Kuwait Times

In New York, a native tribe fights to save land from climate change

The Shinnecock now shrinking due to rising sea levels and coastal erosion

-

SOUTHAMPTO­N, US: In the Hamptons, New York’s playground for the rich and famous, a Native American tribe is battling with the latest threat to what’s left of its traditiona­l land: climate change. The Shinnecock, whose name means “people of the stony shore,” have lived on Long Island for 13,000 years.

Their villages stretched along the island’s eastern end before land grabs by European settlers and later US authoritie­s reduced their territory to an 800acre (1.25 square-mile) peninsula. That low-lying land is now shrinking due to rising sea levels and coastal erosion, and making it increasing­ly vulnerable to more powerful storms.

“You’re looking at a situation where an entire nation of people who have been here for essentiall­y forever are faced with a devastatin­g reality that we may have to relocate,” Tela Troge, a Shinnecock attorney, told AFP. The Shinnecock Indian Nation is a self-governing, federally recognized tribe of approximat­ely 1,600 members. Roughly half live on its reservatio­n, which juts out into Shinnecock Bay beside Southampto­n, where multi-million-dollar mansions sit behind electric gates.

Also next door is the hamlet of Shinnecock Hills and its famous eponymous golf club, land the tribe says was stolen from them in 1859. Warming temperatur­es are causing seas to expand and rise, eating away at the reservatio­n’s coastline.

Ed Terry, who makes traditiona­l Shinnecock jewelry out of shells found on the beach, remembers the sand going out much further when he was a boy. “You can see the erosion. Where the land was is now water. It’s like the sea is coming to us,” the 78year-old told AFP, as he sculpted a mussel shell to be worn as earrings. Some parts of the shoreline have already receded 150 feet (45 meters), according to studies cited by Shavonne Smith, the nation’s environmen­t director.

She says 57 homes may have to be relocated soon and bodies possibly disinterre­d from the tribe’s coastal cemetery and moved elsewhere. “If you’re talking about taking a people that are so dependent on the water-for spiritual health, recreation­al and sustenance-and now moving them further inland, you’re talking about a very huge, stressful, emotional, dynamic shift in who we are,” Smith told AFP.

The nation estimates its sea levels will rise by up to 4.4 feet (1.3 meters) by the end of the century. Coupled with more intense storms, this would mean frequent devastatin­g floods.

Hurricane Sandy gave a foretaste in 2012, washing away bluffs on the shore, ripping off roofs and flooding basements and the burial grounds. “There are studies that show by the year 2040 there’s a 100 percent chance the entire Shinnecock Nation region will get inundated by a storm,” said Scott Mandia, a climate change professor at Suffolk County Community College.

‘We will survive’

In an attempt to preserve their homeland and way of life, which includes fishing and farming, the nation is taking a nature-based approach towards tackling global warming. It has built an oyster shell reef and placed boulders to try to hold back waves, as well as planted sea and beach grass in a bid to stop sand from shifting. Tribe members are doing their bit too.

Troge, 35, is director of Shinnecock Kelp Farmers-a group of six Indigenous women who harvest sugar kelp and sell it as a non-chemical fertilizer. The seaweed helps clean up water pollution, fueled by neighborin­g developmen­t, by absorbing carbon and nitrates that cause toxic algae blooms, which damage marine life. Wading into the bay waist-high, farmer Donna Collins-Smith says she is inspired by previous Shinnecock generation­s “and what they have preserved for us.”

“We are maintainin­g that and bringing it back from a state of near dead,” the 65-year-old told AFP. Mandia, co-author of a book about rising sea levels, laments that marginaliz­ed communitie­s “who are least responsibl­e for” climate change are those “who are going to feel the pain the most.”

He applauds the tribe’s efforts but says they are “just buying time” before their land becomes uninhabita­ble. Terry, the septuagena­rian jeweler, wonders where future Shinnecock will go, since tribal boundaries are fixed.

“We have no higher ground,” he says. Neverthele­ss, Terry adds, “We are a strong people. We will survive.” —AFP

 ?? ?? SHINNECOCK NATION, United States: Waban Tarrant (right) and Donna Collins-Smith (left), members of the Shinnecock Indian Nation, harvest sugar kelp at the Shinnecock Kelp Farmer which will be used as a natural fertilizer for sea and beach grass planted to prevent beach erosion in the Hampton Bays on July 26, 2022. — AFP
SHINNECOCK NATION, United States: Waban Tarrant (right) and Donna Collins-Smith (left), members of the Shinnecock Indian Nation, harvest sugar kelp at the Shinnecock Kelp Farmer which will be used as a natural fertilizer for sea and beach grass planted to prevent beach erosion in the Hampton Bays on July 26, 2022. — AFP
 ?? ?? Nature-based strategy to curb global warming
Nature-based strategy to curb global warming

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait