Deusdedit Ruhangariyo
ICT
Around the world: Honoring Māori leadership through collective memory and service; Cree fashion designers stitch ancestry into modern expression; Nicaragua forest falls as Indigenous lands are breached; Tamworth Festival amplifies Aboriginal voices; and Nepal Indigenous communities resist development without consent.
NEW ZEALAND: Honoring Māori leadership
The New Year Honours list in New Zealand has brought renewed attention to Māori leadership, language preservation, and community service, recognizing individuals whose work has strengthened not only institutions, but the cultural and moral fabric of the nation itself, RNZ News reported on Jan. 2.
The honors span multiple levels of the New Zealand Order of Merit and the King’s Service awards, reflecting decades of commitment across education, governance, health, arts, conservation and cultural revitalization.
Minister for Māori Development and Māori Crown Relations Tama Potaka described the recipients as exemplars of intergenerational service — people whose achievements are inseparable from the whānau, hapū, and iwi that sustained them. He emphasized that while honors are conferred upon individuals, their impact is collective. Behind every recognized leader stands a network of families, mentors, elders and communities whose quiet labor makes visible success possible.
Among the most significant recognitions was the appointment of Professor Thomas Charles Roa as a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Māori language and education.
A professor of Māori and Indigenous Studies at the University of Waikato, Roa has been a central figure in the revitalization of Māori for more than five decades. As a founding contributor to Te Wiki o Te Reo Māori in the 1970s, his work helped shift Māori language from the margins toward national consciousness.
Roa himself rejected the idea of singular achievement, noting that his journey rests on the teachings and sacrifices of elders who came before him. He spoke of standing “on the shoulders of giants,” naming respected Māori leaders and scholars whose influence shaped his path, according to RNZ News. His remarks echoed with a recurring theme throughout the honours: recognition as remembrance, not elevation.
The list also acknowledged Māori excellence across diverse fields. Leaders in business, technology, governance, women’s health, disability advocacy, conservation, education and the arts were honored for weaving cultural values into modern institutions. From rugby to environmental stewardship, from visual arts to governance reform, the recipients’ work demonstrates how Indigenous knowledge systems continue to guide contemporary leadership.
Several recipients were recognized for work supporting vulnerable populations, including people with disabilities, blind and low-vision communities, and those historically excluded from decision-making. Others were honored for advancing Māori participation in education and governance, reinforcing cultural continuity while navigating modern challenges.
What distinguished this year’s honors was not merely the breadth of contributions, but the clarity of a shared ethic: service grounded in responsibility to future generations. As Potaka noted, the work of today’s leaders is ultimately measured by what is preserved, taught, and passed on to mokopuna yet unborn.
In this sense, the new year honors function less as a ceremonial endpoint and more as a public affirmation of values — language as survival, leadership as stewardship, and recognition as a collective act of memory.
CANADA: Cree fashion designers stitch ancestry into modern expression
For two Cree fashion designers in Canada, creativity is not a departure from tradition, but a continuation of it — stitched together through memory, resilience and family inheritance. Their journeys into fashion reveal how Indigenous identity, when nurtured rather than suppressed, can evolve into powerful contemporary expression, CBC News reported on Jan. 2.
Brandon Morin Fox, a Two-Spirit emerging designer from Piapot First Nation, grew up in Regina’s North Central neighborhood in a household shaped by music, artistry and loss. After losing both parents in his early teens, Morin Fox remained anchored by the creative encouragement they instilled in him. His father, a drummer and singer, affirmed individuality as strength — a foundation that later allowed Morin Fox to pursue fashion, not as hobby but as vocation.
At age 23, he enrolled in Toronto Metropolitan University’s fashion design program, drawn by its Indigenous fashion community and mentors who demonstrated that Indigenous aesthetics belong in high-fashion spaces. Morin Fox describes his work as a dialogue between tradition and modernity, blending ancestral adornment with contemporary luxury. His designs reject the idea that Indigenous fashion must be confined to the past, instead asserting its relevance in global creative economies.
Recognition followed sooner than expected. His garments caught the attention of international musicians and creatives who trusted his vision without demanding extensive credentials. For Morin Fox, that trust represented something deeper than professional validation — it affirmed that Indigenous artistry carries authority on its own terms.
Alongside him, another Cree designer, Moody, followed a different but equally intentional path. Leaving his home community seven years ago, he became the first among his siblings to do so, determined to turn spoken dreams into lived reality. While working as a youth support worker in Winnipeg, he was invited to share cultural teachings — a moment that catalyzed his journey into textile work.
With basic skills learned from his grandmother and online tutorials, Moody taught himself sewing. His first ribbon skirt took four hours; today, it takes one. Each piece incorporates medicine colors representing the seasons, embedding cultural meaning into wearable form. For Moody, fashion is not only aesthetic — it is ceremonial, educational and relational.
As a Cree man in a field where such representation remains rare, Moody embraces learning as responsibility. He views design as a skill meant to circulate within Indigenous communities, not be hoarded. His work bridges generations, translating teachings from elders into garments that move through contemporary life.
Together, these designers illustrate how Indigenous fashion operates as cultural infrastructure. It carries grief and healing, memory and adaptation. Their work challenges narrow definitions of success, proving that creative careers rooted in ancestry can flourish without abandoning community.
In their hands, fashion becomes language — one that speaks of survival, continuity and the quiet power of self-determination.
NICARAGUA: Forest falls as Indigenous lands are breached
Nicaragua’s Bosawás Biosphere Reserve, the largest protected rainforest in Central America, is undergoing an accelerating ecological and human crisis. Spanning approximately 7,400 square kilometres (2,857 square miles) along the Honduran border, Bosawás is home to extraordinary biodiversity and to the Miskito and Mayanga Indigenous peoples, whose lives and identities are inseparable from the forest. Despite its UNESCO designation, more than 30 percent of Bosawás’s primary forest has disappeared since 2000, Mongabay reported on Dec. 31.
Satellite data reveal that 2024 marked a devastating turning point. Roughly 10 percent of the reserve’s total land area was cleared in a single year, with fire accounting for over a third of the destruction — a 700 percent increase from the previous year. Preliminary data from 2025 indicate that deforestation continues, advancing deeper into old-growth rainforest.
Indigenous advocates identify cattle ranching as a primary driver. Ranchers clear vast tracts of forest to feed Nicaragua’s beef industry, displacing wildlife and severing Indigenous communities’ access to hunting grounds, fishing waters, and clean drinking sources. Gold mining poses an additional threat, with more than two-thirds of the reserve overlapping with metallic mining concessions.
The consequences extend beyond environmental loss. Indigenous residents report escalating violence, intimidation and displacement as outsiders encroach upon their territories. Conservation initiatives have collapsed under the weight of human rights violations, including the cancellation of a major climate-funded forest protection project in 2024.
For Indigenous communities, the forest is not a resource but a relative — a living system that provides sustenance, protection and meaning. Leaders describe Bosawás as Mother Earth herself, underscoring that her destruction constitutes cultural erasure as much as ecological harm.
An international investigation released in late 2025 revealed that beef produced through illegal deforestation — termed “conflict beef” — continues to enter global supply chains, mixed with legally produced exports. Environmental organizations have urged importing countries and retailers to enforce strict traceability and sourcing policies, warning that consumer markets are indirectly financing deforestation and human rights abuses.
Bosawás now stands as a test case for global environmental accountability. Its destruction exposes the limits of paper protections without enforcement, and the dangers of treating Indigenous territories as expendable zones of extraction. What is lost here cannot be replaced: endemic species, irreplaceable carbon stores, and cultures that have safeguarded these forests for generations.
AUSTRALIA: Tamworth Festival amplifies Aboriginal voices
The Tamworth Country Music Festival, one of Australia’s most prominent music events, is once again hosting the Aboriginal Cultural Showcase — a First Nations-led program dedicated to elevating Indigenous artists, stories and cultural expression, National Indigenous Times reported on Jan. 2.
Fourteen Indigenous performers have been announced for the 2026 showcase, which runs from Jan. 16 to 25 and forms a vibrant counterpoint to the festival’s mainstream programming.
Backed by a three-year sponsorship package from the NSW Aboriginal Land Council, the showcase reflects a long-term commitment to Indigenous cultural infrastructure rather than symbolic inclusion. The council has supported the event since 2016, providing staging, lighting and organizational resources that allow Aboriginal artists to perform on their own terms.
The lineup spans generations and nations, featuring respected headliners alongside emerging voices. Artists from Gomeroi, Arrernte, Wiradjuri, Yamatji, Murrawarri, Dharug, Yorta Yorta, Kalkadoon, Kuku-Yalanji, Ngarrindjeri and other nations will share the stage, creating a convergence of musical traditions, languages and lived histories.
For many performers, Tamworth is more than a venue — it is a site of memory. Nathan Lamont recalls first performing at the festival as a child and describes his return as a continuation of a lifelong journey. Others, like Aimee Hannan and Kyla-Belle Roberts, speak of the showcase as a festival highlight, a space where Aboriginal excellence is centered rather than peripheral.
The program also acknowledges the networks that sustain Indigenous talent. Alongside the NSW Aboriginal Land Council, sponsors include Aboriginal Employment Strategy – Tamworth, Tamworth Aboriginal Medical Service, and the Aboriginal Regional Arts Alliance NSW, all contributing to the Buddy Knox Talent Contest and broader cultural development.
Importantly, the showcase is not framed as a cultural add-on but as an integral component of Australia’s contemporary music landscape. It affirms that Aboriginal music is not confined to heritage categories — it is evolving, experimental and deeply relevant.
By bringing artists together during a nationally significant festival, the Aboriginal Cultural Showcase creates a space where Indigenous voices are not merely heard but amplified. It invites audiences to engage with Aboriginal culture as living practice — one that honors the past while shaping the future.
NEPAL: Indigenous communities resist development without consent
Throughout 2025, Indigenous peoples and local communities in Nepal found themselves at the center of escalating conflicts over development projects that threatened land, livelihoods and sacred ecosystems, Mongabay reported on Dec. 29.
From hydropower dams and cable cars to mining concessions, infrastructure expansion increasingly collided with Indigenous rights — particularly the right to free, prior and informed consent.
Multiple legal challenges underscored this tension. Indigenous Bhote-Lhomi Singsa communities refiled petitions against a hydropower project accused of submitting flawed environmental impact assessments while continuing construction. Communities reported tree felling far exceeding approved limits and demanded project cancellation.
In Nepal’s far west, Indigenous and local residents resisted what was promoted as the country’s largest iron mining project. Approved without community consent, the operation threatened rivers, forests, farmlands and ancestral territories. Despite agreements to halt progress, documents showed mining approvals advancing over hundreds of hectares.
Sacred landscapes were also targeted. The Pathibhara cable car project, planned within a forest revered by the Yakthung (Limbu) community, drew widespread opposition after assessments failed to document key species. Community estimates suggested tens of thousands of trees were cut. Protests escalated into clashes, prompting the Supreme Court to order an immediate halt.
Political instability compounded these struggles. Before being ousted, Nepal’s previous government granted national priority status to several controversial cable car projects, including one within a protected conservation area. Indigenous leaders and conservationists warned that these decisions bypassed judicial safeguards and community consultation.
Development banks came under scrutiny as well. The Tanahu Hydropower project, financed by international institutions, generated a disproportionate number of complaints related to environmental damage, land rights violations, and inadequate compensation. Critics argued that lenders failed to exercise due diligence, leaving communities exposed.
Amid these conflicts, one story offered cautious hope. A reforestation initiative integrating Indigenous ecological knowledge demonstrated measurable success. Communities planted over 130,000 native trees across multiple sites, and satellite imagery later confirmed significant vegetation recovery — evidence that development aligned with local knowledge can succeed.
Nepal’s experience in 2025 revealed a stark truth: development imposed without consent fractures trust and destabilizes both ecosystems and societies. Where Indigenous knowledge was ignored, conflict followed. Where it was respected, regeneration occurred.
My final thoughts
Across five continents, these stories converge on a single, urgent lesson: Indigenous peoples are not resisting progress — they are resisting erasure. Whether through honors lists, fashion studios, rainforests, music festivals, or courtrooms, the struggle is fundamentally about who defines value, whose knowledge counts, and what kind of future is being built.
In New Zealand, recognition of Māori leadership affirms that cultural continuity is not nostalgia; it is national strength. In Canada, Cree designers demonstrate that creativity rooted in ancestry can shape global aesthetics without surrendering meaning. In Nicaragua, the destruction of Bosawás exposes the catastrophic cost of ignoring Indigenous stewardship in the name of export economies.
In Australia, the Aboriginal Cultural Showcase proves that when Indigenous culture is resourced rather than tokenized, it flourishes. In Nepal, legal battles and protests reveal the consequences of development divorced from consent — and the promise of alternatives grounded in local knowledge.
What links these stories is not geography, but ethics. Indigenous communities consistently articulate a relational worldview: land as living system, leadership as service, creativity as inheritance, and progress as responsibility to future generations. Where institutions listen, resilience grows. Where they do not, conflict escalates.
This is not a cultural issue alone — it is a governance issue, an environmental issue, and a moral issue. Global systems continue to extract from Indigenous lands, knowledge, and labor while offering recognition, protection, or consent as afterthoughts. The result is predictable: biodiversity collapse, social unrest, and broken trust.
Yet these stories also show pathways forward. Honor can be collective rather than symbolic. Fashion can carry memory without fossilizing it. Conservation can succeed when Indigenous peoples lead. Development can regenerate rather than dispossess.
The question facing governments, corporations, and global institutions is no longer whether Indigenous voices matter. That has been answered repeatedly. The real question is whether power is willing to change its behavior accordingly.
History will remember not only who spoke, but who listened — and who refused to.
