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Why Is the World So Beautiful?

‘Western science is a powerful way of knowing, but it isn't the only one says Robin Wall Kimmerer. A new interview on Tapestry at CBC Radio Canada.

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Exploring Abenaki Foodways: Cooking with Chef Jessee Lawyer

Roll up your sleeves and gather in the kitchen for this virtual instructional cooking class taught by Missisquoi Abenaki chef Jessee Lawyer. Jessee will demonstrate how to create a seasonal dish showcasing Native techniques and pre-colonial, Vermont-grown and gathered ingredients. Recipes will be included so you can create the dish for your own family and friends.

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Letter to 2050, a Poem

The Squamscott River

grew lazy in early summer—

muskrat rose and dove

heron swept the air and landed

and hemlocks that had survived

another century's practice

of harvesting their bark

were thriving…

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Etuaptmumk: Two-Eyed Seeing with Rebecca Thomas

Etuaptmumk - Two-Eyed Seeing is explained by saying it refers to learning to see from one eye with the strengths of Indigenous knowledges and ways of knowing, and from the other eye with the strengths of Western knowledges and ways of knowing ... and learning to use both these eyes together, for the benefit of all.

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A Crow Suggests How The Crazy Mts. Should Remain Wild And Sacred

"The proposed desired conditions in the plan fail to specifically describe the wild nature, solitude and other characteristics that underscore what makes the mountains sacred and worth protecting. The Forest Service also needs to provide tangible benchmarks towards which management goals should be directed."

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Skywoman Falling

In this excerpt from the new introduction to her acclaimed book Braiding Sweetgrass, Robin Wall Kimmerer draws upon the creation story Skywoman Falling and the wisdom of plants to guide us through our present moment of deep uncertainty. Her words of hope, transformation, and courage feel especially poignant at this moment as we look to find ways to heal and address the monumental challenges that lie before us.

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Indigenous Languages As Cures of the Earth

The Amazon is a sacred place. Human Beings do not make sacred places, they acknowledge them, recognize them, and sustain them without developing them. We honor them with languages taught to us by the Earth herself. The Original Nations of the Western Hemisphere understand sacred places where Earth has directed their sensitivities to pure energy being in place. These multi-dimensional quantum physics of Earth languages of the Original Peoples are also a part of the sacred places. They are part of the Cura Da Terra, “Cure of the Earth”, to borrow a phrase from the First Peoples of the Amazon.

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Heritage Stewardship in Indigenous and Black Communities

Local descendant communities and Indigenous nations continue to be at the center of heritage preservation efforts. While their methods are not always recognized by academic or governmental organizations, they employ innovative, culturally appropriate ways of caring for and keeping alive their heritage in all its manifestations. This panel is comprised of leading Indigenous and Black activists, scholars, and community organizers, providing a renewed focus on contemporary conservation practices, history telling, and ways of being in the world.

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Samoset, Sagamore (Sôgmô) of Monhegan

Samoset is an Abenaki sôgmô (leader) whose name is often invoked at this time of harvest feasting, although his actual visit to the recently-arrived English colonists at Patuxet (later, Plymouth) was in March of 1621. He was the first Native person to meet them in person, walking directly into the village and making a deep impression upon the surprised, and probably alarmed, survivors of that first winter. The tenor of this video is rather even-handed and it seems worth sharing further.

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Corn Tastes Better on the Honor System

I remember. How their songs drew us up through the warming earth just for the joy of hearing them. How we stretched in the sun and turned air into sugar, my sisters and I, leaves and roots entwined. It’s lonely without them. Grandfather Teosinte has been gone for so long; where is that gentle guidance when we need it most? And our good people—with toes and hoes in the soil, fulfilling the agreement made so long ago? What happened to the songs we knew? I remember how they celebrated my beautiful children with feasting and honor and passed them hand to hand in thanksgiving. I remember when they knew my name. The people have forgotten, but the seed remembers.

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Abenaki Fifth Grader Speaks Out After CNN Labels Native Voters 'Something Else'

When a CNN graphic seemingly dismissed Native American voters as “Something Else,” Sage Gould, a local 10-year-old from the Abenaki community, decided she needed to say something.

With some encouragement from a teacher, Sage wrote in a short email to the news network that the graphic had made her “feel really sad, because we were the first people of this country and we never get recognized for that.”

“Maybe next time,” Sage wrote, “you could do better and recognize all races of this country.”

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Rich Holschuh Rich Holschuh

Exploring Abenaki Foodways Cooking Class

Roll up your sleeves and gather in the kitchen for this virtual instructional cooking class taught by Missisquoi Abenaki chef Jessee Lawyer. Jessee will demonstrate how to create a seasonal dish showcasing Native techniques and pre-colonial, Vermont-grown and gathered ingredients. Recipes will be included so you can create the dish for your own family and friends.

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Rich Holschuh Rich Holschuh

Should Brattleboro Be Renamed Wantastegok?

A question was posed recently, publicly, from a concerned individual. To paraphrase: Would there be support for a decolonizing initiative — by this person — to change the name of Brattleboro (and its accompanying official seal) to Wantastegok?

This type of situation comes up not infrequently. It seems appropriate to make a public reply in kind, by way of making clear the principles of our responses.

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Wabanaki Enjoying Nut Milk and Butter for Centuries

“The Wabanaki were not domesticating wild animals,” said ethnobotanist, culinary historian and author E. Barrie Kavasch, who has documented both nut milk and nut butter as indigenous traditional foods in the northeastern United States.

“Doubtless Rosier was referring to other substances used in another way that he was totally unaware of,” Kavasch said. “In Maine especially, the Maine Indians used the resources from the nuts, which are enhanced by roasting, cooking and drying.”

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Whose History Gets Set In Stone? A Closer Look At Monuments In Vermont

As part of protests for social and racial justice arise, people have called for the removal of monuments they feel represent America's racist past. University of Vermont Art history professor Kelley Helmstutler Di Dio spoke to VPR about statues and monuments in Vermont with troubling iconography and discussed what, if anything, should be done with them.

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Abenaki Place Names To Be Added at Parks

According to a bill passed earlier this month signed into law by Gov. Phil Scott, all of Vermont’s state parks will soon be bearing alternate place names in the language of Vermont’s original inhabitants— the Abenaki. The recently signed Act 174 requires the Vermont Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation (FPR) to list the Abenaki place name on any relevant signs for sites within Vermont’s state parks.

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Wabanakiyik Rematriation and Land Justice, with Alivia Moore

A recording of a Blue Hill Public Library program from 11/4/2020, featuring Alivia Moore, co-founder of Eastern Woodlands Rematriation Collective, to explore a Penobscot perspective on land justice. Current rematriation efforts of EWR are discussed, including Wabanaki food & healing systems reclamation, the development of a Rematriation School, and land returns.

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