The China Mail - In New York, a native tribe fights to save its land from climate change

USD -
AED 3.672496
AFN 63.499831
ALL 82.257093
AMD 368.070326
ANG 1.790403
AOA 918.000251
ARS 1461.5157
AUD 1.430584
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.699751
BAM 1.707839
BBD 2.014862
BDT 122.896637
BGN 1.69088
BHD 0.37695
BIF 2985
BMD 1
BND 1.293759
BOB 6.91239
BRL 5.158099
BSD 1.000358
BTN 94.655909
BWP 13.576786
BYN 2.799012
BYR 19600
BZD 2.011981
CAD 1.416315
CDF 2264.999797
CHF 0.809065
CLF 0.023031
CLP 906.449743
CNY 6.774798
CNH 6.778565
COP 3445.05
CRC 453.811158
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 96.87499
CZK 21.17645
DJF 177.720059
DKK 6.54281
DOP 58.291712
DZD 133.536016
EGP 49.741198
ERN 15
ETB 161.283979
EUR 0.87533
FJD 2.251302
FKP 0.755695
GBP 0.755093
GEL 2.650323
GGP 0.755695
GHS 11.230007
GIP 0.755695
GMD 72.999698
GNF 8777.504172
GTQ 7.628428
GYD 209.275317
HKD 7.83945
HNL 26.762371
HRK 6.593902
HTG 130.677006
HUF 308.422497
IDR 17965
ILS 2.97135
IMP 0.755695
INR 94.70085
IQD 1310.524891
IRR 1374999.999882
ISK 126.050215
JEP 0.755695
JMD 158.06984
JOD 0.70896
JPY 161.558494
KES 129.419543
KGS 87.450283
KHR 4016.800706
KMF 429.497004
KPW 900.00035
KRW 1541.859863
KWD 0.30866
KYD 0.833661
KZT 487.587213
LAK 22093.277098
LBP 89584.959701
LKR 334.503445
LRD 182.07459
LSL 16.436923
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.396659
MAD 9.325876
MDL 17.591841
MGA 4219.387176
MKD 53.93993
MMK 2099.917974
MNT 3579.231668
MOP 8.077961
MRU 40.000349
MUR 47.809815
MVR 15.460512
MWK 1736.000022
MXN 17.37015
MYR 4.147098
MZN 63.89974
NAD 16.436923
NGN 1366.65962
NIO 36.814852
NOK 9.70485
NPR 151.449105
NZD 1.752587
OMR 0.384501
PAB 1.000358
PEN 3.385028
PGK 4.456902
PHP 61.130966
PKR 278.233656
PLN 3.74025
PYG 6098.551332
QAR 3.646906
RON 4.5841
RSD 102.777034
RUB 74.251001
RWF 1465.171718
SAR 3.753791
SBD 8.061424
SCR 13.283564
SDG 600.498943
SEK 9.626925
SGD 1.293885
SHP 0.746601
SLE 24.749912
SLL 20969.503664
SOS 571.695527
SRD 37.4305
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.39383
SVC 8.753133
SYP 110.532098
SZL 16.433081
THB 32.980139
TJS 9.278635
TMT 3.5
TND 2.957937
TOP 2.40776
TRY 46.470097
TTD 6.784027
TWD 31.702102
TZS 2628.231975
UAH 44.991835
UGX 3651.795772
UYU 40.002096
UZS 11989.276889
VES 606.63266
VND 26320
VUV 118.352303
WST 2.751796
XAF 572.793161
XAG 0.015452
XAU 0.000239
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.802932
XDR 0.71169
XOF 571.999874
XPF 104.139924
YER 238.567185
ZAR 16.410199
ZMK 9001.198041
ZMW 17.731555
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    0.3600

    61.5

    +0.59%

  • CMSC

    -0.2100

    22.16

    -0.95%

  • NGG

    1.5300

    80.97

    +1.89%

  • BCE

    -0.6300

    22.65

    -2.78%

  • RELX

    -0.3500

    30.83

    -1.14%

  • RIO

    -0.7200

    99.36

    -0.72%

  • AZN

    1.5000

    176.43

    +0.85%

  • CMSD

    -0.2100

    22.08

    -0.95%

  • GSK

    0.0700

    50.74

    +0.14%

  • BCC

    -2.1200

    72.54

    -2.92%

  • BTI

    -0.0100

    58.9

    -0.02%

  • VOD

    -0.1800

    14.12

    -1.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1900

    18.45

    +1.03%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.65

    -0.16%

  • BP

    0.6800

    39.78

    +1.71%

In New York, a native tribe fights to save its land from climate change
In New York, a native tribe fights to save its land from climate change / Photo: © AFP

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

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.

Text size:

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 800-acre (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.

- Flooding -

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 78-year-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."

B.Chan--ThChM