Corrina Gould and the Ohlone Shell Burial Mounds | Bioneers

Corrina Gould, founder of the Sogorea Te’ Land Trust, speaking at the Indigenous Forum on Genocide and Survivance about the Ohlone shell mounds that were once found across the Bay Area.

Mariel Nanasi on How Bioneers Inspired Her to Action

Executive Director & President of New Energy Economy, Mariel Nanasi describes how, 8 years ago in the audience of Bioneers, she was inspired to do something “worthy of standing on” the Bioneers stage.

Thrive East Bay Choir Performing at Bioneers 2017 Conference

The Thrive East Bay Choir, an Oakland-based singing group affiliated with Thrive East Bay, a purpose-driven community focused on personal and social transformation, graced the 2017 Bioneers Conference with a beautiful performance. Learn more about their work and music at http://www.thriveeastbay.org/thrivechoir/.

Bioneers Bulletin: Weekly News Roundup

A week of Bioneers news in one place: what’s happening in our world?

Looking for something to do this weekend? Bioneers Performance Artists Destiny Arts Center’s all female residence company will be performing this weekend at Laney College in Oakland – tickets are going fast!

Our eyes and hearts were glued to this segment of Democracy Now!: long-time Bioneer and “Keep It In The Ground” Activist Terry Tempest Williams speaks on being Bidder 19 at this incredible action in Salt Lake City.

The Radical Work of Healing: Fania and Angela Davis on a New Kind of Civil Rights Activism. “Self-care and healing and attention to the body and the spiritual dimension—all of this is now a part of radical social justice struggles.” Read the article from YES! Magazine.

On International Women’s Day, global climate leaders from the Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network will travel to Puyo, Ecuador to stand in solidarity with Sápara and Kichwa women leaders – denouncing the latest contracts and bringing international attention to the threats posed by expanding oil extraction in the Amazon.

Welcome back into our lives, Netflix. From now until the binge watching is over, it’s just #MichaelPollanAndChill – Michael Pollan’s new series, Cooked, is available to stream now.

Did you catch Bioneer Amy Goodman on CNN’s “Reliable Sources” this past week? Watch her critique media coverage of the 2016 elections here.

A new bill has been introduced into the Senate – a bill preempting any effort to pass a federal mandatory GMO labeling law and much more. Bioneer Andrew Kimbrell comments.

Bioneer Nalini Nadkarni speaks on the Blue Room, her transformative creation for folks in solitary confinement at Washington Corrections Center in Shelton, WA.

Congratulations to Bioneers Honorary Board member, Darian Rodriguez Heyman, who was recently named Executive Director of the Numi Foundation. Read more about Darian’s groundbreaking work in this week’s Yes World Jam!

We have a new book at the top of our reading list, Bioneer Winona LaDuke’s new Chronicle is available for preorder. Hear more about “The Winona LaDuke Chronicles: Stories from the Front Line in the Battle for Environmental Justice” here.

Bioneers’ Indigeneity Program at the White House

On Friday, August 26, the Bioneers’ Indigeneity Program was invited to the White House to share our Indigenous Youth Program with leaders in Washington DC. The #GenerationIndigenous #GenIndigenous event, “Raising Impact with Innovation and Proven Strategies,” was organized by Native Americans in Philanthropy. The event showcased Native American youth programs which are using culturally comprehensive approaches to address the needs of Native American youth.

Our program and story, “Overcoming Barriers to Native Youth Inclusion at Bioneers,” was selected by a youth committee as an example of best practices in Native Youth Career Development and Connectivity in Indian Country. For the past four years we’ve been creating a unique opportunity for Native youth to attend the Bioneers Conference and Indigenous Forum, and we were incredibly honored to be able to participate and share our story of hope, courage and success!

We were joined by eleven other Indigenous Youth initiatives from around the country, including United National Indian Tribal Youth, Inc., Phoenix Indian Center FORWARD PROMISE, We R Native, Oyáte Wóókiye For the People, True North Organizing Network, GWU Native American Politicial Leadership Program, INSPIRE Native Teen Initiative, NERDS: Native Education Raising Dedicated Students, and Cultivating Coders.

For this opportunity of a lifetime, we gathered in the Eisenhower Building, adjacent to the White House in a Press Conference style board room. Each organization had 4-5 minutes to share their story through “lightning round” style presentations. We presented to philanthropic foundations that fund Native organizations, the Native American special advisor to the President, an Advisory Board Member of My Brothers’ Keeper Alliance, and the United States Chief Technology Officer from the office of Science and Technology Policy. This format provided a unique space to share our initiative face-to-face and to connect with our allies doing similar work, allowing us all to learn and be inspired by each other.

One of the many inspirational youth program leaders we met was Noah Blue Elk Hotchkiss (Southern Ute Indian Tribe/Southern Cheyenne/Caddo Nation). After becoming paralyzed in a car accident, Noah has worked tirelessly to bring adaptive sports to Native youth with disabilities.

Our Indigeneity Program Director, Cara Romero (Chehuevi), shared the story of the Bioneers Indigenous Youth Leadership Program. Thanks to tireless support from partners – including the San Francisco Unified School District’s Indian Education Program, the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians, and volunteers like you – this program has grown from an initial group of 4 youth in 2011 to over 60 attendees in 2015 and spots for up to 80 Native youth attendees this year! Our main message to funders and allies is that we must collectively create safe and culturally sensitive educational opportunities for Native Youth, where they can see, meet, interact and learn directly from Native leaders. This contact with Native leaders, with whom youth can closely identify, is critical to keeping them engaged in school and career pathways. “If you can’t see it. You can’t be it!”

In her speech, Cara also outlined our exciting new plans to bring Native content to a broader audience in 2017 via the internet and classroom curriculum. For more information about Bioneers Indigeneity Program activities, check out our webpage. If you are a Native youth, or know a Native youth who would like to attend our Native Youth Leadership Program at the Bioneers Conference (October 21-23, 2016), please apply through our Indigenous Youth group or individual scholarship applications.  

It was truly awe-inspiring to be in the room with so many accomplished and inspirational changemakers from across the US. From the flash presentations, we learned innovative strategies and exciting ideas that we plan to incorporate in the Bioneers’ Native Youth Leadership Program. It was also exciting to share our program with the Native leaders, White House advisors, and Philanthropists who will help spread the word about our work.

As you can see by the transcript we share below, we are very proud of the Native Youth Leadership initiative, and the direction we are taking the program. We plan to extend program activities throughout the school year, via internet-based, open-access media and in the classroom through Native-made and Native-themed curriculum.

Hi, My name is Cara Romero and I am the Director of the Bioneers Indigeneity Program and the Bioneers Native Youth Leadership Initiative.  I am from the Chemehuevi Valley Indian Reservation in Southern California and I’m here with Alexis Bunten who is Aleut and Yup’ik from Alaska. We are honored to be here sharing our story with you.

Native youth of all backgrounds possess the ability to take on leadership roles. However, they also face complex issues of ongoing trauma and barriers to reaching these goals. Along with a vision of what’s possible, Native youth need exposure to many culture-based pathways on their journey to becoming future leaders.  Native youth must gain increased exposure and access to Native leaders, educators and authentic media and curriculum that they can identify with.  This is our overarching goal and mission with the Bioneers Native Youth Initiative.

Over the past 4 years, we have developed a Native Youth Initiative that addresses educational disparities and creates opportunities for Native Youth (both urban and rural) to attend and be empowered at the Bioneers Conference and world-renowned Indigenous Forum. The Indigenous Forum is a sovereign, Native-led educational setting where a powerhouse of indigenous leaders from diverse backgrounds and campaigns converge each year on coastal miwok territory San Rafael, CA.  Past speakers such as Oren Lyons, Winona LaDuke, John Trudell, Tom Goldooth , Suzan Harjo, Xiuhtezcatl Martinez, and Naelyn Pike addressing issues like climate change, truth and reconciliation, eco-apartheid, environmental racism, bio-diversity, Native arts, water, food security and women’s issues in Indian Country.  In 2011, we launched an Initiative for Native youth to receive free registration and support to attend this three-day event of intense indigenous programming. In 2012, we received our first grant from the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians Community Giving Program to fully fund the attendance of 50+ Native youth and have continued to improve, develop and sustain our work with the youth.  From an initial group of 4, the program has grown to engage over 65 Native youth in 2015, many returning and we are expecting nearer 80 in 2016.  And, even more, now that we are taking our content online, we will see a surge in Native Youth served.

We have worked hard to overcome barriers to Native youth inclusion in the Indigenous Forum because it is our shared mandate from our respective Native communities. Overcoming barriers to Native youth inclusion includes empathy, understanding, cultural sensitivity and compassion to hardships so familiar and so traumatic they are too hard for me to share in this space.  We work sensitively and intuitively to identify and alleviate potential hardships for these Native youth to not just attend but to TRULY be available learn at the Indigenous Forum.  We co-own these hardships.  We find resources to problem solve and are at the same time resourceful with what we have.  We partner with other Native youth organizations, directors and chaperones to make this possible.  Together, we work as healers in our collective community–taking many under our wings in the absence of parents, role models and opportunities.  We concentrate on culturally relevant programming. We design Native Youth centered enrichment activities like hands on arts, murals, a digital ambassadors program, ceremony time, and a poetry slam. With help from our partners and funders, we provide financial support to address hardships that inhibit learning like food, camping and transportation.

Support and information like this counters the messages and lessons Native youth learn about their history and cultures in the school environment and media. It gives them confidence, helps them be proud of who they are and supports them in developing positive and balanced messages to share with the world. Our goal is to help them find their voices. Some of our youth have already gone on to become cultural, environmental and social justice leaders in Indian Country. Some of them are in Standing Rock today. we hope to continue to foster new Native leaders.

This year, the Native Youth Leadership Program is expanding into Native designed media and curriculum for the classroom further bolstering the philosophy that Native youth must see themselves and their diverse identities and issues reflected in the content they are learning in order to stay engaged.  We are piloting the curriculum this year with 5 BIE boarding schools. We believe this kind of educational content will inspire Native youth to become the next generation of leaders in their communities.  We invite you to join us in our initiative for fair and equitable education and opportunities for Native youth at the Bioneers Indigeneity Program.”

Solutions: Coming to a Forest Near You

The Winner of the 2016 Buckminster Fuller Challenge is the British Columbia-based Rainforest Solutions Project, a collaborative effort between Greenpeace, Sierra Club British Columbia and Stand.earth (formerly ForestEthics). Operating under the umbrella of Tides Canada, this collaboration lead to the development of one of the most extraordinary approaches to conservation, social justice, and indigenous rights in recent memory, resulting in a historically unprecedented multigenerational agreement to protect the 15-million acre Great Bear ecosystem, the largest remaining temperate rainforest on the planet.

After a decade of confrontations and campaigns, this arduous, painstaking effort was ultimately able to bring together 26 Indigenous tribes, environmentalists, scientists, the BC Provincial Government, and the logging companies in respectful negotiations and relationship-building, and now 85% of the land will be free from any logging, and highly sustainable logging and management practices are mandated on the rest. This remarkably positive outcome is a model for the rest of the world, and the Rainforest Solutions Project team (Director Dr. Jody Holmes, Program Manager Marlene Cummings and Steering Committee members Valerie Langer (Stand.earth), Eduardo Sousa (Greenpeace), and Jens Wieting (Sierra Club BC), are now reaching out to forest activists globally to share what they have learned.

We at Bioneers have long closely followed the struggle over the Great Bear, one that touches on so many themes central to our worldview: the urgent need to preserve biodiversity and intact ecosystems, the rights of Indigenous peoples, and the fact that people working together across divides can change the world. We featured the Great Bear struggle a number of times at the Bioneers conference over the years, including with a sterling keynote address by Tzeporah Berman, then a leader Forest Ethics and presentations on the situation there from the Rainforest Action Network. We offer our congratulations to RSP for winning the prestigious Fuller Challenge, and thank the Buckminster Fuller Institute (a very close Bioneers ally) for the wisdom of its review team and jury in selecting this extraordinary project as their 2016 winner.

Cuba’s Organic Agriculture: Aberration or Model for the World? | Kevin Danaher, Greg Watson, and Anuradha Mittal

Cuba developed, out of necessity, the most organic, sustainable agricultural system of any country. Is that model replicable in other parts of the world, or is it now likely to be overrun by industrial farming as ironically the easing of tensions with the U.S. opens the island up to the influx of capital and multinational corporate plutocrats? What can we learn from Cuba’s food system, and what are the risks to Cuban food security and sovereignty as its economic isolation ends?

With: Kevin Danaher, co-founder of Global Exchange and FairTradeUSA; Greg Watson, former Massachusetts Secretary of Agriculture; Anuradha Mittal, founder and Executive Director of the Oakland Institute.

Recorded Friday, October 16, 2015 at the National Bioneers Conference in San Rafael, California.

Hot Topics from Indian Country

2017 promises to be another incredible year for the award-winning Bioneers Indigeneity Program. In addition to continuing to bring together the world’s foremost Indigenous environmental and human rights activists, we will continue to amplify their authentic voices through our media series.


Street fashion by Native designer Alano Edzerza

We are proud to announce the upcoming release of 12 new Indigenous Forum videos – covering some of the most pressing topics in Indian Country today, from saving Oak Flat to Standing Rock. You can find the videos on our Bioneers Indigeneity YouTube channel. Please subscribe to receive updates, as we will continue to add more media content in the months ahead.

Did you know that the Indigeneity Program contains one of the largest repositories of Indigenous-produced content about traditional ecological knowledge and Indigenous activism? In 2017, we will be curating the most timely and relevant Indigenous content from the Bioneers’ archive, creating exciting new learning materials. Keep a look out for Indigeneity Program updates in upcoming Bioneers newsletters, and through our social media Facebook and Twitter feeds.

Sincerely,


Cara Romero and Alexis Bunten