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Alexis Bunten Bioneers Indigeneity Please join Bioneers Indigeneity this Saturday, April 21 at the San Francisco Civic Center Plaza for the San Francisco Earth Day Festival, where we will be featuring tribal leaders and activists fighting to protect sacred Native American sites on stage at the Redwood Tent from 12:30-2:00 pm. The Redwood Tent …
By Alexis Bunten Bioneers Indigeneity Valentin Lopez has spoken at the Bioneers Indigenous Forum twice; once in 2015 about the historic establishment of the Amah Mutsun Land Trust, and again in 2017 to share the brutal history of genocide against his ancestors, the Mutsun People, who were taken to the Missions San Juan Bautista …
By Alexis Bunten, Bioneers Indigeneity On March 17, 2018 a sacred Native American religious site in southern Arizona was destroyed and it seemed like nobody cared. A representative from the Apache Stronghold came to Oak Flat, a sacred place where the San Carlos Apache people connect to The Creator through prayer and ceremony, and found …
Cara Romero (Chemehuevi), has been directing the Bioneers Indigeneity Program for seven years. During this time, she has formalized the Indigeneity Program. She has strengthened the Indigenous Forum Panels that feature some of the most urgent and fascinating voices from Native America today, and she has also developed go-to resources for Native change makers and …
Kandi Mossett shares her moving experiences of the dangerous realities that big oil has brought to her community alongside their fracking endeavors. These injustices impact Indigenous communities throughout the country and globally, but Kandi has hope that with strength, perseverance and awareness we can — and will — defend our land.
Naelyn Pike’s 2017 Bioneers keynote address touched on the importance of young people in the fight against climate catastrophe and social and racial injustice.
In the late 1990s, John Mohawk and Bioneers’ Arty Mangan worked together to establish the Iroquois White Corn Project, which rebirthed the cultivation of a Native American staple crop.
The Story of the Traditional Lakota Dish Called ‘Wasna’