Department of Geography and Environment, Western University, London, ON N6A 5C2, Canada.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Jun 14;19(12):7285. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19127285.
Indigenous peoples globally are pursuing diverse strategies to foster mental, emotional, and spiritual wellness by reclaiming and restoring their relationships to land. For Anishinaabe communities, the land is the source of local knowledge systems that sustain identities and foster mino-bimaadiziwin, that is, living in a good and healthy way. In July 2019, the community of Biigtigong Nishnaabeg in Ontario, Canada hosted a week-long land camp to reclaim Mountain Lake and reconnect Elders, youth and band staff to the land, history, and relationships of this place. Framed theoretically by environmental repossession, we explore the perceptions of 15 participating community members and examine local and intergenerational meanings of the camp for mental wellness. The findings show that the Mountain Lake camp strengthened social relationships, supported the sharing and practice of Anishinaabe knowledge, and fostered community pride in ways that reinforced the community's Anishinaabe identity. By exploring the links between land reclamation, identity, and community empowerment, we suggest environmental repossession as a useful concept for understanding how land reconnection and self-determination can support Indigenous mental wellness.
全球土著人民正在通过重新建立和恢复与土地的关系,采取多种策略来促进精神、情感和精神健康。对于 Anishinaabe 社区来说,土地是维持身份认同和促进 mino-bimaadiziwin(即健康生活)的当地知识体系的源泉。2019 年 7 月,加拿大安大略省的比提通尼什纳贝格社区举办了为期一周的土地营,以重新获得山湖,并使老年人、青年和乐队工作人员重新与这片土地、历史和关系联系起来。我们从环境回收的理论框架出发,探讨了 15 名参与社区成员的看法,并考察了营地对心理健康的地方和代际意义。研究结果表明,山湖营地加强了社会关系,支持了 Anishinaabe 知识的分享和实践,并以增强社区自豪感的方式促进了社区的 Anishinaabe 身份认同。通过探讨土地开垦、身份认同和社区赋权之间的联系,我们提出环境回收是理解土地重新连接和自决如何支持土著心理健康的有用概念。