Indigenous Ways of Knowing and Decolonial Resource List

Indigenous Ways of Knowing and Decolonial Resource List

Lectures / Interviews / Talks / Readings

Abby Abinanti, “16th National Indian Nations Conference
Abby Abinanti, “2018 ICWA Symposium - Keynote
Abby Abinanti and Josh Norris, “Intergenerational Trauma
Akaxe Yotzin, “Metalanguages in Codex and Nahua Monoliths” (Part 2)
Alawiyya Jamal, “Our Indigenous Knowledge can Preserve The Environment
Alex Wilson, “Coming In to Indigenous Sovereignty: Relationality and Resurgence
Alex Wilson, “One House Many Nations: Hacking Colonial Systems of Dominance
Alexis Sanchez, Holly James, Sheryl Wright, “Decolonizing Queer Spaces
Amaranta Gómez Regalado, “La primera Muxe en conseguir un título universitario, habla de la discriminación
Angela Davis, “What is Queer BDS? Pinkwashing, Intersections, Struggles, Politics
Awqa Colque, “The Wretched of the Earth Chapter 2, 'Spontaneity: Its Strength and Weakness'
Beata Tsosie-Peña, “Three Centuries of Pueblo Resistance
Benny Wenda, “Indonesia's Hidden Colony
Bertha Isabel Zúñiga Cáceres, “US Military Aid Has Fueled Repression & Violence in Honduras
Billy-Ray Belcourt, “Gallstones and the Colonial Politics of the Future
Billy-Ray Belcourt, “Indigenous Feminism as Abolitionist Praxis: An Essay in Ten Parts
Billy-Ray Belcourt, “This Wound is a World
Blessed Ngwenya, “Coloniality and South American-African solidarity
Bruce Pascoe, “Aboriginal agriculture - maintaining a culture over millenia
Caleen Sisk, Jeannette Armstrong, and Anne Keala Kelly, “Colonization and Indigenous People panel
Caleen Sisk, “Ending violence and identifying peace
Caleen Sisk, “Human Rights crisis of unrecognized tribes
Caleen Sisk and Marc Dadigan, “Indigenous Knowledge
Caleen Sisk, “This I Believe: Finding Resilience in Nature in Perilous Times
Candi Brings Plenty, “Queer Indigenous, Two Spirit, cis Oglala Lakota Sioux Activist
Casey Camp Horinek and Ninawa Huni Kui, “Indigenous Knowledge and Cosmo-Vision
Cash Ahenakew, “We Too Are IDLE NO MORE: UBC
Charlene Sul, EMAVoicesOfTheEarth Interview
Charlene Sul, “Ways Non-native People Can Respectfully Get Involved with Indigenous Ways
Cheryl Clarke and Chrystos, “1993 OutWrite Writer's Conference
Chief Arvol Looking Horse, “Prophecies, World Peace, and Global Healing
Christi Belcort. “Artist Description of 'Giniigaaniimenaaning'
Chrystos, “Creating Change 2011
Chrystos, “Queer in Your Ear: Interview and Poetry Readings
Clifford Mahooty “(06-02-18) The Zunis & the Star People
Clifford Mahooty, “Traditional Zuni on the Past and Future
Clifford Nae’ole “Culture, Arts, & Hospitality
Clifford Nae’ole “The Legacy of Kaho`olawe: Protecting the Ancestors at Honokahua
Corrina Gould, “Berkeley Earth Day
Dave Courchene, “Indigenous Perspective on Health & Wellness
Deborah A. Miranda, NVTV “Author of ‘Bad Indians’“
Debra Sparrow, “Musqueam weaver, artist and knowledge keeper
Debra Sparrow, “The Honouring a Legacy: The Conversation of Debra Sparrow's Weaving Our Way
Denise Ferreira da Silva, “The Crises of European Imagination
Dian Million, “‘Indigenous Feminisms’ Affective Response to State Violence
Eda Zavala, “Anthropologist, Sociologist, Curandera 'Healer'
Elena Ortiz, Savannah Ortiz, Justine Teba, Jennifer Marley, Melanie Yazzie, “Pueblo Feminism & the Women's March
Eriel Deranger, “Reclaiming Our Indigeneity and Our Place in Modern Society
Esperanza Martinez, “This Changes Everything talk with Naomi Klein
Frank Johnson, “Resisters reading group Wretched of the Earth- Chap 1 'On Violence'
Freddy Mamani Silvestre and Gastón Gallardo, “New Andean: a new indigenous architecture
Giovanni Batz, “The Four Invasions of Guatemala and Indigenous Resistance
Gogo Ekhaya Esima, “Freedom, Expansion, and Growth in Altered States: Weaving the Spirit into Whole Person Care
Gogo Ekhaya Esima, “Sick or Gifted? Bridging the Connection Between Mental Health Issues and Spirituality
Gregory Cajete, “An Ecological Philosophy of Native Science: Living the Earth, Facing the Sun, Seeking the Light
Gregory Cajete, “Rebuilding Sustainable Indigenous Communities: Applying Native Science
Gregory Cajete and Patrisia Gonzales, “Natural Democracy and the function of Indigenous medicine
Hengede Danshilacuo and Patricia Mukhim, “2nd World Congress on Matriarchal Studies
Huanani-Kay Trask, “Democracy & Dissent in Post 9/11 America
Haunani-Kay Trask, “The Politics of Academic Freedom as the Politics of White Racism
Haunani-Kay Trask, “Who benefits from the misery of Native Hawaiians
Ilarion Merculieff, “The Womb at the Center of the Universe
Indigenous Peoples Forum On Doctrine of Discovery at Arizona Capitol
Inés Talamantez, “In The Space Between Earth & Sky
Inés Talamantez, “2018 SGS Conference, Day 1
Jacinta Koolmatrie, “The myth of Aboriginal stories being myths
Jacqueline Laguardia Martinez, “Overcoming colonial legacies in the Caribbean
Javier Garcia Fernandez, “Interviews from Caracas
Jennifer Marley, “Native Liberation Conference - Building Native/ChicanX Solidarity
Jennifer Marley, “Pueblo Resistance: Three Centuries of Pueblo Resistance
Joely Proudfit and Nicole Lim, “On Indian Ground: California. A Return to Indigenous Knowledge
Joy Harjo, “Poems are houses for spirits
Justine Teba, “Toxic Traditionalism: Three Centuries of Pueblo Resistance
Karim-Aly Kassam, “Co-generating Knowledge to Build Anticipatory Capacity for Climatic Change at the Local Level
Karim-Aly Kassam, “How Do We Teach Students to Speak Truth to Power Thoughtfully with Humility and Grace?
Karina Walters, “Innovative methods and sustainable health approaches to historical trauma
Karina Walters, “Lowitja Institute International Indigenous Health and Wellbeing Conference - Keynote
Kavita Krishnan, “Capitalism, misogyny and sexual violence
Kim TallBear, “Decolonial Sex and Relations for a More Sustainable World
Kim TallBear, "Making Love and Relations Beyond Settler Sexualities"
L. Frank Manriquez, “California Indians: Making a Difference
L. Frank Manriquez, “The L. Frank Project
Laila El-Haddad, “Politics and Parenting in Palestine
Larry Cesspooch, “Ute Wisdom, Language and Creation Story
Larry Grant, José Luis Ramírez, and Enrique Ramírez, “Wixáritari indigenous land defenders at UBC
Layli Long Soldier, “8th Annual ILI Symposium 2017
Layli Long Solider, “Lunch Poems
Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, “As We Have Always Done: Indigenous Freedom Through Radical Resistance
Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, “Facing the Anthropocene Luce Lecture
Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, “Restoring Nationhood: Addressing Land Dispossession in the Canadian Reconciliation Discourse
Lee Maracle, “at North House
Lee Maracle, “Celia’s Song
Lee Maracle, “Connection between Violence against the Earth and Violence against Women
Lee Maracle, “Waterloo Indigenous Speakers Series
Leroy Little Bear, “Indigenous Knowledge and Western Science
Leslie Marmon Silko, “An Evening with Leslie Marmon Silko
Linda Tuhiwai Smith and Eve Tuck, "Decolonizing Methodologies"
Lisa Grayshield, ”Indigenous Ways of Knowing In Counseling & Psychology
Lisa Grayshield, “My Washoe Way of Knowing & My Professional Identity
Lois Conner Bohna, Barbara Drake, Craig Torres, Lori Sisquoc, “Decolonizing the Diet
Lorelai Chavez, “Three Centuries of Pueblo Resistance
Loren Bommelyn, Valentin Lopez, Corrina Gould, Marshall McKay, “California Indian Genocide and Resilience
Luna Merbruja, “For the Women Who Don't Get To Be Girls
Malidoma Patrice Somé, “A Special Evening with Dagara elder
Malidoma Patrice Somé, EMAVoicesOfTheEarth Interview
Malidoma Patrice Somé, “Finding your life's Purpose through Natural Rituals, and Community
Manaháhtaan Symposium: Conversations on Lenape Identity
Ma-Nee Chacaby, “Two Spirit identities
Mariaelena Huambachano, “The Khipu Model: An Indigenous Political Theory and Research Methods
Margaret Mutu, “Indigenizing the University of Auckland
Margo Tamez, “Fronteras 810: Lipan Apache Band of Texas
Marta González, Maximiliano Bazan, and Zenaida Cantú, “Indigenous Mexicans in NYC: An Interview
Maria Yellow Horse Brave Heart, “Historical Trauma in Native American Populations
Masanobu Fukuoka, “the One Straw Revolution
Maximiliano Bazan, “Technology Changes Everything - Mixtec
Maximiliano Bazan, “The Things We Eat - Mixtec
Melba Rakow, “Washoe Tribal History
Mona Polacca, Beatrice Long Visitor Holy Dance, Rita Long Visitor Holy Dance, “Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers
Natalie Diaz, “A Celebration of Natalie Diaz
Natalie Diaz, “How to Sacrifice Your Brother Even When He Is an Aztec
Natalie Diaz, “Manhattan is a Lenape Word
Natalia Diaz, “They Don’t Love You Like I Love You
Nicole Martin, “Three Centuries of Pueblo Resistance
Nixiwaka Yawanawá, “Why Brazil’s indigenous people fight for the Amazon rainforest
Ofelia Zepeda, “Legacies of the Tribal Languages of Arizona: Gifts or Responsibilities with Ofelia Zepeda
Oodgeroo Noonuccal, “Honouring: Oodgeroo Noonuccal
Palestine as a Queer Struggle
Panashe Chigumadzi, “Ubuntu as a solution to the crisis of the Western imagination
Pat McCabe, “Earth Talk: Thriving Life - The Feminine Design and Sustainability
Pat McCabe, “The Earth Talks: Indigenous Ways of Knowing
Pat McCabe, “Thriving Life: Indigenous Ways of Knowing
Patrisia Gonzales, ”The Unseen Realm in Indigenous Healing Systems
Paula Gunn Allen, “The Sacred Hoop” (Part 1) and (Part 2)
Paula Gunn Allen, “The Women's Show
Queen Quet, “Gullah/Geechee Sustainability at the College of Charleston
Queen Quet “Histo-musical presentation of Gullah/Geechee history at Anderson University
Queen Quet, “Keynote for Pollutant Response in Marine Organisms group
Richard and Nora Marks Dauenhauer, “Documenting Tlingit Raven Stories
Robert Henry, “Re “image” ining Indigenous Gang Involvement in Canada, Australia and New Zealand
Robert J. Miller, ”Oregon, Indigenous Nations, Manifest Destiny, and the Doctrine of Discovery
Robin Wall Kimmerer & Richard Powers with Terry Tempest Williams, “Tales of Sweetgrass & Trees
Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz and Nick Estes, “Indigenous Peoples and International Solidarity
Samah Jabr, “'Alienation and freedom: Education in the struggle for national liberation'
Sarah Hunt, “Embodying Self-Determination: resisting violence beyond the gender binary
Shareena Clanton, “Indigenous people want to be ‘the author of our own destinies’
Sheila Humphries, “My stolen childhood, and a life to rebuild
Sobonfu Somé, “A (M)otherworld is Possible
Sobonfu Somé, “Embracing Your Gifts
Sobonfu Somé, “Indigenous Voices
Sobonfu Somé, “2014 Keynote Address, Harvard University
Sobonfu Somé, “Prosperity and Abundance
Steve Newcomb, “Indigenous Peoples Forum on the Doctrine of Discovery, Arizona
Suzan Shown Harjo, Patsy Phillips, Lois Jane Risling, Mary Hudetz, “Strong Women/Strong Nations 5: Trail Blazers
Tame Iti, “Mana: The power in knowing who you are
Tink Tinker, “Individual Salvation vs. Cosmic Balance: An American Indian Perspective
Tshering Tobgay, “This country isn't just carbon neutral — it's carbon negative
Vandana Shiva, “Capitalist Patriarchy Has Aggravated Violence Against Women
Vandana Shiva, “Food for Health
Vandana Shiva, “Growth = Poverty
Vandana Shiva, “Keynote Speech - Earth at Risk Conference 2014
Vandana Shiva, “on GMO issues
Vandana Shiva, “Poison Free Food & Farming
Vandana Shiva, “Stolen Harvest: The Hijacking of the Global Food Supply (Culture of the Land)
Vandana Shiva, “The Lunacy of Economic Growth
Vandana Shiva, “We Must Fight Back Against the 1 Percent to Stop the Sixth Mass Extinction
Vandana Shiva, “Why We Need an Organic Future
Vincent Mann, “Old Ways in NJ with guest Vincent Mann
Vincent Mann, “Oral Histories: Chief Vincent Mann
Vincent Medina (host), ”Ohlone Spoken Word
Vine Deloria, Jr., “American Indian politics, academic freedom, and ethnicity
Vine Deloria Jr., “Our Relationship to the Unseen
Vine Deloria Jr., “Spiritual Yearning in the West
Vine Deloria Jr., “Technology’s Toll
Vine Deloria, Jr., “The World We Used To Live In
Vine Deloria Jr., “Time of its Own
Walter Mignolo, “Coloniality and Western Modernity
Winona LaDuke, “2019 NCECA Conference Keynote Speaker
Winona LaDuke, "Daughters of Mother Earth: The Wisdom of Native American Women"
Winona LaDuke, “Economics for the Seventh Generation
Zenaida Cantú and Jhoana Montes, “The Forgotten Ones From the Mountain - Tlapanec / Me'phaa




Books

Andrea Smith, Conquest: Sexual Violence and American Indian Genocide
Beth Brant (editor), A Gathering of Spirit: A Collection by North American Indian Women
Cherríe Moraga and Gloria E. Anzaldúa (editors), This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color
Chrystos, Fire Power
Chrystos, In Her I Am
Chrystos, Not Vanishing
Cristina Calderón, Hai Kur Mamashu Shis (I Want to Tell You a Story)
Deborah A. Miranda, Bad Indians: A Tribal Memoir
Four Arrows, Gregory Cajete, and Jongmin Lee, Critical Neurophilosophy & Indigenous Wisdom
Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth (1963 version)
Gregory Cajete, A People's Ecology: Explorations in Sustainable Living
Gregory Cajete, Look to the Mountain: An Ecology of Indigenous Education
Gregory Cajete and Leroy Little Bear, Native Science: Natural Laws of Interdependence
Guillermo Bonfil Batalla, México Profundo: Reclaiming a Civilization
Indigenous Men and Masculinities: Legacies, Identities, Regeneration
, edited by Robert Innes and Kim Anderson
Ilarion Merculieff, Wisdom Keeper: One Man's Journey to Honor the Untold History of the Unangan
Jeannette Armstrong, Whispering in Shadows
Joy Harjo, Conflict Resolution for Holy Beings: Poems
Joy Harjo, How We Became Human: New and Selected Poems 1975-2001
Joy Harjo, She Had Some Horses: Poems
Layli Long Soldier, Whereas
Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, As We Have Always Done: Indigenous Freedom through Radical Resistance
Lee Maracle, Celia’s Song
Lee Maracle, Ravensong
Lee Maracle, I Am Woman: A Native Perspective on Sociology and Feminism
Leslie Marmon Silko, Ceremony
Leslie Marmon Silko, The Turquoise Ledge: A Memoir
Leslie Marmon Silko, Yellow Woman and a Beauty of the Spirit
Malidoma Patrice Somé, Of Water and the Spirit: Ritual, Magic and Initiation in the Life of an African Shaman
Malidoma Patrice Somé, Ritual: Power, Healing, and Community
Malidoma Patrice Somé, The Healing Wisdom of Africa: Finding Life Purpose through Nature, Ritual, and Community
Mahmoud Darwish, Journal of an Ordinary Grief
Neolani Goodyear-Kaopua, Ikaika Hussey, and Erin Kahunawaika’ala Wright (editors), A Nation Rising: Hawaiian Movements for Life, Land, and Sovereignty
Nora Naranjo-Morse, Mud Woman: Poems from the Clay
Patrisia Gonzales, Red Medicine: Traditional Indigenous Rites of Birthing and Healing
Paula Gunn Allen, Life is a Fatal Disease: Collected Poems 1962-1995
Paula Gunn Allen, Off the Reservation: Reflections on Boundary-Busting, Border-Crossing Loose Cannons
Paula Gunn Allen (editor), Spider Woman’s Granddaughters: Traditional Tales and Contemporary Writing by Native American Women
Paula Gunn Allen, The Sacred Hoop: Recovering the Feminine in American Indian Traditions
Paula Gunn Allen, The Woman Who Owned The Shadows
Roberto Cintli Rodríguez, Our Sacred Maíz Is Our Mother: Indigeneity and Belonging in the Americas
Scott Morgensen, Spaces Between Us: Queer Settler Colonialism and Indigenous Decolonization
Vine Deloria Jr., Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto
Vine Deloria Jr., The Metaphysics of Modern Existence
Vine Deloria Jr., The World We Used to Live In: Remembering the Powers of the Medicine Men
Zillah Eisenstein, Against Empire: Feminisms, Racism and the West


Academic Articles

Deborah A. Miranda, “Extermination of the Joyas: Gendercide in Spanish California” in GLQ



Quotes

"What I say to really young people, and I’m talking to high school people, I say two things: (1) you’ve got to want your life. First of all, you’ve got to want it. And if you’re not in that place of wanting your life like that, that’s your first activism. You cannot preach about life when you don’t want your life. (2) As a human being, anything you do that is moving towards life automatically makes you a revolutionary on behalf of our species. Because, right now, the sum total of our actions as a species is not headed towards life. So you can pick up anywhere you want. There’s plenty of work to go around. We don’t have to fight over it.” – Pat McCabe

“Here we are now with an opportunity to support a radical paradigm shift. It’s not so radical because we know it, it’s been around for thousands of years. We do have an opportunity now to shift things and that would be to return to an Indigenous or Indigenist worldview. And by ‘Indigenist’ I mean, similar to feminism, it’s a set of values, beliefs, and knowledge that’s grounded in certain principles, and so you don’t have to be Indigenous heritage to follow an Indigenist worldview. That’s different from appropriation.” – Alex Wilson

“This is where we’re going now. We’re coming together all over the country. We’re going to braid each other’s lives together and create something new, not just for Indigenous people, but for everybody… All kinds of knowledge, all kinds of story, all kinds of art, all kinds of sensibilities, religions, philosophies, we could learn from that. We could put these things together. We could recreate the world… That’s what we’re here for, to create and recreate better and better and better.” – Lee Maracle

“So when a person like that, with all sincerity, wants to repair, wants to heal themselves, wants to heal or ask for forgiveness for the pathways of their own families, the families that they know to be, when they want to ask for forgiveness for those people, who am I or anybody else to say ‘sorry, we won’t forgive you, we’ll never forgive you [what you/they did] was horrible’? That just can’t happen. That has to end. In order for the healing to take place and for the incredible work to be done for our future generations to take place, all of that has to stop now. The forgiveness needs to take place right now and then the work to heal, not only our own persons but the environment, has to start now.” – Charlene Sul

“There are things that knowledge cannot eat… It needs to live in the mythical realm in order for its power to exist and to be well, or else something is killed within it.” – Sobonfu Somé

“We use plant, strong plant medicine, to connect in that way, to remove all the stuff that we carry in our minds, to remove all the sickness that we carry in our bodies, to remove all of this negativity that we keep in our spirits. Plant medicine heals us, cleans us, and then opens a profound understanding of our connection to the universe…” – Eda Zavalda

“There is a direct connection between ritual, and fun, and also play. Where does it come from? We can see it in children, whose world is all about play, and the choreography of it. Why do we grow up and find this rather childish? As if childish is less important than solemn and serious. Have we ever tried to do it more playfully? Just to see if in fact there is a greater chance of success than the serious. The bottom line is that the further away from the sacred a culture grows, the more serious and solemn it becomes. That’s to simply suggest that the closer a community or a people get to the sacred, the more access to joy, to playfulness, and to a lot of laughter.” – Malidoma Somé

“Doing things without thought may be a difficult concept for Western-trained minds to understand since the mind is perceived as the center of intelligence, whereas Indigenous people know that true intelligence comes as a result of suspending thought.” – Ilarion Merculieff

“How can a century or a heart turn if nobody asks: where have all the Natives gone? If you are where you are, then where those who are not here? Not here.” – Natalie Diaz

“In my tradition, community is the guiding light behind any being, any person, that helps that person or being achieve their life purpose. For without a community, an individual is lost without a place to contribute, without a place where the light can be shined upon them. And so I believe that is the very piece that creates a longing for us, the longing for community who can see me, who can accept me, not tolerate me. “ – Sobonfu Somé

“This book [Decolonizing Methodologies] was written out of passion, not anger; out of a desire to understand; and really out of a desire to turn research around; turn it around from being a negative; turn it around from being an abusive power. How do you shift the gaze? How do you turn something that’s been anti-you into something that can be positive towards you?” – Linda Tuhiwai Smith

“Broken men. Violated land. Violated women. We’ve been here before… We know that if you’re disconnected from the Earth you will be disconnected from each other, you will be disconnected from creation, and then you’ll violate creation. That’s what it is. And we’re creators [women], so we’re the first to get violated.” – Lee Maracle

“It is true we’re all in pain. But sometimes you laugh at pain and pain gets panicked. You start looking at pain with a strange eye of a clown, and the pain says ‘usually this is not how these people behave,’ and so it goes somewhere else. So it is important to realize the healing aspect of this whole thing… because, in the end, it is this inexplicable sound coming out of our throat chakra that sends a message to all that wants us to look so weighed down by the bad news so that it can then enjoy watching us. The minute we’re cracking up in front of it, then we’ve started creating tremendous discomfort in it. And that’s a show of our capacity to heal each other, as supposed to waiting for some kind of salvation agent to come down…” – Malidoma Somé

“Worse than that, they’re [water bottling companies] going to take pristine water that should be flowing down the waterway for all things needing water and they’re going to contaminate half of it by bottling it. But the other half, that people don’t realize, is that they’re also going to contaminate the part that they sell to you. The first thing they do is that they put disinfectant in the spring water so that it’ll have a longer shelf life because living water turns green. It grows things, because it has minerals it has everything that is for growing. That’s why we grow so well when we drink real water. We’re at a time now when most people don’t even know what water tastes like, what does real water taste like? We don’t know anymore. Most of the population has no idea.” – Caleen Sisk

“I was told that these teachings, they aren’t anything new. They’re called the original instructions.” – Mona Polacca

“In the centuries since the first attempts at colonization in the early 1500s, the invades have exerted every effort to remove Indian women from every position of authority, to obliterate all records pertaining to gynocratic social systems, and to ensure that no American and few American Indians would remember that gynocracy was the primary social order of Indian America prior to 1800.” – Paula Gunn Allen

“The world, the plants, the Earth, nature was there long before we occurred. It might then be another opportunity for humility to wonder: what is it that makes me not different from the tree I’m looking at? What is the kind of kinship that exists? What are the frequencies that I’ve lost that could have, if still alive, allowed me to hear the word of the tree as I was walking past it? [The tree] probably saying ‘hello, how you doing? little one.’ Instead, we have lived a life so far away from that, that if by any accident we walked passed a Redwood who said ‘hello, little one,’ it would startle the bejesus out of us. Right? So there’s the problem, and there’s a diagnostic of the issue right there.” – Malidoma Somé

“If any of you were ever taught from history books, it’s all a lie. Now, of course, we’re [Indigenous people] in these halls of educational facilities, institutions, where we’re telling the truth. And it’s not for anyone to feel guilty about, it’s to bring a consciousness, bring about an awareness that it’s [miseducation is] a disease of the mind.” – Paula Horne

“We’re trying to prevent this world from getting to the point where we can’t live herein existence because Mother Earth does not need you and me. She can heal herself. She will. She has. […] She’ll send those vibrations through the Earth and cause us humans grief. We have to find the understanding in that that we have to try to help save each other, and I believe that that is the Lenape way of thinking.” – Vincent Mann

“…I also proposed that we look to indigenous cultures because they’re very fascinating but, and here’s the real reason, is because they know the science of sustainability, they have known how to live in one place for an extended period of time, thousand years, 2,000 years, 3,000 years, with relative health, harmony, and happiness. They hold the science to sustainability.” – Pat McCabe

“In the very very beginning when we heard about the new people coming to our country, they were welcome to a certain extent, they were welcome by our people. We figured, ‘well, they’re going to turn into Indians anyway.’ The natural course of things, you live on the land, you develop the customs, you adopt the customs of the people near you, you eventually become like the people in the area. But little did we know, or did we realize, that many of these people that came from all over the world, they came with their portable religion, their icons, their philosophies, and they had a different perspective and different way of looking at the land than we did” – Hector ‘Lalo’ Franco

“What made me come back to this dearest place is that my great grandparents are made from the soils and the winds of this place. I too, am made of this soil.” – Roy Sesana

“Sound is a natural opener of the doorways between worlds. And so, in different rituals around the world, you will see that they use a lot of sound. That is to crack what is keeping us from spirit, to crack that open so we kind find a way to go home. In us being able to open those doors, something in us must die, which is our need to control. Because a lot of us are busy controlling versus surrendering to spirit, and so we are constantly like ‘I want to go home to spirit’ And so spirit says ‘Okay, are you really sure?’ And we say ‘Yes, I want to go home to spirit.’ And, in the end, spirit has to put you in places where you end up not being in charge so you can actually begin to come home to it.” – Sobonfu Somé

“My people say that we come from original beauty. We didn’t come from original sin. We came from original beauty, and that orientation is pretty radical in this modern world. And when somebody finds themselves creating actions that are working against life, which could be working against an individual, or working against water, etc. then part of our methodology for healing is first we don’t pathologize, which is a very favorite thing to do in modern culture. We say that this person is in need of being restored to the truth.” – Pat McCabe

“We have not to seek the truth, we have only to remove the lie so that the truth can stand in all of its radiant beauty.” – Osho Zenmaster

“There’s been a tide of humanity that is more than the tide of deniers; more than the tide of the white supremacists; more than the tide of those idiots that live in Washington D.C. and call themselves leaders. We’re the leaders. All power is assumed power. Assume your power now. Align yourself with the true power of the Mother Earth; the true power of the Father Sun; the true power of the sacred water; the truth power of the Father Sky; the true power of the Moon Mother who governs your rhythms; the true power of the Star Nation. Let’s win this one.” – Casey Camp Horinek

“Money is evil. That is the worst evil there is for humanity. When the great creator created the universe, the creator created the universe for all of us, gifted us water for all, land for all, but governments and multi-national corporations are just interested in profit for themselves. And the only way to turn a profit is to destroy nature... Nature is not just going to let us destroy her: that’s why there’s floods, and droughts, and severe weather, and why everything that’s happening is happening.” – Ninawa Huni Kui


“For he never makes love”: Reclaiming Asexual Representation in Julia Ward Howe’s The Hermaphrodite

“For he never makes love”: Reclaiming Asexual Representation in Julia Ward Howe’s The Hermaphrodite

We Are Whole

We Are Whole