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Welcome to On The Land: Stories from the People, Stories from the Land.

On this podcast, we bring you the voices of Indigenous People in this time of political and climate insecurity. We tackle difficult discussions on who has access to land, water, and air and offers a contemporary understanding of what it means to be Indigenous and live in relation to what is often known as the “outdoors” or “the wild.
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New Series Alert! Been wondering what we've been cooking up during those long periods of silence? The Indigenous Peoples’ Secretariat and On The Land in collaboration with the Permanent Participant Youth Network and the Permanent Participants, brings you a new podcast series. Our Arctic Presence features the story of how the Arctic Council Permanent Participant organizations came to be and coordinate across international Arctic borders. If you are from the Arctic and wonder how Indigenous issues are advocated for, this is the podcast for you. Join us as we hear Indigenous Youth speak to their Permanent Participants’ history and interview leaders.The Arctic. It has always held its allure. Often known as the “Last Frontier,” the tundra and taiga that defines the topmost part of the northern hemisphere has been the subject of many an explorer’s daydream. This place, this frozen expanse technically known as a “desert” due to the low levels of precipitation that fall each year, is also known as home.For millennia, the Arctic has been home to the Indigenous Peoples of the North. From Sápmi to Inuit Nunat, Gwichyaa Zhee’ to Denendeh, Tanax to Yakutia, stories ring from these lands. Though the Peoples have always been meeting and engaged in trade and ceremony with one another, Arctic cooperation was strengthened 25 years ago when the Indigenous Peoples joined the Arctic States of Iceland, Finland, Sweden, the Russian Federation, the Kingdom of Denmark, The United States of America, Norway, and Canada in forming the Arctic Council.This is our Story.Episode 1 dropping today Saturday, December 18th, speaks to the story of how the Permanent Participant organizations were developed and became involved with the Arctic Council. Credits Published and produced by: The Indigenous Peoples’ Secretariat and On The Land Media – a multimedia organism created to center Indigenous voices and our relationships to the land and water. In Collaboration with: Arctic Athabaskan Council, Aleut International Association, Gwich’in Council International, Inuit Circumpolar Council, Russian Association of Indigenous Peoples of the North, Saami Council, the Permanent Participant Youth Network. Sponsored by: The Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Iceland, The Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland Cover art by : Halux Markings by Dustin Newman, Aleut International Association Youth Representative. Follow @haluxmarkings for more. Theme Music: Maani Nunamteni by Uqill’aq Byron Nicholai @byronnicholaiJuniper by Nagamo Productions This project was undertaken as an approved project of the Permanent Participant Youth Network. The podcast and written content was prepared by the project team and do not necessarily reflect the policy or positions of any Arctic State, Permanent Participant, or Observer of the Arctic Council.
Waqaa! And welcome to an On The Land Mini Series featuring Indigenous Youth Voices! Lemau Bantatua is from Norvik, and created a podcast about Iñupiaq fur sewing based upon an interview with her Ana (Grandma).In spring of 2021, we teamed up with the Alaska Humanities Forum, See Stories, and Bitanga Productions to host a month-long podcasting workshop with a small group of middle and high school students across western Alaskan villages. Students had the opportunity to create their own 5-15 minute episode featuring interviews with their family, friends, and their teachers.Mentioned in this Episode: Alaska Humanities Forum https://www.akhf.org/Bitanga Productions https://www.bitangaproductions.com/See Stories https://www.seestoriesalaska.org/On The Land Media ontheland.orgCoffee & Quaq https://www.coffeeandquaq.com/Native Time: Village City https://www.nativetimeak.com/The music for this episode was provided by Epidemic Sound featuring the song Glimmer by AGST
Waqaa! And welcome to an On The Land Mini Series featuring Indigenous Youth Voices! Jessica Chingliak is from Goodnews Bay, and created a podcast about teaching in Goodnews Bay based upon an interview with her English / Language Arts Teacher.In spring of 2021, we teamed up with the Alaska Humanities Forum, See Stories, and Bitanga Productions to host a month-long podcasting workshop with a small group of middle and high school students across western Alaskan villages. Students had the opportunity to create their own 5-15 minute episode featuring interviews with their family, friends, and their teachers.Mentioned in this Episode: Alaska Humanities Forum https://www.akhf.org/Bitanga Productions https://www.bitangaproductions.com/See Stories https://www.seestoriesalaska.org/On The Land Media ontheland.orgCoffee & Quaq https://www.coffeeandquaq.com/Native Time: Village City https://www.nativetimeak.com/The music for this episode was provided by Epidemic Sound featuring the song Glimmer by AGST
Waqaa! And welcome to an On The Land Mini Series featuring Indigenous Youth Voices! Today’s episode features Arthur Hanna. Arthur is from Bethel, and created a podcast documenting the ice road on the Kuskokwim river from his own perspective and from an Elder’s perspective.In spring of 2021, we teamed up with the Alaska Humanities Forum, See Stories, and Bitanga Productions to host a month-long podcasting workshop with a small group of middle and high school students across western Alaskan villages. Students had the opportunity to create their own 5-15 minute episode featuring interviews with their family, friends, and their teachers.Mentioned in this Episode: Alaska Humanities Forum https://www.akhf.org/Bitanga Productions https://www.bitangaproductions.com/See Stories https://www.seestoriesalaska.org/On The Land Media ontheland.orgCoffee & Quaq https://www.coffeeandquaq.com/Native Time: Village City https://www.nativetimeak.com/The music for this episode was provided by Epidemic Sound featuring the song Glimmer by AGST
Waqaa! And welcome to an On The Land Mini Series featuring Indigenous Youth Voices! Today we feature Alfred Barr's episode. Alfred is from Deering, and celebrates his Mom's home cooking and catering business in his podcast. In spring of 2021, we teamed up with the Alaska Humanities Forum, See Stories, and Bitanga Productions to host a month-long podcasting workshop with a small group of middle and high school students across western Alaskan villages. Students had the opportunity to create their own 5-15 minute episode featuring interviews with their family, friends, and their teachers.Mentioned in this Episode: Alaska Humanities Forum https://www.akhf.org/Bitanga Productions https://www.bitangaproductions.com/See Stories https://www.seestoriesalaska.org/On The Land Media ontheland.orgCoffee & Quaq https://www.coffeeandquaq.com/Native Time: Village City https://www.nativetimeak.com/The music for this episode was provided by Epidemic Sound featuring the song Glimmer by AGST
Waqaa! And welcome to an On The Land Mini Series featuring Indigenous Youth Voices! In spring of 2021, we teamed up with the Alaska Humanities Forum, See Stories, and Bitanga Productions to host a month-long podcasting workshop with a small group of middle and high school students across western Alaskan villages. Students had the opportunity to create their own 5-15 minute episode featuring interviews with their family, friends, and their teachers.First up is Rozlynn Dock from Akiak! Mentioned in this Episode: Alaska Humanities Forum https://www.akhf.org/Bitanga Productions https://www.bitangaproductions.com/See Stories https://www.seestoriesalaska.org/On The Land Media ontheland.orgCoffee & Quaq https://www.coffeeandquaq.com/Native Time: Village City https://www.nativetimeak.com/The music for this episode was provided by Epidemic Sound featuring the song Glimmer by AGST
It is that time here in Alaska. People along the road system, river beds, tundra, mountains and cities are preparing and heading out for the fall big game hunt. Excitement stirs in the air as whisperings of moose and caribou float on the wind. Hopes for filled freezers weigh heavy on the mind. In this episode community leader, scholar, and activist Eva Dawn Burk and I discuss the right to hunt for moose, being asked to show up as a leader for ones community, and the politics of the Alaska Board of Game.More about Eva's projects: Rock Crossing Consulting https://rock-crossing-consulting.business.site/#summaryHigh Country News: "Will a Native-led initiative spur an agricultural revolution in rural Alaska?"By Max Graham https://www.hcn.org/issues/53.6/indigenous-affairs-agriculture-will-a-native-led-initiative-spur-an-agricultural-revolution-in-rural-alaskaMIT Solve Challenge: Food From Fire https://solve.mit.edu/challenges/2020-indigenous-communities-fellowship/solutions/25846Mentioned in this episode - Alaska Just Transition Coalition : justtransitionak.org Singing Nettle Farm: http://www.singingnettle.farm/Become an OTL Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/ontheland
Welcome back to the second part of our conversation with Àslat Holmberg and Beaska Niillas of SuperSàpmi. In this half we discuss the importance of fish to our communities, tackle some of the conversation around green colonialism and yes, touch on reconciliation. This conversation was recorded in the spring of 2020 pre-COVID in Sápmi on the banks of the Deatnu River and on Pueblo Lands in Dixson, New Mexico. The Storytellers“In Sápmi there are not many platforms where we can dive real deep in to our own issues and discussions. So sometimes it can be challenging to present and talk about them in-depth in a proper and interesting way. With this podcast we will try to build a place of meaningful discussion on issues important for the Sámi future and the strengthening of ourselves. One main rule and basis of our conversations is decolonization and we will try to indigenize both ourselves and others in the creation of the podcast.Thru conversation, exploration and storytelling we will seek to raise awareness in our society and try to find the right paths int o the future.” - ČSV! (SuperSápmi) Check out SuperSápmiwww.supersapmi.comIG Beaska Niillas @beaskaniillasÁslat Holmberg @deanuaslat The Music Caujahat Mu, the music for this episode was gifted by Joik artist Hildá Länsman from Utsjoki and musician & Helsinki-based sound designer Tuomas Norvio. They were asked to perform together in a festival club during contemporary theatre festival Baltic Circle 2017 in Helsinki. As it immediately clicked between the artists they decided to continue searching for their common ground. Based on improvisational soundscapes and interspaces formed by echoes and rhythms, Hilda’s ethereally buzzing, growling and pealing voice meets Norvio’s thick and sampled electronic beats. More of Hildá Länsman https://www.hildalansman.com/aboutIG @hildalansmanMore of Tuomas Norvio:http://tuomasnorvio.netAdditional music was provided by Bedtracks Storytellers https://www.bedtracks.com/storytellersReferences and Resources Papers -Homberg, Aslat. Bivdit Luosa – To Ask for Salmon Saami Traditional Knowledge on Salmon and the River Deatnu: In Research and Decision-Makinghttps://munin.uit.no/bitstream/handle/10037/12868/thesis.pdf?sequence=2&isAllowed=y -Colt, Steve. Salmon Fish Traps in Alaska: An Economic History Perspectivehttp://www.alaskool.org/projects/traditionalife/fishtrap/FISHTRAP.htm Articles -The Barents Observer Local people demand full self-determination over the Teno river systemhttps://thebarentsobserver.com/en/life-and-public/2017/07/local-protesters-demand-full-self-determination-over-teno-river-system -Cultural Survival Quarterly Magazine We Don’t Let the Border Stop Us: Aslak Holmberghttps://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/we-dont-let-border-stop-us-aslak-holmberg Video -350 : Climate justice in Sápmi: Áslat Holmberg, Fisherman & Politicianhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QLqx7hYhghs
In this episode, Deenaalee visits with Áslat Holmberg and Beaska Niillas of SuperSápmi Podcast. During this first part they discuss fishing rights and the impacts of climate change on northern fisheries in the Arctic. This conversation was recorded in the spring of 2020 pre-COVID in Sápmi on the banks of the Deatnu River and on Pueblo Lands in Dixson, New Mexico. The Storytellers“In Sápmi there are not many platforms where we can dive real deep in to our own issues and discussions. So sometimes it can be challenging to present and talk about them in-depth in a proper and interesting way. With this podcast we will try to build a place of meaningful discussion on issues important for the Sámi future and the strengthening of ourselves. One main rule and basis of our conversations is decolonization and we will try to indigenize both ourselves and others in the creation of the podcast.Thru conversation, exploration and storytelling we will seek to raise awareness in our society and try to find the right paths int o the future.” - ČSV! (SuperSápmi) Check out SuperSápmiwww.supersapmi.comIG Beaska Niillas @beaskaniillasÁslat Holmberg @deanuaslat The Music Caujahat Mu, the music for this episode was gifted by Joik artist Hildá Länsman from Utsjoki and musician & Helsinki-based sound designer Tuomas Norvio. They were asked to perform together in a festival club during contemporary theatre festival Baltic Circle 2017 in Helsinki. As it immediately clicked between the artists they decided to continue searching for their common ground. Based on improvisational soundscapes and interspaces formed by echoes and rhythms, Hilda’s ethereally buzzing, growling and pealing voice meets Norvio’s thick and sampled electronic beats. More of Hildá Länsman https://www.hildalansman.com/aboutIG @hildalansmanMore of Tuomas Norvio:http://tuomasnorvio.netReferences and Resources Papers -Homberg, Aslat. Bivdit Luosa – To Ask for Salmon Saami Traditional Knowledge on Salmon and the River Deatnu: In Research and Decision-Makinghttps://munin.uit.no/bitstream/handle/10037/12868/thesis.pdf?sequence=2&isAllowed=y -Colt, Steve. Salmon Fish Traps in Alaska: An Economic History Perspectivehttp://www.alaskool.org/projects/traditionalife/fishtrap/FISHTRAP.htm Articles -The Barents Observer Local people demand full self-determination over the Teno river systemhttps://thebarentsobserver.com/en/life-and-public/2017/07/local-protesters-demand-full-self-determination-over-teno-river-system -Cultural Survival Quarterly Magazine We Don’t Let the Border Stop Us: Aslak Holmberghttps://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/we-dont-let-border-stop-us-aslak-holmberg Video -350 : Climate justice in Sápmi: Áslat Holmberg, Fisherman & Politicianhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QLqx7hYhghs
Ade’ and welcome to the first episode of Xilegg: Our Arctic Presence. In this episode, originally recorded in late October of 2019, we visit with Unangax̂ scholar, activist, and performance artist Haliehana Stepetin. During our conversation we touch on the mapping of Indigenous spacialities that help us imagine and construct our understanding of the world as contemporary Indigenous peoples rooted in the constellations of our ancestors. Haliehana also speaks to her relationship with Iqyax (kayak) building. Haliehana Stepetin is Unangax̂ and was born and raised in the village of Akutan in Alaska's Aleutian Islands. She brings this upbringing into her re-search theorizing subsistence cosmologies as the central component connecting aspects of Unangax and Indigenous ways of knowing in the diverse topics of study she engages. Haliehana is a PhD student in Native American Studies at the University of California Davis. Haliehana is a scholar and activist, an Unangax̂ dancer, choreographer, Indigenous performance artist, Unangam Tunuu learner and Indigenous language activist, subsistence practitioner, and Navy veteran. Her scholarship engages Indigenous performance as embodied knowledge to (re)center Indigenous Knowledge systems in education and academia with, by, and for Indigenous and Alaska Native communities. Follow Haliehana’s work:Website: https://www.haliehana.com/about.htmlIG: @indigenous_agent Referenced in this episode – Mark My Words : Native Women Mapping Our Nations by Mishuana Goeman Find her book here: https://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/mark-my-wordsFalling From the Night Sky by Joy Harjo Visit Poet Laureate Joy Harjo’s site here:https://www.joyharjo.com/Tattooist -Sarah Whalen-LunnIG:@inkstitcher Contribute to the Native Scholarship Fund for Backcountry Avalanche Training in partnership with Coalition Snow! Contribute here: https://www.coalitionsnow.com/blogs/blog/native-scholarship-fundAnd follow Coalition Snow @coalitionsnow Music in this Episode brought to you by BedTrack’s Storyteller Initiative Song 1: MotherBear Song 2: Nation to Nation Our Website: onthelandmedia.org Our Instagram: @on.the.land
voting - a hot take

voting - a hot take

2020-11-0109:24

Here’s my hot take on voting. Check out these resources for more information, thoughts, and history on voting. These podcast episodes give a nuanced understanding of many of the feels that come up when talking about voting on Stolen Land. Find our voting resource toolkit our website onthelandmedia.com and check out Native Peoples Action for more information on voting in Alaska. All My Relations Podcast "Vote(If You Want To & Can)" Sko Vote Den Series NDN Collective Code Switch, an NPR Podcast "Is Trump Really That Racist?""The LationX Vote Comes Of Age""A Historic Vote, Among Many" Native American Calling - "Growing the Youth Vote" - "The Choice Whether to Vote" On this episode we read from the Parable of the Talents by Octavia E. Butler. "Choose your leaders with wisdom and forethought. To be led by a coward is to be controlled by all the coward fears To be led by a foolis to be led by the opportunists who controls the fool To be led by a thief is to offer up your most precious treasures to be stolen To be led by a liar is to ask to be told lies To be led by a tyrant is to sell yourself and those you love into slaveryThe music from this weeks episode was made possible by the Storyteller’s Indigenous Music Library, a collective of tracks gathered by ImagineNATIVE and Bedtracks. Songs featured:- Time to Move - Nation to Nation Bush/Gore References - Bush’s 2000 Policies - The Guardian - "The Shadow of the 2000 Election"The Daily
Ade’ Relatives – Ndadz Ding’ita? I have a question for you.Where are you finding your medicine?In this final episode from Alaska’s First Just Transition Summit we visit with Naomi Michalsen. Naomi Michalsen, Kaasei and Daaw Da Oo (Tlingit names), is Wooshkeetaan, Eagle/Wolf of the Shark House of Berners Bay, Alaska. Naomi and her husband live in Ketchikan and have 5 adult children, and 9 grandchildren. Naomi is the owner of Kaasei Training & Consulting, a business she started in 2014 to help inspire people to learn more about traditional foods and plants. Hiking, gathering, preserving workshops and cooking activities help participants further their understanding of our beautiful surroundings, increase appreciation for the deep cultural history of the Indigenous people of Alaska while gathering traditional plants and wild foods ethically and respectfully. She has her certification in Ethnobotany from the UAF and has served as a cultural instructor at youth culture camps, schools and university programs. Kaasei is a safe food and home preservation instructor and indigenous foods chef. Check out Kaasei Training and Consulting @ kaasei.com The music for this episode was created by Evan Phillips, Creator and Host of The Firn Line Podcast Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thefirnlineIG: @thefirnlineto support this podcastplease check out our website at onthelandmedia.comleave us a reviewhead on over to our patreon at https://www.patreon.com/onthelandpodIf you have an idea for the Gift Economy or would like to reach me regarding what you would like to hear, please email me, Deenaalee deenaalee@onthelandpod.com
Xilegg - Spring. As the flowers come out to breathe and as the birds begin to sing their songs again humans also feel a shift. The snow begins to melt and the break up of ice is just around the corner – it’s an ominous feeling of knew of fresh. This spring is very different than the last, not only for humans in the time of COVID–19, but too for our more-than-human relatives. Our plancestors have been adapting to the changes of this world in their own crises with climate change and other anthropogenic land impacts. We have so much to learn from Plants and so much to listen for. So as spring begins and the plants grow again, as we are practicing staying still in our homes, let us also practice the beautiful art of listening. Castielljas are the flowers I always look forward to seeing the most when the season changes, for what they teach us in their beauty and in their ways of being. So happy spring listeners, what flowers are you looking forward to seeing bloom?This is part of our new mini series called Nitommo'toto which means Relatives in Blackfeet. We see Nitommo'toto as a way to engage you - our relatives - our community. Please send in short reflections, songs, poems, and anything else that you would like to be aired. We hope to highlight the artistry and wonders of creation that come from across our communities. Please submit your materials at onthelandpod.com!
How do we reset and ground our movements so that they are centered on the truth? In what ways are we growing an expansive just transitions that tackle hard issues?In this second part of our three-part bundle, I am so excited to bring you my conversation with 
La quen náay Elizabeth Medicine Crow.

La quen náay Elizabeth Medicine Crow is Haida Eagle Tiits Gitee Nei, Hummingbird and Tlingit Raven Kaach Adi, Fresh Water Marked Sockeye Salmon. 
La quen náay is the President and CEO of First Alaska Institute which seeks to develop the capacity of Alaskan Native peoples through community engagement, information and research, and leadership development. She received her Bachelors of Arts from Fort Lewis College and her JD from Arizona State University College of Law. Questions for Reflection -How are you trusting your community and or communities right now and is there an abundance of trust in and among your friends and family? -What is the responsibility that you carry as a community member in your place of quarantine, to your local community, to a nation facing the pressures of COVID19 and to a world that is on lockdown? -And how are we reimagining and reconstituting our trust and responsibility to the land, water, and our plant and animal relations that sustain us?Please check out:First Alaskan Institute: firstalaskans.org Raye Zaragoza Raye is a world renowned singer and song-writer who has been so generous as to let us use her songs on this episode. Please head over to her Patreon and support her work! 
Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/rayezaragoza
Website: https://www.rayezaragoza.com/IG: rayezaragozaOn The Land Media CollectiveWebsite: onthelandmedia.comIG: @on.the.land Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/creator-home
Welcome to Decol’ Dispatches Late night on Sunday March 22, 2020 I received a call from my cousin, Scotty Savo. For the past week I have been thinking about the what the outbreak of Coronavirus means for the 2020 sockeye salmon season in Bristol Bay, and here was my relative calling me with similar concerns. In this first Decol’ Dispatch you will hear my conversation with Bristol Bay Native and Set Netter Scotty Savo as we discuss how COVID19 will impact our home community of South Naknek and the region of Bristol Bay if we do not take appropriate action before salmon season. Warning: This episode contains explicit language and briefly discusses sexual assault.
In the time of Coronavirus, we return to Kotre’lenayh: Alaska’s first Just Transition Summit to bring you a bundle of stories from Winona LaDuke, Lagunai Elizabeth Medicine Crow, and Naomi Michalsen. This first episode in our three-part bundle is a conversation we had with Winona LaDuke. Winona LaDuke is Anishinaabekwe from the White Earth Nation in what is known as Minnesota. She is the executive director and co-founder of Honor the Earth alongside the Indigo Girls. Honor the Earth is an Indigenous led environmental justice organization that supports water protectors, builds Indigenous regeneration, and is invested in the next economy through a just transition. She is also the founder of Winona’s Hemp and Heritage Farm – a two-part hemp farm and agricultural institute currently working on growing the next economy through localized, tribally led food and hemp growth. Winona is a corn grower and economist by training. Find out more about Winona’s work using the links below:Honor the EarthWebsite: www.honorearth.org IG: @honortheearthWinona’s Hemp & Heritage Farm Website: www.winonashemp.comWinona PersonalIG: @winonaladukeWebsite: https://www.winonaladuke.com/pressPatagonia Presents Film: Misunderstood: A Brief History of Hemp in America https://vimeo.com/334549461IG: @patagonia OTL Call to Action For many people in Alaska, Spring is their favorite time of year, however as soon as the sun starts to shine and the days stretch longer, welcoming the midnight sun - there is one thing on my mind - Salmon Season. Commercial fishing is one of Alaska’s top economic sources alongside the oil and gas industry and tourism. It currently sustains more than 15,000 jobs and is worth over 1.5 billion dollars. 62.3 million fish returned to the water shed 2018 with another record year following in the 2019 season. While the commercial fishing industry supports many local peoples, most of those 15,000 jobs are held by out of state fishermen and cannery workers. Now is a crucial time to be discussing the 2020 fishing season and how it will be impacted by the Coronavirus. April is the time that many people start to make their way north to prepare for the season and our communities are not equipped to handle a possible outbreak. We are calling on out-of-state commercial fishermen and canneries to seriously reflect on their impact in our region and reconsider the 2020 salmon season. Our communities have already seen sickness and our elders still remember the 1919 influenza that swept through Bristol Bay. In light of this, we would like to hear from you - If you are from Bristol Bay or a community that sees a large influx of people due to fishing operations, please let us know your thoughts on the upcoming season. You can submit your testimony at onthelandmedia.com or submit a voice memo to deenaalee@onthelandpod.com. We look forward to hearing from you and appreciate you in advance for opening yourself to engaging in tis dialogue. Amazon Flooding Community ReliefFrom the Go Fund Me Page“CORONAVIRUS AND CLIMATE CRISIS - THOUSANDS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLE IN URGENT NEED AFTER EXTREME FLOODS: As Indigenous people in the Ecuadorian Amazon fight to prevent the spread of COVID-19 into their territories, extreme floods on the Bobonaza river have caused bridges to collapse, flooded homes and food gardens threatening the livelihood of thousands of people. This is the worst flood in recent history, caused by deforestation and climate change. This is the Climate Crisis!”Support the Indigenous people in the Amazon by contributing here - https://www.gofundme.com/f/indigenous-communities-flooding-amazonRaye Zaragoza Raye is a world renowned singer and song-writer who has been so generous as to let us use her songs on this episode. Please head over to her Patreon and support her work! Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/rayezaragozaWebsite: https://www.rayezaragoza.com/IG: rayezaragozaOn The Land Media CollectiveWebsite: onthelandmedia.comIG: @on.the.land Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/creator-home
XILEGG IS HERE 
And we are opening up this season by imagining and putting into action a new future for our future generations. 

Welcome to Kohtr’elneyh: Remembering Forward, Alaska’s first just transition. On this this episode you will be hearing from the voices of people that attended, spoke, and organized Alaska’s first just transition summit held January 8-10th on Lower Tanana Dene Lands. Storytellers:Naawéiyaa Tagaban @_naaweiyaa_ Ruth Miller @frompeaksnpinetreesSiqiñiq Maupin @savageinupiaq- https://www.silainuat.org/Rochelle Adams @gwinziiEnei Begay @eneibpPolly Carr @pollyalaskaJessica Girard @girardableKelsey Wallace @ciugunVeri de Suvero @veriturpitudeEvon Peter @evonpeterWill Bean @will.ah.bGeorge Alexi James Temte @jrtemte- www.Temteabstract.com Music by:Zachary Matthews @elephantarthurHenry Schaefer @dicegameuchihaPamyua @pamyualiveOrganizations: - Alaska Just Transition - @justtransition_ak www.akjusttransition.org Toolkit and Zine https://www.justtransitionak.org/toolkit/Livestream - https://www.justtransitionak.org/livestream/- Native Movement - @native_mvmt www.nativemovement.org - Native Peoples Action - @nativepeoplesaction https://nativepeoplesaction.org/- Gwich’in Steering Committee http://ourarcticrefuge.org/- Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition - @fbxclimateactionhttps://fairbanksclimateaction.org/ - Alaska Center - @alaskacente https://akcenter.org/- Alaska Public Interest Research Group - @akpirg https://www.akpirg.org/team- Alaska Community Action on Toxics https://www.akaction.org/Support Wet’suwet’en!!- Unist’ot’en Supporter Toolkit 
http://unistoten.camp/supportertoolkit2020/- INVASION - A short documentary on Wet’suwet’en https://www.yintahaccess.com/?fbclid=IwAR38LDec2O1ZxHLgLtrpy8KaiAeQaLeFlsOGv-ogbhC6ZgSeI4ieE3vAea4- History and Timeline of Wet’suwet’en Protection of their lands from the Coastal Gas Link https://www.yintahaccess.com/historyandtimeline- Unistoten 2020 Legal Fund https://actionnetwork.org/fundraising/unistoten2020legalfund/- Gidimt'en Fund https://www.gofundme.com/f/gidimt039en-strongPodcast Recommendations Coffee and Quaq with Will Bean and Jenny Miller https://www.coffeeandquaq.com/single-post/2018/04/23/Episode-5-LGBTQ-the-native-communityFor the Wild Podcast InTheField: NUSKMATA (Jacinda Mack) on the Gold Rush That Never Ended / https://forthewild.world/listen/jacinda-mack-on-the-gold-rush-that-never-ended-160160
Use the link below to find our toolkit for resources referenced in this episode https://www.onthelandmedia.com/toolkit-show-notes
Xilegg Trailer

Xilegg Trailer

2020-03-0209:51

⁠March is here and in the Arctic we know what that means - the return of the Midnight Sun and welcoming the first season of On The Land: Xilegg - Our Arctic Presence. ⁠⠀⁠⁠⠀⁠Our Arctic Presence brings you the Voices of the Arctic. In this season we visit with People from throughout the Circumpolar North, tackling difficult discussions surrounding the health and well-being of caribou, reindeer, and fish and other animal relations, the impact of thawing ice and permafrost in our communities, and dive into what we imagine our futures to look like as Arctic Indigenous Peoples. ⁠⠀⁠~Check out our Indigenized Consent Form https://www.onthelandmedia.com/consentThe syllabus for Xilegg at https://www.onthelandmedia.com/syllabusAnd follow us on instagram @on.the.land ~Voices featured on this trailer James Temte IG @jrtemte Website www.temteabstract.com Martina Fjallberg
IG @martinafjallbergÁslat Holmberg Juno Berthelsen IG @junojunebug1
Haliehana StepetinIG @indigenous_agent & @fitn8vsNils Ándá Baer~Music by Zachary Arthur Matthews @elephanmt Graphics by Laura Jaramillo
On The Land Trailer

On The Land Trailer

2020-01-1402:10

Welcome to On The Land: Stories from the People, Stories from the Land. On this podcast, we bring you the voices of Indigenous People in this time of political and climate insecurity. We tackle difficult discussions on who has access to land, water, and air and offers a contemporary understanding of what it means to be Indigenous and live in relation to what is often known as the “outdoors” or “the wild.This episode’s music was created by henry schaefer aka dicegame uchiha who’s music can be found at https://soundcloud.com/hickorysmokedhenryCheck out our website at onthelandpod.com and follow us on Instagram @on.the.land.
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