"The Eighth Fire: Earth in the City" is part of the documentary series that explains the challenges that Aboriginal people face when moving from the settlement to the big city. The documentary first describes the British Canadian stereotype and the recognition of other visible minority indigenous people. They show how devastating the indigenous stereotypes are, especially in the field of education. The documentary will finally offer several solutions on how to change and improve the relationship between the Aboriginal community and other Canadian countries.
Our pictures are from the Amazon Aboriginal community to the Australian coral reefs, the Indonesian forest fires, and the emotional protests by Japanese grandparents. In the year when world leaders eventually agreed to take measures to manage climate change this year also thousands of people traveled all over the world to get rid of fossil fuels. Over the generations, the people of Munduruku lived at the Amazon Center Sawre Muybu. The Brazilian government plans to build a series of dams in the Tapahos River basin, which seriously threatens their way of life. In addition to protecting their lifestyle, Sawré Muybu split ensures 178,000 hectares of protection of the Amazon rainforest. Learn more
Recognition of the day of the people of today in Los Angeles City - not the day of Columbus - for those who can trace the time until their family tree on America's soil returns to their presently bordering border - Is a great advance in the recognition of their story. And they continue to exist as part of America. "This change has had a major impact on the indigenous peoples of Los Angeles and they will no longer suffer the ongoing damage caused by Columbus Day - it is obviously implicit, and we will make our ethnic massacres Celebrate. " He is a member of UCLA's American Indian Research Center and Chickasaw Country. "Instead, we recognize that we are still people and celebrate the unique contribution of regional culture to the lives of Los Angeles."
People in Guatemala believe that the United Nations report is an important first step in the country's settlement journey. "Peace agreement on indigenous peoples identity and rights" recognizes that it will occupy the status of the international community "by ancient history and citizens' spirit" before Guatemala moves forward. Guatemala's peace treaty is a very radical document in several respects in that it contains the concepts of indigenous peoples identity and human rights and women's rights. Identification of women's identity, education, past fraud in order to build a society that respects differences