23rd Biennale of Sydney Participant Interview - Torres Strait 8 - Yessie Mosby

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 2 авг 2024
  • The Torres Strait 8 are a group of claimants and Traditional Owners from Zenadh Kes (Torres Strait Islands) taking the Australian government to the Human Rights Committee of the United Nations for its inaction over climate change. Zenadh Kes is home to Torres Strait Islanders who have lived with a deep connection to land, sea, sky and culture for over 60,000 years. The people of Zenadh Kes are on the front line of climate change with rising sea levels, increasing extreme weather events and coastal erosion affecting the 18 inhabited islands in the region and threatening many communities’ way of life and culture.
    Torres Strait 8 Members
    Yessie Mosby, Masig (Yorke Island)
    Kabay Tamu, Warraber (Sue Island)
    Keith Pabai, Boigu (Boigu Island)
    Stanley Marama, Boigu (Boigu Island)
    Nazareth Warria, Masig (Yorke Island)
    Ted Billy, Warraber (Sue Island)
    Daniel Billy, Warraber (Sue Island)
    Nazareth Fauid, Poruma (Coconut Island)
    For the 23rd Biennale of Sydney, the Torres Strait 8 participate with a hybrid art-as-protest work led by Masig cultural practitioner Yessie Mosby. Yessie has carved a series of new totem poles from materials, pigments and fibres found on the Islands. The mythological totems share stories of ancestral beings in deep saltwater. These stories are interconnected with the current climate trauma the communities are experiencing, Yessie says ‘we will be the first climate refugees in this country.’ The collective’s participation magnifies the activism of the Our Islands Our Home campaign fighting for justice for the communities of Zenadh Kes and holding the Australian Government to account on climate change policy.
    You can read more about the Torres Strait 8’s Our Islands Our Home campaign and sign the petition by visiting ourislandsourhome.com.au/
    Our Islands Our Home is supported by 350.org Australia, ClientEarth, the environmental law charity supporting the UN complaint, the land and sea council Gur A Baradharaw Kod; and the Seed Youth Indigenous Climate Network.
    Video by Motel Picture Company.

Комментарии • 4

  • @alfrednasslander5334
    @alfrednasslander5334 Год назад +2

    Hey bala, the speech blo you was to deadly mekeh my hairar stun up too good bala to good👍

  • @C9H0S
    @C9H0S Год назад +1

    👏🏾🙂

  • @grahamjohnbarr
    @grahamjohnbarr 10 месяцев назад

    Just think mate, until Marbo got Land Rights the Australian Aboriginals fought very hard to deny they the TI's were Aboriginals. Once you got Land Rights the Aboriginals swung on your coat tails to get Land Rights.
    Up until 12000 to 8000 years ago The TI Islands were above the water & there was a land bridge between & PNG & Australia. The water has been rising for more than 100000 years. The rising water has nothing to do with Climate Change.

    • @amorlia4488
      @amorlia4488 10 месяцев назад

      Holy shit I didn't realize YOU were a Scientist. 😂😂😂😂 piss off