Indigenous Knowledge & Cultural Stewardship

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Honoring the world’s oldest climate wisdom and the communities who protect it.

For thousands of years, Indigenous peoples have protected forests, rivers, grasslands, oceans, and wildlife through deep cultural knowledge, spiritual connection, and sustainable land stewardship. Today, they safeguard 80% of the world’s biodiversity, yet face some of the most severe threats from climate change and environmental degradation.

At WeAreTELL, we believe that any meaningful climate action must start with listening to, and learning from Indigenous communities. The Indigenous Knowledge & Cultural Stewardship program exists to amplify their wisdom, celebrate their guardianship of the Earth, and defend their right to protect their lands, languages, and ways of life.

What This Program Does

We work with Indigenous communities to capture stories about:

  • forest guardianship and sustainable land use

  • seed saving and traditional agriculture

  • water conservation and seasonal knowledge

  • wildlife protection

  • sacred ecological practices

  • cultural traditions linked to nature

These stories highlight ways of living that restore balance and hold keys to global climate resilience.

Indigenous storytelling must be done with, not on, communities.
Our approach includes:

  • community approval at every stage

  • protection of sacred and restricted knowledge

  • cultural protocols and consent processes

  • hiring and training local storytellers

  • revenue-sharing or benefit-sharing where appropriate

Respect is at the center of every story we tell.

Climate change threatens not only environments, but entire languages and oral histories.
WeAreTELL documents:

  • stories in original languages

  • intergenerational teachings

  • songs, rituals, and ecological memory

  • traditional place names and meanings

We preserve these narratives through film, audio, photography, and archives ensuring they are passed on to future generations.

Indigenous communities are leaders, not victims.
We amplify their roles in:

  • forest conservation

  • biodiversity protection

  • climate adaptation

  • land rights movements

  • sustainable livelihoods

  • local and global climate governance

Our global distribution ensures their voices are heard by policymakers, journalists, researchers, and the wider public.

Climate justice cannot exist without Indigenous rights.
Through partnerships, we use storytelling to bring visibility to:

  • land rights struggles

  • forced displacement

  • mining and resource extraction conflicts

  • threats to sacred sites

  • criminalization of land defenders

  • cultural erasure

Our stories help build public support and pressure power structures toward accountability.

We adapt stories for:

  • local screenings

  • community radio

  • schools

  • WhatsApp groups

  • bilingual or trilingual platforms

Every story returns to the community it came from, as a matter of respect and shared ownership.

Ready to Rewrite the Future Through Climate Stories?

Join us as we change the way the world understands the climate crisis through powerful, human stories.