Russian day in Indigenous peoples' pavilion

Date: 4 December 2015

Place: Indigenous peoples' pavilion, COP21

​Program:

 

11.00 - 11.20 - The Ceremonial Opening of the Russian day (Big room, Indigenous pavilion. Russian/English translation)

11.20 - 12.00 - Cultural presentation. Drum, throat singing (Big room, Indigenous pavilion)

       Presenters:

·      Olga Chonka (Chukotka, Throat singing, drum, traditional indigenous songs)

·      Cheinysh Baitushkina (Altai, Throat singing, traditional indigenous music)

12.00 - 12.50 - Side-event "Russian indigenous peoples and climate change adaptation cases" (Big room, Indigenous pavilion. Russian/English translation)

       Presenters:

·      Polina Shulbaeva (Selkup people, Tomsk region (Siberia), Russia)

·      Viktoria Sharahmatova (Itelmen people, Kamchatka region, Russian Far East)

·      Vyacheslav Shadrin (Yukagir people, Yakutia, Russian Far East)

·      Dr. Alexandra LAVRILLIER (CEARC - Associate professor in anthropology - University of Versailles, France)

·      Dr. Boris Shishlo, Doctor of ethnology (Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, France)

 12.50 - 13.30 - Cultural presentation of the Amur people. (Round room, Indigenous pavilion. Russian/English translation)

·      Presenter: Elena U (Ulchi people, Khabarovsk region, Russian Far East)

 12.50 - 14.30 - Film Screening "The Tundra Book. A Tale of Vukvukai, the Little Rock". (Big room, Indigenous pavilion. Russian with English subtitles)

 13.30 - 14.00 - Presentation of the Russian indigenous peoples' traditional food (Round room, Indigenous pavilion. Russian/English translation)

       Presenters:

·      Elena U (Ulchi people, Khabarovsk region, Russian Far East)

·      Polina Shulbaeva (Selkup people, Tomsk region (Siberia), Russia)

·      Valentina Kastarakova (Kumandin people, Altai region, Russia)

 14.15 - 14.30 - Traditional Evenk round dance (Solar Sound System space in the Center of Civil Society pavilion, near bicycles)

       Presenter:

·      Nadezhda Bulatova (Evenk people, Amur region, Russian Far East)