Agar Iklenia Tejeda a interviewé un interprète au sujet de l'applique Mola voile cousue à la main par des femmes indigènes Guna du Panama à COP26, Glasgow, Écosse
3515 x 5043 px | 29,8 x 42,7 cm | 11,7 x 16,8 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
3 novembre 2021
Lieu:
Hidden gardens, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom
Informations supplémentaires:
THE GEO 2030 BAMBOO ARK is a global and sustained campaign for biocultural leadership and living design for sustainability in harmony with nature. Leading the charge to COP 26 is Indigenous Guna leaders from Panama Agar Iklenia Tejada who is urging their peers to “join us in growing the skills and the network of empowered activists we need to survive and create the world we want.” Under Agar's leadership, 37 women have hand sewn the largest “mola” ever created (a traditional cloth appliqué unique to the Guna people) to trailblaze COP26. The Mola Sail is a 40 square meter rendering of the Bamboo Ark’s sail as a mola made by women from Gunayala, one of the three autonomous territories in Panama of the Guna people, with densely- populated island communities imperiled by a rising sea. “For me” explains Agar, “the Mola Sail represents the origin of my people’s identity as a Guna nation. It symbolises our deep caring of our Mother the Earth with its honouring of the sky, sun, water, earth and of all living beings. It’s the sail that unites us and moves us forward in our fight for the forests, rivers and oceans of our Mother.”
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