About this Event
$20 Suggested Donation
To rewrite our future, we must right the wrongs of the past and present—including the harm that colonization has authored upon the Earth’s original caretakers and listen to their words of wisdom. In this talk, Indigenous advocates, leaders, and visionaries will invite the audience into a discussion about Native sovereignty, stewardship, reparations, and the landback movement.
(she/her) Jade Begay, Tesuque Pueblo and Dine, works at the intersections of Indigenous rights and climate and environmental justice, shaping national and international policy. Jade works alongside frontline communities to develop place based solutions.
(Hopkins) (she/her), or Cankudutawin (Red Road Woman), is a Dakota/Lakota Sioux writer who was born on the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. She resides in her ancestral homelands and is a biologist as well as the Chief Judge of the Sisseton Wahpeton Sioux Tribe, where she is an enrolled member.
(she/her) is an an enrolled citizen of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians and is dedicated to Indigenous rights and revitalization, biocultural heritage and environmental justice, intercultural solidarity, and the renewal of community health and cultural arts. For over two decades Melissa has worked in the Native American food movement and since 2006 in international Indigenous food sovereignty.
(she/her) is a member of the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head Aquinnah and the founding Executive Director of The Northeast Native Network of Kinship and Healing. Jennifer’s work focuses on providing advocacy and restoration services for Native people who have been impacted by sexual and intimate partner violence. She believes that relationship to culture, community, and land is vital to healing and thriving.
Banner photograph by Philip-Daniel Ducasse for Atmos Volume 06: Beyond
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
The Hawthorne Barn, 29 Miller Hill Rd, Provincetown, United States
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