Aboriginal peoples and their relationship: Life-Nature // Reflection

The food comes from mother earth and wise nature, with which they maintain a biological and spiritual relationship, it is life for each of the ethnic groups. It can also be said that they practice an ecological ethic, in which they consider that the most important thing is the integrity of the Natural Resources, an example of this characteristic are certain activities that they carry out in their daily life, such as:

Hunting of certain mammals that make up the fauna of their habitat

Fauna that despite this, is not threatened by extinction risks, since the feeding of these hunters is based always respecting the reproduction and preservation of the fauna of their environment, and in this way they are especially careful to hunt female specimens and in this way it does not affect the reproduction of new species.

Fishing

Which they perform in seasons where their reproduction is not altered.

Feeding new crops

At the time of planting, they extract the plants and disperse the seeds for new crops.

Preserving the environment based on sustainable development

We can summarize all the aforementioned activities and conclude that the aboriginal lifestyle goes hand in hand with preserving the environment, exploiting the natural resources of its environment, and all this always thinking of living a dignified life, where they enjoy the riches that the nature, and at the same time thinking of leaving their future generations a habitat where they can, like them, live a lifestyle consistent with a sustainable and sustainable development over time.

Final reflection

If we all live in the proportion and direction in which our aborigines live, we would all have a life plagued by coexistence, harmony, love of Mother Nature (PACHAMAMA), thus considering preferences for certain elements such as natural foods from crops grown without transgenic or use of fertilizers.

If our love for the planet were such, then let's just say:

"Let us all live in the same form of consciousness as our aboriginal brothers, who, without counting on our so-called development, have the greatest development, the spiritual one, in which respect for nature is the most important thing."

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