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Melinda Adams: Flame Keeper

On Indigenous Fire, Cultural Healing and Not Giving Up on a Warming World

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Native America woman in black shirt and blue earrings looks directly at camera for a series on climate anxiety.
Native American studies scholar and environmental scientist Melinda Adams studies the reclamation of Indigenous land stewardship practices, such as cultural burning. (Alysha Beck/UC Davis)

is an environmental scientist, Ph.D. candidate in Native American studies and member of the San Carlos Apache Tribe. She helps teach UC Davisā€™ ā€œKeepers of the Flameā€ class, in which students work with Indigenous fire practitioners to reclaim the practice of cultural burning ā€” which uses fire as a tool for land restoration, not destruction.

Hers is a unique voice that amplifies and weaves together Native American studies, environmental science, ecology and climate change solutions through a lens of Indigenous land stewardship and cultural inclusivity.

How do you feel when youā€™re at a cultural burn?

For me, I think thereā€™s a lot of healing that happens. Weā€™re not just healing the landscape with this good fire thatā€™s going to regenerate plants and cut back fuel loads and raise the water table. This was a practice that was taken away from Indigenous peoples. Weā€™re literally taking these practices back and stewarding our lands while healing ourselves, culturally. And weā€™re doing it with elders, young folks and even little kids. Weā€™re participating in a community of healing.

Men and women in jackets light field of deergrass on fire as part of cultural burn in California.
Melinda Adams, middle, along with UC Davis students, academics and members of the local Native American community take part in a collaborative cultural burn at the Tending and Gathering Garden at Cache Creek Nature Preserve in Woodland in January 2020. (Alysha Beck/UC Davis)

In the beginning stages of my research, I used the word ā€œrevitalizing,ā€ but one of my elders said, ā€œMelinda, weā€™re not ā€˜revitalizingā€™ fire. These ways are not dead; they didnā€™t go anywhere. Weā€™re reclaiming them.ā€ I thought that was a pretty powerful ā€œauntieā€ lesson.  

Are there common misconceptions youā€™d like to share about cultural burning? 

Cultural burning can differ from prescribed or controlled burning. Itā€™s very tribe-centric and place-specific. The lessons and solutions you learn in one area arenā€™t necessarily translatable to another. For cultural burns, you need to build community in each place. These partnerships have to be created and sustained first with the Cā€™s: consultation, collaboration and consent. And also the Rā€™s: respect, responsibility and reciprocity, all upheld with the tribe. Grounding your approaches in those relational contexts is key. 

What are some of your early memories around connecting with the environment? 

I grew up in New Mexico, and where my mother and father have close connections to their tribal homelands. Learning about the environment through storytelling, storysharing and placing ourselves within the environment was such a holistic way to learn my responsibilities to the land and how to carry myself as an Indigenous woman.

Melinda Adams lights a field of Deergrass on fire
Melinda Adams lights a field of deergrass during the Tending and Gathering Garden Indigenous Fire Workshop at the Cache Creek Nature Preserve in Woodland. The workshop was part of an ongoing collaboration between local members of the Native American community and UC Davis students from the ā€œKeepers of the Flameā€ class, which Adams co-instructs. (Alysha Beck/UC Davis)

What led you to get involved with studying fire?

Iā€™ll tell you the academic story and the family story.

The academic story is that after I finished undergrad at a tribal college in Kansas, I found my way to plant ecology and environmental science at Purdue by working with biochar, a soil amendment and form of charcoal created through burning. Itā€™s a conservation restoration tool created by Indigenous people in the Amazon basin. Like with cultural burning, they purposely burned for millennia for many reasons ā€” to sustain communities with food, get rid of waste, to make healthy soils. I was captivated by this!

We decided to apply the practice to tallgrass prairie ā€” one of the most devastated ecosystems in the United States. I participated in some prairie burns, and we had good results with our biochar research. That was inspiring. This is how I got into fire research.

Weā€™re participating in a community of healing.

Then thereā€™s the family story: A lot of our Native communities have a dark history of removal, and we donā€™t always want to share part of the past related to intergenerational trauma. Recently, my mother shared something with me. She never told me this until I brought up my research with cultural fire. She said, ā€œYou know, I fought fire as a young person.ā€

I was like, ā€œWhat?!ā€

ā€œYeah! Every summer in Arizona, I served as a wildland firefighter for our tribe. You come from a line of fire keepers. Itā€™s in your blood.ā€

Iā€™m sure that was a surprise! So, two key questions: Do you feel climate anxiety, and what do you do about it in those moments? 

I grapple with my approach to climate anxiety. I think we need to confront that weā€™re experiencing it, especially here in California, with drought and wildfire. When I was in the Midwest, I taught about air pollution and smog by showing pictures of New York and California. Now Iā€™m here and seeing it. And the orange skies are something we have to prepare ourselves for. That struck me, vividly. This is happening. We all need to pay attention and think about collective climate solutions. 

As a Native community member, I see firsthand how extreme climatic events displace, remove and leave our people in vulnerable positions environmentally and with our public and mental health. In most instances, our culture, language and identities are formed through our connections with lands and waters.  So when our homelands are degraded or when weā€™re removed from them, there are threats to cultures that have persisted for millennia. Thatā€™s a heavy thing to carry.

Native American woman Melinda Adams in field
Melinda Adams, a Native American studies scholar and environmental scientist at UC Davis, stands in a field at the Tending and Gathering Garden in Woodland, California. (Alysha Beck/UC Davis)

I choose to remain committed to the work I do because there are elders, tribal members and young people all in a sense relying on the work I help with to dispel a lot of the misconceptions about Native Peoples and to respectfully foreground our land stewardship practices. Given the spaces and fields I have access to, itā€™s my responsibility to challenge the oversimplification and erasure of my Peoples.

Thatā€™s kind of what lights the fire, if youā€™ll forgive the pun. We talk a lot about responsibility in our community. We want to be good relatives so that one day we can be good ancestors.

What excites you about the work you do? 

For people who study climate change, it can be disheartening. They know the statistics and what the science is pointing to. Itā€™s hard to remain optimistic and solutions oriented. But Iā€™m seeing and feeling a shift in peopleā€™s perspective.

Back of Native American woman looking toward field. Back of her shirt says "Rematriate the Land."
Melinda Adams looks out at the Tending and Gathering Garden at Cache Creek Nature Preserve in Yolo County. (Alysha Beck/UC Davis)

I think the surge of social justice movements in 2020 demands that we look at how certain perspectives have been left out of national conversations and how we must invite these perspectives into climate solutions. I think weā€™re experiencing a moment, and it might be naive of me, but I see this as an opportunity. We can return the gaze. I think if we could have had a broader Indigenous perspective hundreds of years ago, perhaps some of these climate change issues would probably not be occurring at the rate they are.

 I think weā€™re experiencing a moment, and it might be naive of me, but I see this as an opportunity. We can return the gaze.

Thatā€™s a great way of tying together the social justice and climate change issues. They really canā€™t be separated.

Yes! For example, I recently served on the committee to rename the John Muir Institute of the Environment here at UC Davis. We heard from people wanting to keep it and from Native peoples about how we need to stop naming things for people who have caused harm to underrepresented communities. At the end of the day, as a committee, we voted to rename JMIE and now itā€™s the .

For me, that was such an exciting moment! Being part of the renaming dialogue was a way to uplift the visibility of my people, especially in a space dedicated to science and climate research. It was a bit of a heavy load to carry in educating people about why itā€™s necessary. But changes like these are profound.

[My ancestors] never gave up. They withstood colonization and the collapse of their worlds. Who am I to give up when they didnā€™t? 

When I was brought up, I heard stories about people fighting for change, whether it be for federal status recognition or environmental issues. My relatives shared with me: ā€œI might not ever see that change in my lifetime. We come to these spaces and fight our fights with this in mind.ā€ We lead with, ā€œIā€™m not doing this for me, but for my children, my grandchildren.ā€

So to see something like a renaming, or a racial slur like the Redskins or the Indians be changed. To see Deb Haaland, a tribal member and U.S. secretary of the interior be the highest-ranked government official overseeing the greatest proportion of our public lands ā€¦ Iā€™m not an elder yet, but I never thought Iā€™d see that change in my lifetime! 

Native American scholar Melinda Adams in grassland of Yolo County
Melinda Adams of UC Davis at the Tending and Gathering Garden in Woodland, California. The garden is a collaboration between Native American community members and Cache Creek Conservancy to demonstrate traditional land and plant management practices of Californiaā€™s Native people. (Alysha Beck/UC Davis)

I think that extends to a lot of underrepresented communities. Thereā€™s such momentum in social and environmental activism right now. Our youth are taking on the challenge of climate change. They inherited this, but theyā€™re savvy and smart. Theyā€™re calling out racial injustices. They are very prepared to take on this fight.

I share your admiration for todayā€™s youth. But I also know some young people are quite anxious and scared about the future. Some quite literally think the world is about to end. There are videos of kids on Tik Tok in tears over climate anxiety. Do you have any thoughts or advice for them? 

I would say their feelings are very real, they are valid, and I understand. For example, some students taking the ā€œKeepers of the Flameā€ class have climate anxiety, some were displaced from wildfire. The point of taking the class is to have that change in perception of our approaches to stewardship. Cultural burning and other Indigenous-led environmental practices are led with our future, all peopleā€™s future, in mind.

For me, I havenā€™t reached the point of feeling like there might not be a future or a California. That might be how I choose to see the world based on the stories of resiliency and hope Iā€™ve inherited from my ancestors.

They never gave up. They withstood colonization and the collapse of their worlds. Who am I to give up when they didnā€™t? They didnā€™t give up on their youth or their future, and neither will I. 

Media Resources

Kat Kerlin is an environmental science writer on the UC Davis News and Media Relations team. 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu. Twitter 

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