Photo: Emily Wolfrey with some of the youth and elders who gathered to talk about their stories as land and water protectors.
Emily Wolfrey of Rigolet did what it took to get to New Brunswick last month to participate in a gathering of youth and elders. While there, they talked about their stories as land and water protectors.
“I travelled on skidoo from Rigolet to Goose Bay (about a six-hour ride) and then I caught my flight the following day to go to Halifax. When I got to Moncton (New Brunswick) we drove to Fredericton,” Wolfrey said during a phone interview.
A group called United for Mining Justice (www.unitedforminingjustice.com) organized the event which took place Feb. 15 to 18.
Wolfrey told the gathering about the mega hydroelectric project at Muskrat Falls and about how her role as a land protector led to her arrest in October 2016.
She told them about how high methylmercury levels are poisoning her people’s food. “We never, ever had to go and buy our meals from the store. We always lived off the land.
“But now people are a bit nervous to live off the land because of the methylmercury,” Wolfrey said. Wolfrey […]
Full article: Young woman from Rigolet shares stories of protecting the land and the water
Water Warriors and Other People Stories
- How One Kid Stopped the Contamination of a River
- Flint water bottles become Genusee eyeglass frames
- Interfaith Leaders From Across The World Pledge To Protect Rivers, Glaciers
- Attorney who won legal battles for Louisiana after Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill receives Coastal Stewardship Award
- Local sorority raises $20,000 to help Flint’s water crisis
- How a Pediatrician Became a Detective