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2021 Press Coverage

Freedom Square Installation Bringing Community Together

By Erika Leigh Troy

The Emerging From Darkness Art Installation has been in Freedom Square in Troy since Martin Luther King Jr. Day weekend, but many members of the community are just starting to learn about it.

“I do a lot of baking and we’re not going to parties or anything right now, so this is a way to kind of indulge in the craft but do good at the same time,” said Chris Severance of Watervliet.

“So we decided to start putting food in there,” said Mia Nilo of Watervliet.

Severance and Nilo say when they first saw the installation had free food boxes, they wanted to get involved.

“During this time helping out your neighbors, being a resource for your neighbors has been the most rewarding thing and the thing that you’re really starting to pay attention to and appreciate,” Nilo said.

So a few weeks ago they went into action, baking and delivering different treats and they’re not just for people facing food insecurity.

“Even the distribution boxes will hit all of the nutrition but it leaves out a treat which is the kind of thing that makes life worth living,” Nilo said. “[It’s] the thing people look forward to. So what it doesn’t have any nutritional value? It’s the thing you remember at the end of a meal, so we want to make sure those are in there and available for people, regardless of need.”

On this week’s menu? “Sweet cornbread, knishes; I have a pack of frozen waffles and the applesauce cakes,” Nilo said.

Nilo and Severance package up all the goodies with ingredient labels. Milo said a lot of their friends have food allergies or intolerances, so they’re used to baking carefully.

“I’ve done vegan, I’ve done gluten-free, so it doesn’t intimidate me,” Severance said.

Then it’s time for the money shot. A perfect photo is what Nilo needs to post on social media. She regularly posts about what they’ve made in multiple garage sale groups and other local groups on Facebook.

“You eat with your eyes first,” she said.

Then, it’s time to drop off. The pair pack up Nilo’s truck and head to Freedom Square. While they’re filling the food boxes, a passer-by stops.

“What are you guys doing?” he asked.

“We’re filling the free food box,” Nilo said.

“Is that what this is?” he said.

“Yeah!” Nilo said.

The altar and installation in Freedom Square are sponsored by a number of community groups, but was organized initially by the Sanctuary for Independent Media.

Nancy Weber, an environmental artist, says the weather hindered the launch a few times.

“In November, I first had this vision of a community altar where people could express their grief for this year of unprecedented losses,” Weber said.

“It’s not just about grieving, it’s also about resilience,” said Aileen Javier, of Media Sanctuary.

In the spring, they hope to create a permanent memorial in Freedom Square for the community. Javier says it’s important to have a space to come together as a community when people can’t be together right now.

“Coming here you can say, ‘OK, other people are experiencing the same thing and we will survive together,’ ” Javier said.

“The best thing about these is, I think that the altar is meant to be a space for people to grieve, and I think the free food boxes and the treats inside are a reprieve,” Nilo said.

Nilo and Severance say they usually drop off their goodies each Sunday around 1 p.m., but you can look for their posts with details and drop times in the Troy Garage Sale group on Facebook. Nilo says she hears from people who stop by, and the treats are typically gone by the end of the day on Monday.

The space is open to anyone in the community throughout the week, to stop by and enjoy what’s left in the food boxes, to grieve, to add to the altar and more. There are often free books and art supplies at the installation as well.

For more information about the installation or to find out how you can get involved, visit https://archive.mediasanctuary.org/event/memorial-altar.

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2021 Press Coverage

Vigils mark grim Covid milestone

 

Dan Levy
Updated: January 19, 2021 11:39 PM
Created: January 19, 2021 11:34 PM

TROY – At Freedom Circle in North Central Troy, there was an alter built by youth in the community to shine a light, not just on the loss of 400,000 lives from Covid-19, but also for those who have died as a result of gun violence, or other social injustices.

“This community is mainly composed of low income and people of color and so this is the community, as are other communities in the Capital Region, who are most impacted by this pandemic,” said Branda Miller, Professor of Media Arts at RPI, and advisor to the Sanctuary for Independent Media in Troy.

The belief in the Collar City is that at this moment in time, if people could show compassion, if they could feel what it’s like to be in a community that is suffering loss, maybe that sentiment can become the impetus for healing the nation.

“Until you lost somebody, maybe you don’t have that compassion,” Miller suggests, “Until you hear somebody’s story, maybe you don’t understand, but we need to come together as a human family.”

“The only way to really make a difference is to show people and to have people learn about what’s going on around them,” said Shansanique Pollack, a 15-year old community volunteer who helped to build the Freedom Square alter.

On the streets of Troy that encircle Freedom Square, 14-year old Genesis Cooper says gun violence is more concerning to her than the threat posed by Covid-19.

“Where ever you live you should feel safe,” she asserts, “I shouldn’t walk down the street thinking I’m going to get shot by a cop or someone who has a gun that they shouldn’t have.”

Gabby Espada, 14, another community volunteer, says her goal is to bring awareness to as many people as she can.

“Having your voice heard, especially when you’re so young is very important,” Espada states, “So that way I could impact people of my age and around my age and around my school to do the same.”

Meanwhile, outside Niskayuna Town Hall, several dozen gathered for a candlelight vigil to honor the lives of people who were living in their community at the beginning of 2020, but who no longer live there because of Covid-19.

“It’s amazing to think about it really that today is the first time we’ve ever as a nation acknowledged the loss (of 400,000 Covid) lives, the loss of our economy, and to come together. I think it really says a lot about what we expect from this new president.”

Creators of the Troy alter are hoping people stop by on their own time to reflect on the loss of life of so many of their neighbors and friends.

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2020 News Press Coverage

‘Time for Reckoning’ on WMHT examines post-protest response

Airing Monday, special features activists’ demands, officials’ answers

Activist Jamaica Miles - shown at a July protest in Schenectady - is one of the panelists featured in
Activist Jamaica Miles — shown at a July protest in Schenectady — is one of the panelists featured in “The Time for Reckoning” airing at 9 p.m. Monday on WMHT. (Lori Van Buren/Times Union)Lori Van Buren/Albany Times Union

ALBANY — Featuring the voices of activists from the Black Lives Matter movement as well as prominent Albany officials, the hour-long special “The Time for Reckoning” airs at 9 p.m. Monday on WMHT Ch. 17.

The program features parallel panels discussing the issues of racial reconciliation and social justice in the context of the protests that followed the killing of George Floyd of Minneapolis, and touches on more local controversies such as the 2018 shooting of Ellazar Williams by police and the notorious raid on a First Street home in March 2019 that resulted in an officer being charged with felony assault.

In addition to sharing the views of local activists, the program includes responses from Mayor Kathy Sheehan, Common Council President Corey Ellis and Police Chief Eric Hawkins on matters ranging from the pace of police discipline to the relative worth of the city’s police review board. Times Union editor Casey Seiler moderates.

All three of the city officials are part of Albany’s ongoing Policing Reform and Reconciliation Collaborative, a broad effort to address many of the issues brought to light in recent months. Formed in response to Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s executive order requiring local communities to address systemic racism in law enforcement, the collaborative has an April deadline to produce proposals for local lawmakers to consider.

The program — a special edition of WMHT’s “New York Now” — is part of a larger symposium sponsored by Albany’s Center for Law and Justice and the New York State Writers Institute and other groups, with a mission to confront systemic racism, seek justice and reimagine society.

The community panel will have a follow-up online discussion held on the evening of Monday, Nov. 2 on the Facebook page of the All of Us social justice group.

Additional partners in “The Time for Reckoning” include the Justice Center of Rensselaer County, the Times Union, Amnesty International USA, the Community Foundation for the Greater Capital Region and the Sanctuary for Independent Media. The symposium was supported by the Steve McKee Foundation.

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2020 News Press Coverage

Early voting opens Saturday with surge anticipated at local polls

TROY – When early voting starts Saturday, three chartered buses will run every 20 to 30 minutes, getting members of the city’s Black churches and residents of public housing and community centers to Rensselaer County polling sites.

“I want to get the people in the neighborhoods out and involved,” said Deacon Jerry Ford of the United Ordained Church.

“Souls to the Polls” is the effort to get voters out on Saturday, Oct. 24, Wednesday, Oct. 28, and Saturday, Oct. 31, to county’s early voting sites at Holy Cross Armenian Church in Troy and Brunswick Town Hall, which don’t have direct public transportation.  Schodack Town Hall is the county’s third early voting site.

Voting across the region will be every day at a few sites in each county from Saturday to Nov. 1. Election Day at regular polling places is Tuesday, Nov. 3.

“We’re trying to make it easier,” Ford, who is involved in community and youth activities in the city, said about giving inner city residents the opportunity to cast ballots.

Souls to the Polls is sponsored by Bethel Baptist Church, Equality for Troy, Fifth Ave AME Zion Church, Justice Center of Rensselaer County, Kingdom Ministries, League of Women Voters, New Hope Missionary Baptist Church, The Sanctuary for Independent Media, Team Hero, Troy Area United Ministries, United Ordained Church and the Troy Branch of the NAACP.

Also in the region, Schenectady County Board of Elections Commissioners Amy Hild and Darlene Harris said Friday that the office is working with CDTA to provide bus transportation to two of its four early voting sites. There will be a trolley circulating around downtown Schenectady to take voters at the Hon. Karen B. Johnson Library, 99 Clinton St., and the Glenville Senior Center, 32 Worden Road.

The Capital Region’s county election boards are anticipating a flood of early voters.  Since it’s a presidential election year, interest is heightened. There are also congressional and state legislature seats on the ballot, and Saratoga Springs has a charter change referendum.

The boards in Albany, Rensselaer, Saratoga and Schenectady counties have all reported record requests for absentee ballots, due in part to the COVID-19 exception allowed by the state, for this year’s elections.

“We believe it’s going to be a huge turnout. That’s what we’re ramping up for,” said Ed McDonough, Rensselaer County Democratic elections commissioner.  McDonough said the staff is receiving hundreds of calls asking about early voting.

Also expecting plenty of activity are Albany County Republican Elections Commissioner Rachel Biedi and Saratoga County Democratic Elections Commissioner William Fruci.

Ford said helping get city voters to the poll locations may help get them interested and involved in the 2021 elections when the City Council and Rensselaer County races are on the ballots.

Categories
2020 News

Troy organizations provide free buses for early voters

TROY, N.Y. — A coalition of community organizations in Troy are providing free buses to early voting sites.

“We want to level the playing field by providing an opportunity for people to make it out to vote,” Deacon Jerry Ford of the United Ordained Church in Troy, who is helping to organize the program, said. 

The non-partisan effort, “Souls to the Polls,” aims to make it easier for voters in Troy to access Rensselaer County’s early voting sites, which are not located on convenient CDTA bus routes for many living in South Troy, North Central, and Lansingburgh. Souls to the Polls is also meant to help voters avoid Election Day crowds on Nov. 3 in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“If we can reduce some of that traffic, we can help make it safer for everyone,” Ford explained. 

The buses will comply with CDC guidelines by limiting the number of passengers in each vehicle and requiring all riders to wear masks. Masks will be available on the buses for those who do not have one.

There will be three routes running to two polling places, Holy Cross Armenian Church polling place in Troy and Brunswick Town Hall. The routes include pickup locations at 19 public housing complexes, churches, and parks. 

Schodack Town Hall is the third early polling place in Rensselaer County. There is no early voting location in downtown Troy.  

Early voting begins Oct. 24 and ends Nov. 1. Election Day is Nov. 3. There is no early voting on Nov. 2, which is the day before Election Day. 

Troy residents who want to take advantage of the free buses but are unable to get to and from a pick-up location are encouraged to contact any of the sponsoring groups for assistance.

“It doesn’t matter who you’re voting for, we just want people to get out and exercise their right to vote,” Ford added. 

Souls to the Polls is sponsored by Bethel Baptist Church, Equality for Troy, Fifth Ave AME Zion Church, Justice Center of Rensselaer County, Kingdom Ministries, League of Women Voters, New Hope Missionary Baptist Church, The Sanctuary for Independent Media, Team Hero, Troy Area United Ministries, United Ordained Church and the Troy Branch of the NAACP.

Permalink: https://www.troyrecord.com/news/troy-organizations-to-provide-free-buses-for-early-voters/article_f4844fee-1483-11eb-89ed-536d3f4bfedc.html

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2020 Hudson Mohawk Magazine NATURE Lab

Indigenous Voices at the Intersection of Environmental & Social Justice Podcast Series

ABOUT

The podcast series, Indigenous Voices at the Intersection of Environmental & Social Justice, is a collection of interviews by Anna Steltenkamp. The series seeks to decolonize and diversify the voice of media by prioritizing the voices of Indigenous leaders, as well as Indigenous-led organizations and initiatives, that are working to achieve environmental and social justice within their own communities and throughout the world. 

 

Land Acknowledgement

It is with gratitude and humility that I acknowledge that The Sanctuary for Independent Media resides upon, and broadcasts the Hudson Mohawk Magazine radio show from, the ancestral homelands of the Mohican people, who are Indigenous peoples of the lands of New York. Despite tremendous hardships and being forced from their lands, today their community resides in Wisconsin and is known as the Stockbridge-Munsee Community. I pay honor and respect to their ancestors, past and present, as I commit to building a more inclusive and equitable space for all. 

 

THE SERIES

 “The Condor & The Eagle”: Indigenous Voices in Independent Media Work 

MediaSanctuary · “The Condor & The Eagle”: Indigenous Voices in Independent Media Work

HMM producer Anna Steltenkamp speaks with “The Condor & The Eagle” film’s co-director, Clement Guerra. In this segment, Clement speaks about “The Condor & The Eagle” film’s Global Impact Campaign and the use of independent media work as an impact tool, as well as the importance of Indigenous voices in the global fight for environmental and social justice. Listen in to learn about the significance of cultural frameworks and personal reflection for successful action in the fight for climate justice—as well as the necessity of listening to the Indigenous voices who are leading the fight.

 

“The Condor & The Eagle”: Co-Director Clement Guerra’s Personal & Creative Journey During Production

MediaSanctuary · “The Condor & The Eagle”: Co-Director Clement Guerra’s Personal & Creative Journey During Production

HMM producer Anna Steltenkamp continues speaking with “The Condor & The Eagle” film’s co-director, Clement Guerra. In this segment, Clement speaks about his personal and creative journey throughout the production of “The Condor & The Eagle” and the implementation of the film’s Global Impact Campaign. Listen in to learn how an idea to create a 10-minute video led to a two-year, trans-continental journey documenting the global impact of four well-known Indigenous leaders in the fight for climate justice.

 

A Dialogue with Bryan Parras: The Path to Achieve Harmony in the World & Balance with the Earth 

MediaSanctuary · A Dialogue with Bryan Parras: The Path to Achieve Harmony in the World & Balance with the Earth

HMM producer Anna Steltenkamp speaks with Bryan Parras. Bryan Parras is one of the Gulf Coast’s most dynamic environmental justice organizers, fighting along the entire central and eastern United States. He is the co-founder of Texas Environmental Justice Advocacy Services and Sierra Club’s Beyond Dirty Fuels campaign—and he is one of the protagonists in the film, “The Condor & the Eagle.”

This is the first segment in a three-part dialogue with Bryan Parras. In this segment, Bryan speaks about his personal efforts in the fight for environmental justice, his role in “The Condor & the Eagle,” and how collective action is necessary to achieve harmony in the world and balance with the Earth.

 

A Dialogue with Bryan Parras: Indigenous Voices & Healing Amidst the Fight for Environmental Justice

MediaSanctuary · A Dialogue with Bryan Parras: Indigenous Voices & Healing Amidst the Fight for Environmental Justice

This is the second segment in a three-part dialogue with Bryan Parras. In this segment, Bryan speaks about the importance of people telling their own stories, the need for especially local media to change towards greater inclusivity, and the healing practices Indigenous communities use to cope with the environmental issues they face.

 
A Dialogue with Bryan Parras: When We Help Those Least Empowered, Everyone Benefits
MediaSanctuary · A Dialogue with Bryan Parras: When We Help Those Least Empowered, Everyone Benefits
This is the third segment in a three-part dialogue with Bryan Parras. In this segment, Bryan speaks about the importance of changing the narrative about those who are affected by environmental racism and how when we help those least empowered, everyone benefits. Further, he addresses how those in a privileged position can contribute to the fight for environmental justice in a respectful and inclusive manner.
 
 
Revitalizing Native American Cuisine: A Dialogue with Chef Sean Sherman of the Sioux Chef & NĀTIFS 
MediaSanctuary · Revitalizing Native American Cuisine: A Dialogue with Chef Sean Sherman of The Sioux Chef & NāTIFS 

HMM producer Anna Steltenkamp speaks with Chef Sean Sherman about his efforts to revitalize Native American cuisine. Chef Sean Sherman is the Founder of the company The Sioux Chef and the Co-Founder of the organization North American Traditional Indigenous Food Systems (NāTIFS). Sean speaks about the importance of food for Native American identities, for the reclamation of Native American ancestral education, and for the well-being of both Native American communities and the environments wherein they reside.

 

Seeding Sovereignty: Redefining ‘Expertise’ in the Environmental Movement

MediaSanctuary · Seeding Sovereignty: Redefining ‘Expertise’ in the Environmental Movement

HMM producer Anna Steltenkamp speaks with Janet MacGillivray, the Founder and Executive Director of Seeding Sovereignty. Seeding Sovereignty is a multi-generational, Indigenous womxn-led collective that works to decolonize social and environmental paradigms.

This is the first segment in a multi-part dialogue with Janet MacGillivray. In this segment, Janet speaks about the need to ‘de-expert’ and diversify the environmental movement so that the voices of those directly impacted by social and environmental issues are heard. She addresses how we must redefine our understanding of ‘expertise’—recognizing that those directly impacted have their own ‘expertise’—if the environmental movement is to be both inclusive and successful.

 

Seeding Sovereignty: The Importance of Indigenous Knowledge Systems & Multi-Generational Stewardship

MediaSanctuary · Seeding Sovereignty: The Importance of Indigenous Knowledge Systems & Multi-Generational Stewardship

This is the second segment in a multi-part dialogue with Janet MacGillivray. In this segment, Janet speaks about the importance of Seeding Sovereignty’s multi-generational approach and elaborates on how Indigenous practices are in synchronicity with the land. Further, she addresses how COVID-19 has exposed systems of racism, economic oppression, and speciesism present within our society—and the necessity of seeking alternatives that are informed by nature and by a regenerative philosophy.

 

Seeding Sovereignty: An Indigenous-Led Effort to Transform the Colonial-Capitalist Farming Industry

MediaSanctuary · Seeding Sovereignty: An Indigenous-Led Effort to Transform the Colonial-Capitalist Farming Industry

This is the third segment in a multi-part dialogue with Janet MacGillivray. In this segment, Janet speaks specifically about Seeding Sovereignty’s Land Resilience Project. She addresses how the profit-driven, industrial agriculture system is detrimental to environments, communities, and the workers within the industry—and she emphasizes how COVID-19 has exacerbated these negative consequences. Further, she explains her vision for a regenerative food system and how Indigenous ecological knowledge and land practices are essential for this transformation.
 

Papscanee Island: Sacred Land of the Mohican Nation Threatened by the E-37 Pipeline 

MediaSanctuary · Papscanee Island: Sacred Land of the Mohican Nation Threatened by the E-37 Pipeline

HMM producer Anna Steltenkamp speaks with Heather Bruegl, the Director of Cultural Affairs for the Stockbridge-Munsee Community of the Mohican Nation. The Indigenous peoples of the upper Hudson Valley are the Mohican people, derived from their name for the Hudson River, the Mahhicannituck, the “waters that are never still.” Today known as the Stockbridge-Munsee Community, the Tribal Nation is based in Wisconsin, far from their original homelands. However, the Stockbridge-Munsee Community maintains a close connection to its cultural sites.

Heather Bruegl discusses the historical and present-day cultural significance of Papscanee Island. Papscanee Island is located in the Hudson River just south of Albany, New York. It is perhaps the best preserved known late woodland Native village site in New York, and the entire island is nominated for the National Register of Historic Places due to its Mohican cultural significance. Further, Heather addresses how the installation of National Grid’s proposed E-37 natural gas pipeline threatens to negatively impact Papscanee Island, and she explains the role that the Stockbridge-Munsee Community has taken throughout the decision-making process to protect the island’s rich cultural heritage.

 

Papscanee Island: The Stockbridge-Munsee Community’s Continued Efforts to Protect Their Sacred Lands

MediaSanctuary · Papscanee Island: The Stockbridge-Munsee Community’s Continued Efforts to Protect Their Sacred Lands 

HMM producer Anna Steltenkamp speaks again with Heather Bruegl, the Director of Cultural Affairs for the Stockbridge-Munsee Community of the Mohican Nation. Heather continues her discussion of the cultural significance of Papscanee Island and the Stockbridge-Munsee Community’s efforts to protect their sacred lands. Heather addresses the most recent developments in the proposed Pipeline E-37 case, including the Pipeline E-37 Resolution that was approved by the Tribal Council of the Stockbridge-Munsee Community on August 18, 2020.

To learn more about Papscanee Island and the proposed Pipeline E-37, and to support the Stockbridge-Munsee Community’s preservation efforts, visit: papscanee.org

 

Dina Gilio-Whitaker: Centering American Indians in the Question of What is Environmental (In)Justice

MediaSanctuary · Dina Gilio-Whitaker: Centering American Indians in the Question of What is Environmental (In)Justice

HMM producer Anna Steltenkamp speaks with Dina Gilio-Whitaker. Dina is a member of the Colville Confederated Tribes, an award-winning journalist, and a lecturer of American Indian Studies at California State University San Marcos. Anna speaks with her about her recent book: “As Long as Grass Grows: The Indigenous Fight for Environmental Justice, from Colonization to Standing Rock.” Dina also co-authored “‘All the Real Indians Died Off’: And 20 Other Myths About Native Americans” with Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz.

This is the first segment in a multi-part dialogue with Dina Gilio-Whitaker. In this segment, Dina speaks about her personal experience as an Urban Indian in the United States, as well as her background as an activist and journalist, and how these experiences influenced her work. Further, she addresses how the defining of “environmental justice” by the United States Government creates issues for American Indians, and she discusses her argument for why American Indians need to be centered in the question of what is environmental (in)justice.

 
 
Dina Gilio-Whitaker: Native Place-Based Identities Informed by Relationships with the Natural World

MediaSanctuary · Dina Gilio-Whitaker: Native Place-Based Identities Informed by Relationships with the Natural World

This is the second segment in a multi-part dialogue with Dina Gilio-Whitaker. In this segment, Dina speaks about how Native worldviews are informed by their identity as place-based people, an identity formed through relationship with the natural world and the more-than-human elements within it. Further, she addresses how American Indian knowledge systems result in societies of sustainability because land was not understood as a commodity, as just a function of economies. This contrasts Euro-American perceptions of land as a resource in service to humans, wherein humans are dominant over the land and exploit it for extractive purposes. 

 
 
Dina Gilio-Whitaker: The Importance of Food for American Indian Health & Cultural Identity

MediaSanctuary · Dina Gilio-Whitaker: The Importance of Food for American Indian Health & Cultural Identity

This is the third segment in a multi-part dialogue with Dina Gilio-Whitaker. In this segment, Dina speaks about the importance of food for American Indian cultural identity and personal vitality, as well as efforts to revitalize Native food sources. She addresses how the imposition of foreign food systems, the dependency on Federal Government food programs, and the forced removal from, or degradation of, natural environments and food sources created a multiplicity of health-related issues within Native communities—including starvation, malnourishment, and obesity.

 

Devon Mihesuah: The Indigenous Food Sovereignty Movement in the United States

MediaSanctuary · Devon Mihesuah: The Indigenous Food Sovereignty Movement in the United States

HMM producer Anna Steltenkamp speaks with Devon Mihesuah. Devon is an enrolled citizen of the Choctaw Nation and is the Cora Lee Beers Price Teaching Professor in International Cultural Understanding at the University of Kansas. Anna speaks with her about the book she co-edited with Elizabeth Hoover, entitled: “Indigenous Food Sovereignty in the United States: Restoring Cultural Knowledge, Protecting Environments, and Regaining Health.” Devon is also the author of the book “Recovering Our Ancestors’ Gardens: Indigenous Recipes and Guide to Diet and Fitness,” and the revised edition was just released this year.

This is the first segment in a multi-part dialogue with Devon Mihesuah. In this segment, Devon speaks about the Indigenous Food Sovereignty movement in the United States, including her personal experiences as part of this movement. Further, she explains her definition of “Indigenous food sovereignty,” and she addresses what the main reasons are for the movement and its fundamental goals.

 

Devon Mihesuah: Reimagining Food via Multi-Generational & Experiential Learning in the Natural World

MediaSanctuary · Devon Mihesuah: Reimagining Food via Multi-Generational & Experiential Learning in the Natural World

This is the second segment in a multi-part dialogue with Devon Mihesuah. In this segment, Devon speaks about how to conceptually reimagine food as more than just a commodity. She proposes that food provides more than just biological nourishment, for it also gives us cultural, ecological, and spiritual nourishment. Also, she addresses the importance of learning about food in a multi-generational and experiential manner within the natural world. In this manner, one may develop an emotional connection with the natural world and learn how to act respectfully within, and how to understand the rhythms of, the natural world.

 

Hudson Mohawk Magazine Spotlights ‘Indigenous Voices’ Podcast to Honor & Celebrate Indigenous Peoples’ Day

MediaSanctuary · HMM 10 – 12 – 2020: Indigenous Peoples’ Day
On Indigenous Peoples Day, we honor and celebrate Indigenous communities.
 
For this reason, the Hudson Mohawk Magazine dedicated its October 12th show to Indigenous voices by spotlighting our podcast series: “Indigenous Voices at the Intersection of Environmental & Social Justice,” produced by Anna Steltenkamp.
 
On this special episode of HMM, first we hear from Janet MacGillivray, the Founder and Executive Director of Seeding Sovereignty on redefining ‘expertise’ in the environmental movement. Then we have Dina Gilio-Whitaker, author of “As Long as Grass Grows: The Indigenous Fight for Environmental Justice, from Colonization to Standing Rock.” And later on, Heather Bruegl, the Director of Cultural Affairs for the Stockbridge-Munsee Community of the Mohican Nation, speaks about Papscanee Island, a site of cultural and historical significance, located in the Hudson River. After that, we’ll hear from Bryan Parras, co-founder of Texas Environmental Justice Advocacy Services and Sierra Club’s Beyond Dirty Fuels campaign—and he is one of the protagonists in the film, “The Condor & the Eagle.” Finally, Anna speaks with Devon Mihesuah, co-editor of the book: “Indigenous Food Sovereignty in the United States: Restoring Cultural Knowledge, Protecting Environments, and Regaining Health.”
 
Photo Copyright: Amanda J. Mason/Greenpeace
 
 
Multi-Generational Sharing of Farming Knowledges & the Revitalization of Traditional Agriculture

MediaSanctuary · Multi-Generational Sharing of Farming Knowledges & the Revitalization of Traditional Agriculture

HMM producer Anna Steltenkamp speaks with Clayton Brascoupé. Clayton is a life-long gardener and farmer. He is also the Program Director of the Traditional Native American Farmers Association (TNAFA), which is a non-profit, inter-tribal organization of Indigenous farmers, gardeners, educators, and health professionals whose mission is “to revitalize traditional agriculture for spiritual and human need, by creating awareness and support for Native environmental issues.”

This is the first segment in a multi-part dialogue with Clayton Brascoupé. In this segment, Clayton speaks about the mission of the TNAFA and why it is personally significant to him. Further, he speaks about the practices and ideals of traditional agriculture that the organization seeks to revitalize, as well as the importance of these practices for his own children and grandchildren. He speaks on the value of the quality time and the knowledges he is able to share with his family through farming.

 

Working the Land: How to Become Attune to, & Create Positive Relations with, All of Nature

MediaSanctuary · Working the Land: How to Become Attune to, & Create Positive Relations with, All of Nature

This is the second segment in a multi-part dialogue with Clayton Brascoupé. In this segment, Clayton reflects on how working the land, and having a productive role within his natural landscape, makes him feel—while describing his own efforts to find a healthy relationship with all of nature. Also, he speaks about the acute awareness of, and the feeling of connectedness within, the natural world that develops through working the land.

 

Natural & Holistic Approaches to Creating Sustainable & Healthy Living Systems

MediaSanctuary · Natural & Holistic Approaches to Creating Sustainable & Healthy Living Systems
This is the third segment in a multi-part dialogue with Clayton Brascoupé. In this segment, Clayton speaks about TNAFA’s education program: the Indigenous Sustainable Communities Design Course. This program takes a holistic approach to creating sustainable communities, integrating many disciplines to create complete living systems. He addresses the benefits of community participation in farming and gardening—including access to a healthier diet, to physical activity, and to quality time with both your community and family. Also, Clayton speaks about the importance of developing youth interest in farming and gardening, and the resurgence of this interest that occurred amidst the COVID-19 pandemic.
 
 
Indigenizing Media Through Indigenous Eyes

MediaSanctuary · Indigenizing Media Through Indigenous Eyes

HMM producer Anna Steltenkamp speaks with Myron Dewey. Myron Dewey is a filmmaker, journalist, digital storyteller, and the founder of Digital Smoke Signals, a media production company that aims to give a platform to Indigenous voices in media. He co-directed the award-winning 2017 film “Awake: A Dream from Standing Rock,” which tells the story of the NoDAPL movement and the Native-led peaceful resistance and fight for clean water, the environment, and the future of the planet. Through both Digital Smoke Signals and his own media work, Myron seeks to bridge the digital divide throughout Indian Country and to indigenize media with core Indigenous cultural values.

In this segment, Myron speaks about his personal experience at Standing Rock as both a Native participant and media maker. He discusses the importance of Indigenous people becoming community journalists, so what is shared is the Indigenous narrative through Indigenous eyes. Myron discusses the historical trauma that continues to affect Indigenous people—including Western encroachment, Western media and misrepresentation, broken treaties, and environmental extraction and degradation. He also speaks about the strength, synchronicity of support, and spirit of Standing Rock, as well as the importance of ceremony and kinship for Native healing and his own efforts to empower Native communities. Further, he shares his perspective on how one can be a white ally, and what role an ally has in the movements for environmental and social justice—describing the decolonizing process of (re)learning, healing, and holding space in solidarity with Indigenous people.

 

PEOPLE

Anna Steltenkamp began working with the Sanctuary for Independent Media in Summer 2020. Anna is a member of the University Scholars Program at Duke University, studying Cultural Anthropology, Environmental Sciences & Policy, and Documentary Studies. During her undergraduate career, she has studied abroad in Berlin, Germany and Sydney, Australia.

Her primary research interests are sustainability and equity in the food system; veganism and industrial animal agriculture; Indigenous ecological knowledge and BIPOC-led environmental activism; and efforts to combat environmental racism through biocultural restoration. At Duke University, she currently conducts ethnographic research at the Duke Campus Farm and works as an Equity Through Stories Researcher at the Sarah P. Duke Gardens on the inclusion of local Indigenous peoples & their knowledge systems.

At the Sanctuary, Anna works as a host and producer for the Sanctuary’s radio show, the Hudson Mohawk Magazine (HMM). Her interviews for HMM primarily address BIPOC-centered efforts to achieve environmental sustainability and social equity. Anna has also created the site, papscanee.org, in collaboration with the Stockbridge-Munsee community of the Mohican Nation. This is an effort to spread awareness about the Mohican cultural and historical importance of Papscanee Island in the Hudson River and to combat the threat that the E-37 natural gas pipeline proposal poses on this sacred land. 

For more of Anna’s work, click here.

Categories
2020 Press Coverage

Troy kids research Hudson River water quality

 

WNYT Staff
Created: August 21, 2020 08:27 PM

Young people from Troy are taking on the water quality in the Hudson River.

A new collaboration between Riverkeeper and the Sanctuary for Independent Media is giving Troy kids a chance to learn more about the Hudson.

The group is called Water Justice.

Teens will be testing the water for bacteria and tracking health and safety standards in the Hudson River Watershed.
Genesis Cooper, 14, tells NewsChannel 13 she became interested in the water issue after seeing the lead contamination story last year in Flint, Michigan.  Now she wants to affect change in her own backyard.

“Taking how we can solve the problem of its pollution and make it better so that everyone can have clean drinking water and clean bathing water,” explained Genesis.

A physical lab for the Water Justice program is being built now in North Troy and will be done some time next year.

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