From Cultural Survival <[email protected]>
Subject Q&A with Cultural Survival’s New Executive Director
Date September 24, 2019 2:30 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Get to know Galina Angarova.

Get to know our new executive director!
View this email in your browser ([link removed])
[link removed] Share ([link removed])
[link removed] https%3A%2F%2Fmailchi.mp%2Fculturalsurvival.org%2Fqa-galina Tweet ([link removed] https%3A%2F%2Fmailchi.mp%2Fculturalsurvival.org%2Fqa-galina)
[link removed] Forward ([link removed])
Support our work ([link removed])


** En español. ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------


** Q&A with Cultural Survival’s New Executive Director: Galina Angarova
------------------------------------------------------------

Being an Indigenous woman (Buryat), Galina Angarova is very familiar with Indigenous issues around the world. We look forward to Galina’s leadership which will support an increasing global presence and effectiveness of Cultural Survival’s ability to reinforce Indigenous goals of self-determination and self-governance.

Galina recently sat down to talk about a range of topics, including her work as an Indigenous rights advocate, as a foundation program manager, and her plans for Cultural Survival. Please read below for an excerpt, or click here to read the whole Q&A. ([link removed]) En español ([link removed]) . ([link removed])

Thank you for reading, and as always, for your partnership. If you'd like to write a short note to Galina, please click here. ([link removed])
Send Galina a Message ([link removed])

Cultural Survival: How did you get into this line of work, advocating for Indigenous Peoples?

Galina Angarova: I come from the Buryat Peoples who have lived in Siberia for millennia, on both sides of Lake Baikal, the deepest and largest fresh-water lake containing 20 percent of the world’s fresh water. I was born and raised in a community of about 400 people. I grew up eating wild berries, mushrooms, pine nuts, wild garlic, deer, and rabbit that members of my family would gather and preserve for harsh winters. My grandmother would tell me stories which encapsulated the wisdom of our ancestors and have been passed down for generations. I participated in our traditional ceremonies. I still vividly remember a time when I was five years old, when my grandmother took me to a ceremony on a wooden horse cart miles away from our village. I still recall the fire, the chants, and the prayers of the women in my clan. I grew up with a deep sense of understanding of our lifeways and belongingness to the land, to my people, and a deep love for my culture and for Mother Earth.

It was not until I was 24 when I first encountered the term “Indigenous Peoples.” Growing up in Russia, it was hard to really understand my own situation and the situation of my own people. It took leaving and living far away to understand the degree of both external and internalized oppression, colonization, and paralysis that my people and other Indigenous Peoples in Russia currently face.

I received a full scholarship to go to graduate school in the United States, in New Mexico. This is where I first met Native American Tribal members - Zuni, Navajo, and Acoma. I was blown away by their rich and vibrant cultures, the people, and the food. I made friends with local people and I learned that there were more similarities than differences between my people and Native Americans communities. Having a Native language, our own culture, land-use and management practices, belief systems, traditional ceremonies, traditional governance systems, and close relationships to Mother Earth--all these elements make Indigenous Peoples “Indigenous” and are rightfully included in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

My work in a professional setting as an advocate for Indigenous Peoples started when I joined San Francisco-based Pacific Environment in 2007. Even though the organization’s focus was on environmental issues in the countries of the Pacific Rim, we worked closely with Indigenous communities, specifically in the regions of Siberia, Russian Far East and, Russian Arctic and Alaska. I worked as a program associate for community-based initiatives and was responsible for campaign organizing, regranting, strategy development, and movement building among environmental and Indigenous organizations in Siberia and the Russian Far East. I was promoted to the Russia program director and started organizing global campaigns and representing issues of Russian Indigenous Peoples on the international level. In 2012, I joined the board of Indigenous Funders for Indigenous Peoples (IFIP) where I served as a board member for seven years.

[link removed]

CS: Tell us about your work with Indigenous Peoples on the ground?

GA: During my years with Pacific Environment, our team helped to build one of the most effective movements in Russia that works to protect both local people and the environment. This is what influenced my strongest belief that local and Indigenous communities are best equipped to protect their own environment. This is why I have always prioritized local needs and building relationships. One of the most successful campaigns I led was against plans to build a gas pipeline in Altai, an Indigenous republic in Western Siberia that borders with Mongolia, China, and Kazakhstan. Together with local Indigenous partners, we worked on a multi-tiered campaign that included several elements: targeting potential investors, protection of sacred sites and protection of rare and endangered species. We worked to bring in alternative energy such as solar, wind, and mini hydro-power, and created protected areas managed by Indigenous Peoples.

We conducted numerous exchanges bringing experts and activists from the United States and other parts of Russia who had similar experiences with large infrastructure projects. They met with local people and shared with their experiences of what happened to their land and people once the projects started - loss of biodiversity, corruption, pollution, disease, prostitution and so on. These conversations had a powerful effect on local people which resulted in local support for the campaign.

Other successful campaigns were protesting against a toxic paper mill on Lake Baikal, an oil pipeline that was supposed to be laid in the proximity to the northern shore of the Lake, an hydro-electric dam that threatened to flood thousands of hectares of forest and a settlement of five thousand Evenk people. Read more. ([link removed]) En español. ([link removed])


Support our work ([link removed])
[link removed]
Go to smile.amazon.com/ch/23-7182593 ([link removed]) and Amazon donates to Cultural Survival, Inc..
Cultural Survival advocates for Indigenous Peoples' rights and supports Indigenous communities’ self-determination, cultures and political resilience since 1972. We envision a future that respects and honors Indigenous Peoples' inherent rights and dynamic cultures, deeply and richly interwoven in lands, languages, spiritual traditions, and artistic expression, rooted in self-determination and self-governance.
DONATE ([link removed])

============================================================
** ([link removed])
** ([link removed])
** ([link removed])
** ([link removed])
Advancing Indigenous Peoples' Rights and Cultures Worldwide, since 1972
** Cultural Survival ([link removed])

2067 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02140
(617) 441-5400
** www.cs.org ([link removed])


Want to change how you receive these emails?

You can ** Update your preferences. ([link removed])

Want to stop receiving anything from us? ** Unsubscribe from ALL of Cultural Survival's lists. ([link removed])
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis