In a small Quebec town of 2,000 people, something quietly extraordinary happened on June 9th: city council voted unanimously to recognize trees as living beings with rights of their own -- the right to life, to natural growth, to integrity, and to regeneration. Terrasse-Vaudreuil, built in the woods west of Montreal, became the first municipality in Canada to sign the Universal Declaration of the Rights of the Tree, a move inspired in part by a local filmmaker whose documentary showed citizens how trees breathe, communicate through their root systems, and form ecosystems all by themselves. The legal argument turns out to be less radical than it sounds. As Ecojustice lawyer Karine Peloffy notes, "corporations have legal personhood and rights and they are definitely not living" -- so why not the beings that hold up the sky? The town's mayor speaks of trees not as scenery or resources but as allies, infrastructure, neighbors -- a community flooded three times by climate change learning to name what it cannot afford to lose. There is something worth sitting with in the image of a municipal resolution that asks humans to stand in "fraternity and solidarity" with the trees that have been standing all along.