Skip to content
  • About
  • Partner with Us
  • Indonesia
  • Subscribe
  • Log In
Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Latest
  • Topics
  • News
  • Brief
  • Interview
  • Opinion
  • Figure
  • Infographic
  • Video
  • Community
  • Partner
  • Press Release
  • Youth
  • Global
  • Featured
  • Soft News

‘Hooked on Peace’ Engages Youth and Storytelling to Promote Indigenous Languages and Cultures

The ‘Hooked on Peace’ project explores how youth can help promote Indigenous languages and cultures through storytelling.
by Nazalea Kusuma January 17, 2024
an elder lady sitting cross-legged and weaving talking to a young man crouching and writing on a note pad.

A youth conducting an interview with an elder in Kangrachari, Bangladesh. | Photo: The Asia Foundation.

Language is how we express ourselves and connect with others. Every community has its own language, including all ethnic communities, the Deaf community, and Indigenous communities across the globe. In the Asia-Pacific alone, there are more than 3,000 documented languages. Unfortunately, many of them are dying along with their cultures. The ‘Hooked on Peace’ project explores how youth can help promote Indigenous languages and cultures through storytelling.

Indigenous Languages and Cultures

With thousands of languages spoken, Asia is one of the most linguistically diverse regions in the world. Regrettably, this beautiful diversity is now under threat, with Indigenous languages at the frontline. This is a direct consequence of colonial practices such as land grabs, assimilation policies, and discriminatory laws and actions toward Indigenous peoples. 

Indigenous languages play a role beyond practical communication. They are also repositories of Indigenous peoples’ rich, complex, and extensive values and knowledge with millennia of history. A threat to Indigenous languages is a threat to Indigenous peoples.

In the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Article 13 states, “Indigenous peoples have the right to revitalize, use, develop and transmit to future generations their histories, languages, oral traditions, philosophies, writing systems, and literatures, and to designate and retain their own.”

Hooked on Peace

As globalization continues, it is important to acknowledge how Indigenous youth can be valuable actors in promoting and guarding their own cultures and heritages. Hooked on Peace aims to empower them to do so.  

Hooked on Peace is an intersectoral collaboration by UNESCO, the Asia Foundation, the Asia Indigenous Youth Platform (AIYP), and the Asia Indigenous Peoples Pact (AIPP) with support from the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs. This project encourages connection between Indigenous youth and community elders to collaborate and promote Indigenous knowledge and wisdom to answer present-day challenges.

Essentially, Hooked on Peace seeks to promote peacebuilding by fostering intergenerational dialogue through stories and other narrative traditions. It aims to use digital storytelling in the Indigenous languages to promote youth development, mother-tongue education, digital literacy, gender equality, and preservation of Indigenous cultures. 

Masterclasses and More

The ‘Hooked on Peace’ project began in September 2022. It primarily manifests as masterclasses and workshops, training Indigenous youth in South and Southeast Asia in various storytelling methods and techniques. Among them are documentary filmmaking, photo stories, children’s stories, and creative non-fiction.  

These events involve storytelling experts from various organizations, such as the Indigenous Media Network from Thailand, The Asia Foundation from Bangladesh, and Lao New Wave Cinema from Lao PDR. So far, they have happened in person and virtually. 

Language and story are powerful tools for both preservation and advancement. Therefore, empowering Indigenous youth with storytelling skills to contribute to cultural preservation and peacebuilding is essential to sustainable development that leaves no one behind. 

Twisa Tripura, a Hooked on Peace workshop participant from Bangladesh, said, “I am so delighted to be a part of the Hooked on Peace project, as I always endeavor to contribute to my community. Being an Indigenous youth changemaker, I feel a great responsibility to protect and promote our traditional culture and document all the untold stories for our future generations.”


Subscribe to Green Network Asia
Strengthen your personal and professional development with cross-sectoral insights on sustainability-related issues and sustainable development across the Asia Pacific and beyond.
Select Your Subscription Plan
Nazalea Kusuma
Editor at Green Network Asia | Website |  + postsBio

Naz is the Manager for International Digital Publications at Green Network Asia. She once studied Urban and Regional Planning and has lived in multiple cities across Southeast Asia. This personal experience has exposed her to diverse peoples & cultures and enriched her perspectives. Naz is an experienced and passionate writer, editor, translator, and creative designer with a decade worth of portfolio.

  • Nazalea Kusuma
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/nazalea/
    Living with Less: Does TikTok’s Underconsumption Core promote sustainable living?
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/nazalea/
    Brain Rot and Its Impacts on Mental Health and Cognitive Abilities
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/nazalea/
    Addressing the Challenges in Ecosystem-based Adaptation (EbA) Implementation
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    https://greennetwork.asia/author/nazalea/
    Dark Side of the Light: How light pollution affects people and the planet

Continue Reading

Previous: Strengthening Religious Moderation to Support Global Peacebuilding
Next: Climate Journalism Key Issues and Learning in Southeast Asia

Related Stories

Close-up of seedlings growing in pots How India’s National Agroforestry Policy Helps Tackle Land Degradation and More
  • Exclusive
  • Featured
  • Soft News

How India’s National Agroforestry Policy Helps Tackle Land Degradation and More

by Attiatul Noor June 20, 2025
The rapid development in AI technologies must be supported with AI regulation to ensure responsible usage. Establishing AI Regulation to Support Responsible Tech Usage
  • Featured
  • Soft News

Establishing AI Regulation to Support Responsible Tech Usage

by Ayu Nabilah June 19, 2025
a wilted sunflower Comprehensive and Participatory Drought Monitoring for Improved Disaster Mitigation
  • Exclusive
  • Featured
  • Soft News

Comprehensive and Participatory Drought Monitoring for Improved Disaster Mitigation

by Kresentia Madina June 18, 2025
multiple megaphones attached on a pillar The Role of Risk Communication for Better Disaster Preparedness
  • Exclusive
  • Featured
  • Soft News

The Role of Risk Communication for Better Disaster Preparedness

by Kresentia Madina June 17, 2025
two hands joining puzzle pieces Indonesia-UN Collaboration to Support Job Creation and Social Protection
  • Exclusive
  • Featured
  • Soft News

Indonesia-UN Collaboration to Support Job Creation and Social Protection

by Abul Muamar June 16, 2025
a photo of Umea town landscape. How the City of Umeå Addresses Gender Inequality in Urban Areas
  • Exclusive
  • Featured
  • Soft News

How the City of Umeå Addresses Gender Inequality in Urban Areas

by Ayu Nabilah and Kresentia Madina June 13, 2025

About Us

  • GNA Founder’s Letter
  • GNA In-House Team
  • GNA Author Network
  • GNA Press Release Guidelines
  • GNA Op-ed Article Guidelines
  • GNA Community Content Guidelines
  • GNA Internship
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
© 2021-2025 Green Network Asia