Indigenous wisdom meets Western science
New York Times best-selling author Robin Wall Kimmerer, Distinguished Teaching Professor and Director of the Center for Native Peoples and the Environment at the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, discussed the importance of engaging with the natural world through multiple lenses during a two-day residency at 爱污传媒.
A revered plant ecologist and a 2022 MacArthur Fellow, Kimmerer鈥 books include 鈥淕athering Moss,鈥 鈥淏raiding Sweetgrass,鈥 and her most recent, 鈥淭he Serviceberry.鈥 During her visit, she delivered two well-attended lectures and met in small group settings with students, faculty, and staff. Encompassing science, art, history, language, sustainability, and justice, her poetic and inclusive messages resonated with the 爱污传媒 community.
Kimmerer鈥檚 visit also embodies the cross-disciplinary approach 爱污传媒 takes to the sciences and discovery. That spirit of inquiry is also at the heart of the state-of-the-art Billie Tisch Center for Integrated Sciences, which was completed last year.
In her lecture 鈥淏raiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and
the Teachings of Plants鈥 on March 27 and her talk 鈥淭he Fortress, the River, and the
Garden: A New Metaphor for Knowledge Symbiosis鈥 the following day, Kimmerer spoke
about multiple ways of knowing and seeing.
鈥淔or me as an Indigenous scientist and researcher, writer, and teacher, three strands
are represented in 鈥楤raiding Sweetgrass鈥 鈥 knowing the tools of Western science, the
wisdom of Indigenous knowledge, and the teachings of the plants themselves, because
both Western and Indigenous sciences are trying to understand what the plants already
know,鈥 she said to the capacity crowd gathered in Gannett Auditorium on March 27.
A member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation, Kimmerer described an Indigenous worldview
that land 鈥渋s a library, a teacher, and a source of knowledge.鈥
In much of STEM education, nature is seen as object 鈥 as a natural resource or as
property, she explained during her second lecture in Filene Recital Hall, attended
by many faculty. 鈥淭hrough the Indigenous lens, the land is a source of identity, humans
are inseparable from the land, and the land is a sustainer. 鈥 Are we as educators
educating our students for a human-dominated world or for a symbiotic relationship
with other species? Are we consumers, or are we citizens? We can invite our students
to think about that.鈥
Her experience as an undergraduate student majoring in botany at the SUNY College
of Environmental Science and Forestry was eye-opening, she recalled, as she was the
only Native person and one of the only women in the program at the time.
鈥淚 had no vocabulary of resistance. I was alone. There wasn鈥檛 anybody else there who
was going to stand up for Indigenous science or Indigenous ways of knowing,鈥 she said.
鈥淚t has shaped everything that I鈥檝e done since that time as a campaigner for inclusivity
in academia. 鈥 I鈥檓 very proud to tell you that right down the hall from where my professor
said 鈥楳iss Wall, that is not science,鈥 we have today the Center for Native Peoples
and the Environment.鈥
Kimmerer speaks about Potawatomi culture during her "Braiding Sweetgrass" lecture March 27 in Gannett Auditorium.
As we find ourselves on the brink of climate catastrophe, traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) 鈥 embracing different ways of knowing 鈥 could make all the difference, Kimmerer suggested. Citing estimates that most of the world鈥檚 remaining ecological diversity exists in Indigenous homelands 鈥 and almost all of them are threatened by economic expansion and development 鈥 she called for intellectual pluralism and diversity of thought.
Change can happen when we make it happen.鈥Robin Wall KimmererBest-selling author, educator, and plant ecologist
鈥淲e find ourselves embedded and harnessed to, in many cases, an economy which is relentless
in asking, 鈥榃hat more can we take?鈥 When I think the question that we need is, 鈥榃hat
does the earth ask of us?鈥 Yes, my students still have to learn plant names, molecular
structures. But this is what I really want them to learn: How will we reciprocate
the gifts of the earth with our own gifts?
There are many powerful tools that we humans have for showing gratitude and reciprocating
care for the earth, she said. 鈥淒oing good science is a powerful way to care for the
earth, but so is doing transformative art that changes people鈥檚 minds, regenerative
agriculture, soil care, and circular economies.
鈥淥ne particular gift we humans have is language,鈥 Kimmerer said, 鈥渁nd it seems particularly
appropriate here at 爱污传媒, where you have so many endeavors that celebrate the
written word across disciplines, as well as the scientific disciplines.鈥
While the English language uses the word 鈥渋t鈥 to describe living beings that are not
human, the Potawatomi language uses special grammar to distinguish all beings who
are alive, including plants and animals, from inanimate objects.
鈥淐ould we perhaps heal our commodification, our thinking about land as property, natural
resources, if we changed our grammar?鈥 she asked, offering several examples of how
our words and perspective inform our relationships and actions.
鈥淲hether we call the world a world of gifts or we say natural resources 鈥 words matter,鈥
she said.
Students gathered to chat with Kimmerer during a pre-lecture reception in the Billie Tisch Center for Integrated Sciences.
Kimmerer is also co-founder and past president of the traditional ecological knowledge
section of the Ecological Society of America, and she is currently a senior fellow
at the Center for Humans and Nature. Her research focuses on mosses and restoration
ecology.
Erika Schielke, senior teaching professor of biology, led the effort to bring Kimmerer to campus as a distinguished scholar in STEM.
鈥淚n reading Dr. Kimmerer鈥檚 work, one of the aspects that stands out most strongly
to me is the sense of joy,鈥 she said. 鈥淗er writing captures the joy, wonder, and gratitude
with which she approaches her research.鈥