Relearning Ancestral Knowledge: Helping People and the Earth

(52)inCLEAN PLANET

Humans are part of nature, not apart from it, and balance, reciprocity, and observation are key to sustaining life. Illustration by the Author.

Our lives move fast. We buy, we use, we discard. But for thousands of years, Indigenous and traditional communities moved differently. They lived close to the land, watched the seasons, learned the ways of plants, animals, rivers, soil. They learned balance. They learned care. And that knowledge still matters (Vinyeta, 2013).

Traditional Ecological Knowledge, TEK is what they passed down. It teaches that everything is connected. A fire set just right can protect a forest from wildfire. Rotating crops can keep soil alive. Local plants can feed and heal. Every action, small or large, ripples outward (Khosravi Mashizi & Escobedo, 2025; Vinyeta, 2013).

We can carry this wisdom into our lives. Learning the plants and animals around us, foraging, tending gardens, protecting what’s wild. Farming in ways that mimic nature composting, planting together, sharing nutrients, reducing waste . Sharing knowledge, supporting Indigenous-led projects, spreading these ideas gently . Even small gestures; saving water, choosing natural materials matter (Bethel, 2022).

The planet needs this. Indigenous peoples care for roughly 25% of the world’s land, land that holds much of Earth’s biodiversity and carbon. Their ways help ecosystems stay strong, resilient, alive (climatepromise.undp.org). Blending ancestral knowledge with modern science gives us tools to fight climate change, to slow deforestation, to protect species before it’s too late (Khosravi Mashizi & Escobedo, 2025; Vinyeta, 2013).

Relearning ancestral knowledge is more than preservation. It is practice. It is guidance. It is a path to living more lightly, more consciously, on this planet. A way to leave something healthier, steadier, for the generations yet to walk this land (Bethel, 2022).


References:

Bethel, M. B. (2022). Mapping risk factors to climate change impacts using traditional ecological knowledge to support adaptation planning with a Native American Tribe in Louisiana. Environmental Science & Policy, 132, 1–11. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2022.02.004

Khosravi Mashizi, A., & Escobedo, F. (2025). The role of traditional ecological knowledge and ecosystem quality in managing ecosystem services. Scientific Reports, 15, 31510. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-17611-z

Vinyeta, K. (2013). Exploring the role of traditional ecological knowledge in climate change initiatives. Pacific Northwest Research Station. https://www.fs.usda.gov/treesearch/pubs/43431

inCLEAN PLANETby
(52)
$0.05
||
Sort: