Saturday, July 13, 2024

 

Here's how Europe's Indigenous peoples are using food diplomacy to save the Arctic

The Sami people are keen to spread their food traditions to the rest of Europe
Copyright Daniela De Lorenzo / Canva
By Daniela De Lorenzo
Published on 

The Sámi community want to protect their long-earned gastronomic traditions across the continent.

The glazed seal fat topping a miniature reindeer blood pancake enhances its coppery flavour. Combined with the smoked whale bites that lie on top of the dark flapjack, it is difficult to tell whether this dish tastes more like game or fish. Either way, it’s delicious.

Traditional Indigenous food is based on ingredients harvested from nature: we receive a three-course meal that embodies the richness of Sami cuisine with fish and meat appetisers, a reindeer stew and a squeaky cheese dessert with wild berries.

Sitting on reindeer skin inside the Nomad Indigenous Food Lab which combines a ‘lavvu’ - the traditional Sámi tent - with a stainless steel kitchen, Indigenous youth and chefs tell researchers and policymakers about their struggles in keeping their food culture and tradition alive.

Sami food is served up to grateful recipients
Sami food is served up to grateful recipientsDaniela De Lorenzo

100,000 nomadic Indigenous people can’t find food in the same places as before

Arctic biodiversity is the basis for Arctic food systems and the livelihood of Indigenous populations in ten countries. But, today, Arctic environments are experiencing climate and environmental changes four times faster than any other place in the world. 

Retreating sea ice and permafrost thawing impact pasture conditions and routes for livestock and over 100,000 nomadic Indigenous people.

Changing routes make their journeys more complex:  “Indigenous communities are being dragged away from their berries patches,” Stephan Schott, a professor in natural resource management at Carleton University, shares as an example. 

Food security of these communities becomes more difficult to sustain as they cannot rely on food resources along their paths like in previous years, he says.

But human-caused climate change does not happen in a vacuum. Booming Arctic tourism, increased Sámi land use, and overfishing disrupt further Arctic food systems. It also threatens the passing of culture onto younger generations.

The traditional food is often served in a ‘lavvu’ - or traditional Sámi tent
The traditional food is often served in a ‘lavvu’ - or traditional Sámi tentDaniela De Lorenzo

Back in 2014, the world’s top climate scientists, under the IPCC, named protecting grazing land as the most important adaptive strategy for reindeer herders. But Sámi communities’ pastures in Northern Europe are seized as rare minerals are abundant and the construction of mines to extract them can help fasten the green transition. Renewable energy parks have been built on Sámi land in Norway and Finland.

Alongside all this, Schott believes some communities are losing the ability and knowledge to slaughter, hunt, butcher, gather, and conserve food in traditional ways.

“As Sámi youth, it’s hard to preserve some traditions also due to exploitation of resources like salmon,” says Julius Mihkkal Lindi, a young Sámi working in the Arctic and Environmental Unit of the Saami Council. He remembers the first salmon he caught, but nowadays wild salmon fishing is off-limits for Indigenous communities in Canada, Norway and Alaska as the government ban is intended to replenish fish stocks.

What can food diplomacy do for Indigenous communities?

Food security is essential for the survival of these communities - and the right to food sovereignty is a recent innovation in international law, with the United Nations’ recognition and adoption in 2018.

Convincing policymakers to protect Indigenous people’s culture and environment had to be done in a particular way and this is why reindeer herders adopted food diplomacy strategies: 

“When you work with food, you work with all the things that are critical for us as Indigenous peoples. It's about both physical and mental health and animal welfare. It's about our economy, our security, identity and language,” says Anders Oskal, executive director of the International Centre for Reindeer Husbandry (ICRH).

The Arctic Council is the only political organisation that has permanent Indigenous people representatives. In 2018, they harnessed the power of their food and made the first food diplomacy attempt: an Indigenous people’s cookbook co-created by 50 Indigenous youth groups. Eallu won the prize for Best Cookbook at that year’s Gourmand awards, mainstreaming the knowledge of their food cultures and traditions. 

Nomad Indigenous Food Lab: Feeding top European politicians

The Nomad Indigenous Food Lab spun off in late 2020. The ICRH came up with the concept and made it mountable so they could bring it to various political arenas. 

The strategy was simple: feeding decision makers with what could soon be lost.

Young Sámi chefs fed Norwegian politicians with the food they love and cherish, as they sat around the fireplace during a top Norwegian political event in 2023. The nomadic kitchen was also transported and rebuilt inside the headquarters of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) during its World Food Forum in Rome.

“The response is enormous because people in the modern world are no longer used to having discussions around the fire. It is the arena where we have our most important conversations. It feels different, and it's something people remember,” Oskal says.

Reindeers are used for multiple parts of Sami's lives
Reindeers are used for multiple parts of Sami's livesDaniela De Lorenzo

Strengthening Indigenous communities from the inside

The Centre for Reindeer Husbandry believes that the recognition of Indigenous knowledge by FAO was strengthened by the presence of their nomadic kitchen - but, they say, more work and convincing needs to be done.

The Indigenous people's mantra is ‘to take only what you need from nature and use everything of what you get’ - an increasingly popular mantra in gourmet restaurants and beyond.

“Our concept has the potential to get people to understand more about our food systems and how one might think about true sustainability,” says Oskal. Putting Indigenous people’s knowledge and food systems on the agenda is not easy. But it is vital if they are to have a liveable future.

To navigate the climate crisis - that they are not responsible for - Nomadic people believe they have to strengthen their communities so as to have a voice at the table: “The goal is to help younger Indigenous peoples realise the importance of our food systems,” says Oskal. “We need to engage our youth to take charge themselves to become the leaders of their future, and empower them."

This is the aim to avoid being left behind: “The European Union has a very progressive policy towards Indigenous peoples in the world. However, it does not practice those same regulations for the Indigenous peoples inside the European Union,” Oskal says. “I'd like to see our nomadic food lab in Brussels.”

 

Royal Mail unveils new stamps celebrating 50th anniversary of Dungeons & Dragons

Royal Mail unveils new stamps celebrating 50th anniversary of Dungeons & Dragons
Copyright Royal Mail
By Euronews
Published on 

Royal Mail celebrates the 50th anniversary of the tabletop role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons, which is enjoyed by around 64 million fans globally.

Fantasy game Dungeons & Dragons turns 50 this year and the Royal Mail is celebrating by unveiling a set of 14 stamps, featuring monsters and characters from D&D. 

The tabletop role-playing game, first published in 1974, allows an estimated 64 million fans worldwide to embark on player-driven adventures with friends. 

Fourteen special stamps are part of the collection, depicting the game’s most famous monsters and heroes. All of the artwork was illustrated by British artist Wayne Reynolds and features 11 images commissioned for the set

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David Gold, director of external affairs and policy at Royal Mail, said: “For fifty years, Dungeons & Dragons has enabled millions of fans across the world to enjoy using their imaginations and immersing themselves in a magical world. We are delighted that this creative and exciting role-playing game is celebrated using Britain’s Wayne Reynolds’ unique illustrations.” 

Vecna
VecnaRoyal Mail

The monsters featured on the main set of eight stamps are Red Dragon, Vecna, Mimic, Beholder, Gelatinous Cube, Mind Flayer, Displacer Beast and Owlbear. The six images of a party of adventuring heroes feature Tiefling Rogue, Human Bard, Halfling Cleric, Elf Fighter, Dwarf Paladin and Dragonborn Wizard. 

And if you happen to have an ultraviolet light handy, shining it over the eight pictures of monsters will reveal the D&D logo on four of the stamps and a graphic related to the monster on the other four. 

DUNGEONS & DRAGONS Dragons Medal Cover
DUNGEONS & DRAGONS Dragons Medal CoverRoyal Mail

There are some important decisions to be made for fans. The Presentation Pack includes the main set of eight stamps along with the sticker sheet of six for £24.40 (€29); the Dragons Medal Cover looks mighty good for the sum of £19.99 (€23); and the framed Vecna print signed by Wayne Reynolds will set you back £150 (€178). For our money, the Prestige Stamp Book Limited Edition and its fold out toothy mouth for £49.99 (€60) is a favourite.

DUNGEONS & DRAGONS Prestige Stamp Book Limited Edition
DUNGEONS & DRAGONS Prestige Stamp Book Limited EditionRoyal Mail

Dan Rawson, global play lead of D&D at Wizards of the Coast said: “Building on Hasbro’s existing work with Royal Mail, we’re honoured to release this beautiful collection of stamps, officially approved by HM King Charles III, in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the World’s Greatest Roleplaying Game. With stunning art from long-time Dungeons & Dragons artist Wayne Reynolds showcasing our adventuring heroes and fearsome creatures, we’re sure these items will be treasured by D&D fans and stamp collectors alike.” 

D&D’s fantasy world and monsters have influenced fantasy tropes in film, television and video games to this day. A movie based on the game, Dungeons & Dragons: Honour Among Thieves, was released last year and a video game set in its universe, Baldur’s Gate 3, was also published in 2023 and won five Bafta Game Awards in April. 

As for the 50th anniversary celebrations, D&D's creators have not limited it to stamps. Earlier this year, they released the first-ever D&D Lego set and then teamed up with Converse for an exclusive line of shoes. 

The stamps are available to pre-order on Royal Mail’s website before going on general sale from July 25.