Johnny Dame
Johnny Dame is a seventh-generation Floridian artist, naturalist and environmental educator who creates physiographic maps, Wildflower Wheels, and ecosystem paintings to help people develop a deeper connection to the natural world. In this conversation, he shares stories about locating indigenous artifacts, his grandmother's native plant medicine knowledge, and the ancient practice of "scrying"—demonstrating how art and direct observation can help us rediscover our essential relationship with the Earth.
Dahr Jamail
Dahr Jamail, Storytelling and Communications Manager at Home Planet Fund, is a former mountaineer and war correspondent. He shares his journey—from growing up in suburban Houston, to witnessing the impacts of U.S. foreign policy in Iraq, and ultimately dedicating his life to environmental and Indigenous advocacy. We explore his deep connection to nature, the importance of witnessing and storytelling in times of crisis, and how Indigenous perspectives can guide us in addressing today’s polycrisis.
Diane L. Schenandoah
This coversation features Diane Schenandoah, a faithkeeper of the Oneida Nation, Wolf Clan of the Six Nations Haudenosaunee Confederacy. She speaks about her efforts to encourage people to care for the Earth through her multifacted roles as a sculptor, published author, singer, and Syracuse University’s first Honwadiyenawa’sek, meaning “the one who helps them.”
Sheryll Durrant
This coversation features Sheryll Durrant, an urban farming and food justice advocate who shares insights on her upbringing in Jamaica, her awakening to sustainability initiatives in Brooklyn, and how these experiences fueled her commitment to food justice in the Bronx.
Maria Fernanda Vivanco, PhD. (“Mara”)
Dr. Maria Fernanda Vivanco (Mara) is a Peruvian rural sociologist and feminist. In her interview facilitated by Kétu Oladuwa and Kelsey Greene, she advocates for food justice and the protection of Andean forms of knowledge through personal stories, powerful academic references, and poetic prose.
Collective Water Stewardship Series Conversation
In this nuanced dialogue, we unpack the deeper impacts of our perceptions about water and it’s role in our histories, cultures and lives. The stories and insights shared are informed by Kogi and Patuxent Riverkeeper representatives.
Fred Tutman & Rabiah Nur
Fred Tutman is a grassroots community advocate for clean water in Maryland’s longest and deepest intrastate waterway and holds the title of Patuxent Riverkeeper, which is also the name of a non-profit organization that he founded in 2004. Grandma Rabiah, has worked for more than 50 years to educate the public about the need to work together.
Dr Aroha Spinks Ngāti Raukawa, Ngāti Tukorehe, Tainui/Waikato
Dr Aroha Spinks is an independent consultant in New Zealand striving for a sustainable future that builds resilience within ecosystem and communities. She is an environmental scientist with experience in fisheries, restoration ecology, kaupapa Māori approaches, and Te Tiriti o Waitangi indigenous research. Through her interview facilitated by Kétu Oladuwa and Kelsey Greene, she speaks of her Ancestral connections and mission-driven work to heal Earth and its people through an environmental syncretism honoring and aligning indigenous perspectives with modern land management practices.
3 Core Resilience Practices
These are some common beliefs and practices of resistance in the face of empire.
3 Survivance Approaches
These persistent principles and beliefs have enabled Peoples to survive and, in some cases, to thrive in the face of assaults.
5 Main Enemy Tactics
Powerful aggressors have used these common tactics in their efforts to dispossess and destroy Indigenous and Maroon Peoples.
5 Common Enemies
All the assemblies continue to struggle for existence and autonomy in conflict with these systems, institutions, and forces.
Indigenous Media Making: Affirming Identity
Analyze short videos from TikTok, a feature film, a video game, Hip-Hop video, and a documentary film for messages related to Indigenous identity and cultural pride.
African and Free Maroon Resistance in the Americas
Analyze videos produced by and about people of the African diaspora in the Americas for messages about representations of their peoples' freedom, resistance, and ties to Africa.
Indigenous Representations of Cultural Pride and Resilience
Analyze videos produced by Native Americans (Inuit, Haudenosaunee, Hopi and Hawaiian) for messages about the contributions and resilience of Indigenous nations and peoples.
Khangelani Mhlanga
Khangelani is a recent graduate from Ithaca College where she earned her Bachelor of Science in Biology. She’s passionate about veterinary medicine, public health, and the preservation of Zimbabwean cultures. She speaks about her Zimbabwean upbringing and her new initiative to curate different aspects of Zimbabwean cultures in this personal interview facilitated by Ketu Oladuwa and Kelsey Greene.
“Blow the dust from your ears so you may hear and understand all that is being said to you and be able to recognize the truth.”
Beverly Cook (beh-ver-lee cook), Mohawk chief and nurse practitioner
“We all have fought the same fight. We all have shed the same blood to be called Seminoles.”
LeEtta Osborne-Sampson (lee-eh-tah ahz-born samp-sun), Seminole Freedmen Chief of the Caesar Bruner Band
Nichole McIntosh
Nichole is a senior nurse, poet, digital broadcaster, motivational speaker, entrepreneur, Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, and Editorial Advisor of the Royal College of Nursing Institute’s Nursing Management Journal. She speaks about her Maroon identity, life experiences and powerful values in this captivating interview facilitated by Ketu Oladuwa and Kelsey Greene.
Wahinkpe Topa (Four Arrows)
Four Arrows is a professor and author of 24 books and numerous other publications on Indigenous Worldview. He speaks about his journey and advocacy work in this thought-provoking interview facilitated by Ketu Oladuwa and Kelsey Greene.