learn how to reclaim traditional #LandStewardship practices to actually increase the production of those berries.' "

Source [includes video links]:
https://beyond.ubc.ca/how-indigenous-food-sovereignty-can-improve-food-security/

#SolarPunkSunday #FirstNations #Quwutsun #ClimateChange #Resilience #DecolonizeYourDiet #HonorIndigenousFoodSystems #LandBasedLearning #IndigenousFoodSovereignty #IndigenousFoods #BuildingCommunity #CommunityGardens #FoodForests

How Indigenous food sovereignty can improve food security - Beyond

Indigenous food sovereignty can help heal both the land and its people as we face the challenges of climate change

Tsawwassen First Nation appeals Cowichan court decision

Appeal is being made to protect treaty rights says TFN

Delta Optimist
Musqueam to appeal Cowichan Tribes ruling on Aboriginal title | CBC News

The Musqueam Indian Band is the latest government to announce its plans to appeal the recent B.C. Supreme Court decision that found another First Nation government holds Aboriginal title for land and fishing rights in an area of Metro Vancouver.

CBC
#RichmondBC #Musqueam #Quwutsun - Musqueam and Richmond file notices of appeal after Cowichan Tribes ruling https://vancouversun.com/news/musqueam-richmond-file-appeal-cowichan-tribes-ruling
Musqueam and Richmond file notices of appeal after Cowichan Tribes ruling

Musqueam Chief Wayne Sparrow says his nation is "deeply concerned" by the Aug. 7 ruling and its potential effects on future land claims.

vancouversun
City of Richmond files appeal of B.C. Supreme Court’s Cowichan Tribes decision

Backlash to a landmark court decision granting aboriginal title to private land in Richmond, B.C. continues.

CTVNews
City of Richmond joins fight against Cowichan Band ruling

The city is appealing a B.C. Supreme Court ruling that granted the Cowichan Tribes title to hundreds of acres of land in southeast Richmond.

vancouversun
City of Richmond to appeal court decision that grants title to Cowichan Nation | CBC News

The City of Richmond is joining the B.C. government in appealing a recent B.C. Supreme Court decision that grants Aboriginal title to Cowichan Tribes. The title is for a parcel of land that includes private property, Crown land, and city-owned land.

CBC

Tribute to the #PacificNorthwest.

One of the #woodburned planks on the boardwalk at the #Somenos Marsh Wildlife refuge/estuary. I overlaid one of my foggy Autumn photos of Lake Cowichan over the marked plank photo.
This wetlands estuary is a key part of S’amunu (Somenos) watershed in South #CowichanValley, just outside of downtown #DuncanBC.

Learn more & visit it sometime - birders love these wetlands:

The Somenos Marsh Wildlife Society (SMWS) is a 35-year-old charitable society made up of people who care deeply about the S’amunu (Somenos) Watershed. This biodiversity-rich watershed is the traditional home of the #Quwutsun People, a nursery for salmon, a resting place and winter home for migratory waterfowl, and a sanctuary for many other endangered and common species. The work of the SMWS is both restorative and educational.
https://www.somenosmarsh.com/

#VancouverIsland #VanIsle #PacificNorthwest #Cascadia #PNW #BritishColumbia #Canada #PhotoEdit #photography #CreativeArtist #VisualArt #WorldWhereWeLive

Somenos Marsh Wildlife Society

Stewards of Somenos Marsh Conservation Area, Important Bird Area (IBA), WildWings Festival, Nature Cowichan wildlife restoration, Cowichan Valley, BC.

Somenos Marsh Wildlife Society

#Quwutsun #Indigenous #artist Charlene Johnny will lead work, beginning this week, on the largest piece of #PublicArt in the City of Duncan. Charlene’s #mural at 221 Jubilee Street will stand 44' tall & will represent the theme of thu-itsthuw tun shqwaluwun (be truthful with your feelings). Various #community partners, led by Quw’utsun Elders & Youth, joined together as the Nanum Iyus Tth'ele (Meeting of Joyful Hearts) #collective to support this project. 
https://www.cowichanintercultural.org

#Cowichan #PNW

Reconciliation: Journey of our Generation Workshop - Duncan - June 20th

Join Quw’utsun’ Elders who will take you on a journey through time with stories of pre-contact village life and the impact of colonization.

Eventbrite