Below are the best videos we could find on Indigenous Rights and indigenous well being.
CLEAR ALL
Grandmother Mona Polacca believes that her origins are as important as her name, Polacca, which means butterfly in the Hopi language. On her father's side, she a Hopi-Tewa from the Sun and the Tobacco Clans. It was her paternal grandfather who named her.
Agnes Baker Pilgrim talks of her early life and family, of her Takelma heritage, of the Sacred Salmon Ceremony, of going to Southern Oregon University and graduating at age 61, about the Circle of 13 Indigenous Grandmothers and about water, life and the earth.
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Talk given by Pat McCabe at the Advaya event Regenerative Activism: Revitalising Self and Society, April 2017.
Geo Neptune explores the history of the term “Two-Spirit” and who it pertains to. Does it mean two genders? Can anyone use it to describe themselves? InQueery is the series that takes a deeper look at the meaning, context, and history of LGBTQ+ vocabulary and culture.
Grandmother Mona is representative of the Indigenous World Forum on Water and Peace, a coalition of Indigenous leaders and organizations that was envisioned by the elders to protect the water. It has the support of 60 organizations globally at the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues.
Winona LaDuke is an internationally renowned activist working on issues of sustainable development renewable energy and food systems.
Agnes Pilgrim, Council of 13 Grandmas.
Jose Stevens interviews 2018 Eagle Feather Recipient, Mona Polacca.
Reclaiming Relationship & Tradition: Towards a Future that Works for All.
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