As a young man caught between life in rural and urban Manitoba, Dean Robinson struggled with anger, disconnection, and questions about where he belonged. Reconnecting with the land through hunting helped him rediscover his culture, identity, and purpose.
In this episode, Dean’s personal journey unfolds alongside a troubling reality: moose populations across parts of Manitoba are declining due to a human-caused pressures. And for many Indigenous communities, the disappearance of moose threatens cultural practices and relationships with the land that have endured for generations.
Through conversations with Dean, wildlife biologist Ally Menzies, and climate psychologist Britt Wray, the episode explores anger as a response to ecological loss, and how that anger can be transformed into stewardship, and hope for future generations.
Beyond Ecological Grief is a six-part series about how people live with profound loss in a changing world, and what it means to carry grief, justice, and hope forward.
With support from the Trebek Initiative.
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