BIO-CULTURAL COMMUNITY PROTOCOLS AS A COMMUNITY-BASED RESPONSE TO THE CBD PART I / CHAPTER 2 3.6 The Cultural Importance of TK and Indigenous Breeds to the new home and moisturizing her skin with the fat to relax her; • When a child is born, a sheep is slaughtered, and when All communities greatly emphasized the cultural importance of their TK and where applicable, their indigenous breeds. The Bushbuckridge traditional healers, for example, explained how they perform a number of important roles as traditional healers that underpin their Sepedi or Tsonga cultures: someone dies, sheep fat is smeared on their mouths as a sign of respect; and • When we slaughter for warriors, we choose only one color which they say is straight, also when someone is sick, then they slaughter an animal that is healthy, with all the teeth and eyes. There is a special steer (castrated bull) that As well as treating conventional illnesses, we perform a number of other culturally significant roles in the community. We connect community members to their ancestors in different is slaughtered and a part of the skin is used as a ring. The color has to be accepted by the community and it must have all its teeth intact. ways, including assisting families when their newborn babies cry for their names, carrying out coming of age ceremonies, providing counseling for a range of issues, chasing away evil spirits through cleansing ceremonies, and determining when the ancestors are calling someone to become a traditional healer. Notably, whilst mixed breeds can be used in lean times, the pure indigenous breeds are more highly valued for use in 16 our ceremonies. They concluded by saying: “Our culture and animal breeds are integral to who we are as a People. Without our We also induct new traditional healers, providing initiation and training, thus passing on our knowledge and culture to future generations. All of the above contributes to healthy indigenous breeds we will lose a critical part of our collective bio-cultural heritage, and without our culture our indigenous breeds are less likely to be conserved.” communities, builds leadership and morale, and promotes 15 our culture. Likewise, the Samburu set out a number of areas of their 3.7 Traditional Knowledge, Sharing and Free, Prior and Informed Consent culture in which their breeds are important. They state: In continuation of the last point, the idea of ABS and its In addition to the sustenance our livestock provides us, they constituent parts such as FPIC is novel to many communities. also play a significant role in our culture. A number of examples Communities need time to think through what prior illustrate this point: informed consent to use their natural resources or TK really entails, especially when the idea of owning or selling • Each clan’s elders decide on the age set for initiating boys, resources or knowledge can be alien. and a bull is slaughtered to validate that age set; • During the coming of age ceremony, boys are circumcised Natural Justice’s approach has been to work with while wearing and sitting on Red Maasai sheep skins; communities to think through the customary laws that relate • As part of wedding ceremonies, the man must find a pure to the sharing of TK and use of natural resources, helping Red Maasai sheep (signified by its red color, long ears and communities to extend the values that underpin their TK clear eyes) and present it to his future Mother-in-Law who or access to resources to other new stakeholders such is then referred to as “Paker”, literally meaning “the one who as (non-) commercial researchers. has been given sheep.” Another sheep is slaughtered for the wedding; All the groups mentioned above discussed how they • The bride is given a calabash full of milk and a gourd came to know their knowledge and how they share it that is filled with the fat of from the tail of the Red Maasai with each other. In fact, the sharing of knowledge was sheep, drinking the milk to assuage her fears about going presented by all groups as one of the most important 15. Supra note 8. 16. Supra note 2. 28

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