Remembering Tom Hayden: 1939-2016

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As I was preparing for the Bioneers Awards ceremony on Saturday night of the conference, I learned that Tom was in the hospital and fading fast. I was overcome with grief and sadness. After a stroke about a year ago, he’d made a remarkable recovery, and the photo here is from a visit during that time.  He threw himself wholeheartedly back into the fray, and then took a dive after going to the Democratic Convention.

It was both incredibly difficult to get up in front of everyone that night, and unspeakably beautiful to be able to honor him while he was still with us.

Tom knew about the award and sent us all a brief message:

“Keep up the great work Bioneers, and I send my love always and forever.”

Tom had been a larger-than-life hero to me since the ‘60s when I came of age into the movements for civil rights, peace, justice and the environment. In 1992 in the second year of Bioneers, I screwed up my courage to cold-call him to invite him to speak at the conference. I could hardly believe it when he said yes, and there he was, delivering a blindingly brilliant talk that seamlessly connected the arc of movements over deep time for peace, justice and the Earth.

At the time Tom was a California State Senator and iconic figure, yet there he was passionately curious about what we were all doing, how we were organizing and what he could learn and how he could help. He was at heart an organizer.

He showed earnest humility and a kind of straight-up respect for people from every walk of life. If you were working for the cause, he was right there alongside you. His old friend Suzanne Harjo, the now legendary Native American activist, was there too, and it was old home week. How do we make change? He was on fire with that question for his entire extraordinary life, with an unusual hybrid of a tough Irish street fighter and a Buddhist soul.

Tom returned to Bioneers many times over the years, and most recently we collaborated with him to produce two daylong “intensives” about California’s game-changing climate policy. Tom had been almost literally the only person reporting on what may be the single most important climate policy story in the world today. I’d been devouring everything he wrote and called him up to say we ought to try to bring more awareness to it and to connect some of the right people in the room. He leaped at the chance. Both events were amazing.

At the end of the first gathering, Tom sat in front of a packed room, and for half an hour he dropped wisdom. He shared part of his own personal story, which few had ever heard him do, about growing up in the years after the Depression and his grandmother’s worship of FDR. We made a Bioneers radio show with much of that talk for this year’s series, called “Spirit in the Air: Reform, Revolution and Regeneration.” You can hear it below:

Tom is well known for his blindingly brilliant mind, his awe-inspiring capacity to process impossible amounts of information and make sense of it, and his rare political skillfulness and dedication. But perhaps what always most blew me away were his uncanny ability to see and record history in real time – to give us a compass across deep time to keep bending the arc of justice in favor of fairness, democracy, inclusion, ecological wellbeing, and our humanity.

I’m told that right up the end, he was having someone read him the newspaper. He lived and breathed the work, and he adored his wife Barbara. When he sent word to us on Saturday to keep up the great work, he really, really meant it.

We are incredibly blessed to have had this great soul among us for so long, to have learned so much from him. The world feels a smaller place today without Tom. I know he’s counting on us to take all he’s given and done and to keep making it real.

I am incredibly grateful that we could honor him while he was still with us, and may our tears be the holy water to wash the world free of injustice and harm in honor of Tom’s incredible legacy. We send our heartfelt love and wishes to Barbara, his family and all those who loved and cherished him.


Below are several additional pieces of media developed from Tom’s presence at Bioneers over the years.

 

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Permaculture at the 2016 Bioneers Conference

Join us for talks and workshops with some of the leading permaculture designers and experts at the upcoming 2016 Bioneers Conference in San Rafael, California on October 21-23, 2016.

If you’re interested in regenerating people and planet, be sure to mark your calendar for these must-see sessions at #Bioneers16:

Permaculture and Green Jobs

Erik Ohlsen, a Permaculture designer and teacher, founder of Permaculture Artisans and Executive Director of the Permaculture Skill Center, is a specialist in water harvesting systems, food forest design, community organizing, and vocational education. He will explain how he is successfully using Permaculture as a framework to generate green jobs by creating ecologically regenerative, socially just, and economically viable businesses. Come discover how Permaculture design skills can be directly applied in building, landscaping, urban planning, land use, agriculture, forestry and many other enterprises. Hosted by Arty Mangan, Bioneers Director of Restorative Food Systems.

Restorative Agriculture with Permaculture and Biomimicry

Mark Shepard, author of Restorative Agriculture: Real World Permaculture for Farmers, runs New Forest Farm, a rare example of a large-scale farm implementing Permaculture and Biomimicry principles. Mark will explain how he is “redesigning agriculture in nature’s image” by using Keyline design, earthworks, water management, silvopasture, alley cropping, and perennial polyculture agro-forestry to hydrate the land, build soil fertility, sequester carbon, and restore the vitality of the ecosystems in his care. Hosted by Arty Mangan, Bioneers Director of Restorative Food Systems.

Women and Social Permaculture

Women in the Permaculture movement are in the forefront of developing “Social Permaculture”—the application of ecological principles and systems thinking to social dynamics—to structure healthy groups, create meaningful diversity, resolve conflicts and design empowering environments. This interactive session will use exercises and discussions to give us a taste of how these visionary women are highlighting “people care” in regenerative design.  With: Starhawk, Earth Activist Training; Pandora Thomas, Earthseed Consulting, Black Permaculture Network; Wanda Stewart, Program Director for the Victory Garden Foundation; Delia Carroll, founding member of the 13 Moon CoLab.

RDI Permaculture: An Experiential Permaculture Practicum with Penny Livingston-Stark

Come join one of the nation’s most renowned Permaculture practitioners and teachers, Penny Livingston-Stark, as she first offers us an overview of the principles and ethics of Permaculture design, and then shares a range of techniques to help us tune into the land, understand the patterns of a landscape, and develop a true sense of place, so that all our interactions with a given piece of land are harmonious and ideally suited to its specific requirements.

Wiser Together Café: Permaculture Meetup: Cross Pollination, Collaboration and Integration

California has one of the world’s most active permaculture communities. Come connect with permies and projects, continue the conversation from permaculture sessions at the conference and learn exciting news from the National and CA Permaculture Convergence last month. With: David Shaw, Santa Cruz Permaculture & UCSC Common Ground Center; Dana Pearlman, The Lotus; Amy Lenzo, weDialogue; & Special Guests TBA.

Fire and Water: Land and Watershed Management in the Age of Climate Change

As climate change destabilizes our already stressed ecosystems, droughts and wildfires have become far more challenging. We need to rethink and reshape our relationship to the land by combining time-tested Indigenous approaches, aka TEK (Traditional Ecological Knowledge), with the most sophisticated, holistic modern scientific methods. Hosted by Jason Mark, Editor in Chief of Sierra Magazine, former Editor of Earth Island Journal. With: Frank Kanawha Lake, Ph.D. (of Karuk, Seneca, Cherokee, and Mexican ancestry), Research Ecologist, USDA Forest Service, fire management specialist and expert in bridging TEK practices and modern scientific techniques; Brock Dolman, Co-Director of the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center’s WATER Institute and its Permaculture Design and Wildlands programs; others TBA.

What Would a Biomimetic Food System Look Like?

Carbon farming, regenerative agriculture, permaculture – these are practices that follow nature’s design strategies for keeping nutrients in the soil. With food systems responsible for one-third of humanity’s global carbon and emissions footprint, redesigning the way we eat is crucial. We’ll examine existing practices and solutions that can support our growing population without damaging our planet, and what we need to do to replicate and scale up their successes. Hosted by John Lanier, Executive Director, Ray Anderson Foundation. With: Tim Crews of the Land Institute; Torri Estrada, Managing Director and Director of Policy at the Carbon Cycle Institute; Miguel Altieri, professor at U.C. Berkeley, one of the world’s leading experts in agroecology.

Producing Food and Capturing Carbon

Ariel Greenwood, a self-described “feral agrarian” is the co-owner of Grass Nomads. She manages yearlings in Montana in the summer and cows in Northeastern New Mexico the rest of the year. In 2016, at the time of this interview, Ariel worked in Sonoma County, CA and where she learned about the local flora and fauna and seasonal cycles and used that knowledge to graze livestock in a way that healed the ecosystem.

Explore the Bioneers Carbon Farming series >>


Describe where you work.

I live and work on a 3,000-acre research preserve in the inter-coastal Mayacamas mountain range region of Sonoma County. Pepperwood has around 1,000 acres of open grassland, another several hundred of mixed oak woodland mosaic, deciduous and evergreen, and some serpentine outcropping, and then some dense dark woodlands. We actually have, I think, the eastern most stand of redwoods in the County. There’s a lot of bay trees and scrubby chaparral too in its own natural state. It’s a really breathtaking and in many ways really challenging landscape.

Pepperwood is a private operating research and ecological preserve. Really, every aspect from the vegetation to the soil to the broader watershed, and then even more largely the climate that we’re situated in is monitored and researched here with staff and other visiting researchers, so it’s very much a progressive conservation-oriented place. This is considered quite a robust eco-tone, the meeting of several different environments.

How does holistic management differ from conventional thinking and methodology?

It’s a broad question, because holistic management is a pretty broad comprehensive platform. But essentially holistic management is a way of managing complexity; it emerged from Allan Savory who is a Zimbabwean biologist and researcher in Africa as a way to attend to some of the problems that were plaguing ranches and grassland preserves in that area. What he found was that while people may profess to have certain values, we often do not manage our projects or ourselves in a way to actually honor those values and those goals.

Here, what that means for our planned grazing is that we regularly compare notes with the preserve about what its goals are in grazing. I graze for a company called Holistic Ag. We are a separate entity from Pepperwood, but we are essentially operating their conservation grazing program. The goal of that program is to steward grasslands, and that looks like many different things, but it’s all predicated on the notion that grasslands need grazing in order to stay healthy. So the grazing here is intended to mitigate the spread of invasive exotic annual grasses and other species. It’s intended to propagate and revitalize native bunchgrasses like Stipa pulchra. It’s intended to improve soil condition and water holding capacity, to mitigate the spread of coyote brush, which in turn mitigates the spread of Douglas fir.

Holistic Ag, of course, has its own goals on top of that. The herd was formed as an ecosystems services company, but because we are doing this with domestic cattle and have to be able to pay for the expense of doing so, we produce and sell beef, which I market under my own brand, Circle A Beef. That means we have to keep our animals healthy. There’s that added layer of complexity, but all of that is intended to be harmonized with the outstanding ecological goal of the place.

So, holistic management allows us to discover those goals, articulate those goals, and then test our decisions against those goals. A really important principle I find very hard to practice, but nonetheless very important in holistic management, is this idea that you’re supposed to assume that you are wrong, so you are actually looking for evidence that you’re right rather than assuming you’re right and, as it often turns out, avoiding evidence that you are wrong.

Because it’s so complex here in California, especially in the Mayacamas, and because we are in not only seasonally dry and wet areas, but pretty significant hills, just moving cattle sensitively across the landscape is another layer of complexity.

Holistic management is just a way to check all of our decisions and make sure they are in keeping with our actual goals. I find that if we didn’t have goals, it would be so easy to drift from our mission. Holistic management puts ecology on the forefront. That is one thing that is kind of non-negotiable with holistic management, whether it is managing a company, a ranch, or a research preserve, or all of those combined. The idea is that if you are managing for the whole, you can’t externalize costs, and the most easily externalized cost is the environmental cost. Social cost is often pretty invisible too.

You said holistic management is how you manage yourself too. How has that informed how you go about your work?

Something I discovered through this is that I really love working with large animals specifically. I’ve never been as excited about sheep or goats as I am cattle. It’s not even the fact that they’re cattle. The fact that they’re large and they can do a lot of damage or a lot of good depending on how you manage them is very exciting to me.

There’s a whole part of my mind, that really comes online when working this intimately with nature, with phenology, with weather, with animals, soil and so on. There are levels and layers of intuition and instinct that– at least in my life, that I’ve not had the opportunity to emerge until I began to engage with this work. That’s been very humbling and exciting at the same time.

How do you read your landscape? How do you go about understanding what the landscape is offering in all of its dynamics?

It kind of depends on the questions I’m asking. If I’m standing at a knoll on the preserve and looking across at an area I might graze, there are a few things I’ll notice before even posing any questions. One is where the shade points might be, because shade matters to the herd when it’s hot. This time of year, the grass is shifting from its growth period to its senescence in dry period. I’m looking at how much brown there is, how much green, what species are growing in different places, because that tells me a lot about the soil, the hydrology of the given acre that I’m staring across.

I’m often asking questions like: Where can I run fence lines? Where can I move cattle without fence? Where can I run water pipe? Where will I need to put in vents for my water pipes? How can I bring material on the ATV or on foot? How much time is it going to take to do one thing versus another, and what will most achieve my goal? I’m looking for wildlife, signs of deer activity, because if there’s deer activity I won’t put my fences up so far in advance, because I’ll just confuse them or they’ll get caught in it or mess it up. I’m looking at wildlife corridors, hard-wired fence lines and seeing if they need to be repaired.

The most implicit overarching question is just simply how does this need to be grazed and am I able to pull that off. Some hill sides need a lot more restorative, sensitive grazing, others can take a lot more impact. Time of year matters significantly in that respect. How dry is the ground? How wet is the ground? All of these questions in anticipation of moving 120,000 pounds of animal across the area.

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Now that you’ve been on that land for at least a few years, what’s the difference in what you see now than when you first started?

I really like that question. The first thing I developed an eye for were perennial bunchgrasses. There are a few species here we’re trying to manage for and improve the recruitment for. Now I can see them hiding out even in dense growing exotic annuals. That was very fun to see, once I got an eye for that.

I now notice things like how much litter is covering a soil versus thatch. Thatch is just kind of the plant growing and shedding its own lignified material over time. Litter is what I’ve actually put down on the soil with the herd. If I can see litter remaining year after year, that’s very exciting to me. That means I’m doing my job. I’m not leaving too much, but I’m leaving enough and it’s cycling through.

It’s been fun to watch oak woodlands. I’ve been doing some oak woodland grazing and grazing animals on the species called Festuca californica, which is a native bunchgrass. It grows in deciduous oak stands that traditionally have either had more large animals in them, or have been burned by native people. Lacking the impact of either, the Fescue tends to grow over itself. I’ve come across a lot of dead Fescue plants that probably died within the past two years because their growth point becomes so thatched over that the new shoots can’t actually reach light or even oxygen. So taking the cows in and doing some experimental grazing that we’re monitoring and then taking them out and seeing how that plant bounces back is really exciting.

So now I would say I have a lens for plants that need animal impact, and asking why they haven’t received it yet on this land base, especially if I’ve already grazed an area. Then I think: Do I need to be grazing at a higher density? What’s the deal there?

In some ways this can be a very punishing environment. It gets very hot, hilly and dry heading into the time of year. But it’s also because of those factors, it needs a lot of rehabilitative grazing. It needs a lot more care. It’s been very damaged by lack of grazing or over-grazing, lazy grazing for a long time. And I know why, because it’s physically difficult and sometimes emotionally and financially difficult to graze areas that deserve to be grazed.

Every once in a while I’ll notice new little things, new species, and then I’ll have this like paradigm-shifting thing I’ll notice that scrambles everything.

Can you talk about the impact of animals on that landscape? What happens during over-grazing and under-grazing? How does your system mimic nature?

 Over-grazing means something more than just eating a lot of grass. Over-grazing generally means animals have the opportunity to come back to the same individual plants before that plant has had sufficient time to recover from the last time its vegetation was removed. When you have over-grazed situations, you often end up with plants like thistle, star thistle, bull thistle, mustard, things like this that have a very fast reproductive cycle and blitz their seeds everywhere and are unpalatable to cattle.

You also tend to have just annual grassland dominate in places. The trouble with that is that it’s not that annuals don’t have their place, it’s that when their place comes at the cost of native perennial bunchgrasses, that’s what we’re trying to reverse. Bunchgrasses are especially, as individual organisms, sensitive to repeated grazing because when the plant is vegetative as opposed to dormant, from say September through June, if a cow takes a bite out of bunchgrass or several bites, that grass will put out a flush of new growth from its energy source in its perennial root system. But if the same cow is in the same place and can come back through and eat that again, every time that happens it depletes the energy reserve of that bunchgrass before it has a chance to photosynthesize enough to rebuild those roots.

The act of eating bunchgrasses is the goal in some ways because not only do they release a lot of glomalin and root exudate that pour carbon into the soil in perpetuity, it also clears off thatch and the plant can grow. But the problem with over-grazing, which is usually achieved through what we call set stock grazing, which is where you just put a bunch of cows in, say, a 50 or 200-acre area for weeks and months at a time. That’s called selective browsing. Animals basically have the ability to come back to the same plant that they found palatable, and they’ll graze it into oblivion. That’s over-grazing.

You can also end up with situations like hard pan soil or ruined riparian areas, things like this, because the impact of cattle is like a low-grade trauma on the landscape as opposed to a high-intensity disturbance with a lot of recovery time.

Under-grazing you can actually end up with similar plant species, ironically, and some of the same conditions. It’s helpful to think about this in terms of succession. Under-grazing is sort of a recipe for one successional pathway. Usually that goes from healthy, lush grasslands to less complex grassland that begins to be populated by scrubby chaparral species. Around here it’s often baccharris [coyote brush] and Douglas fir. They end up growing large. They shade out the grasses. The soil’s exposed. They propagate. Those pioneers end up taking the successional trajectory down a different path.

Similarly with over-grazing, you are kind of retarding succession too far back. You’re never getting to this kind of midway, stable perennial bunchgrass dominated pathway. So under-grazed plants can similarly exhaust themselves because it’s as if they are not able to photosynthesize enough, but rather than being too exposed repeatedly, they are smothered and covered either with their own thatch or that of neighboring grasses.

They also can be significant fire hazards. You might have an area that is not grazed for 10 years and then a grass fire catches and completely obliterates that grassland.

But the main thing is that whether through over-grazing or under-grazing, the California grassland ecology is now so changed due to the importation of domestic cattle a couple hundred years back, and just through regular repeated disturbance that we have specific  species we have to manage for, specific species we have to manage against, so to speak, or manage out of the system if we want a stable grassland community, because grasslands are so vulnerable to development, whether real estate or wine in California. I think it’s really important that we not only manage the ones we have but try to create new grasslands in areas that have been overcome with brushy species. So it’s kind of a low-grade ecological crisis if you think about how many species depend on grasslands just for their survival.

When there were large wild herds of deer or elk browsing the land, predators would come in, put pressure on the heard resulting in the herd moving that would create the balance between over and under grazing. Your role is taking the place of the predator in terms of moving the herd.

Absolutely. Through herding and electric fence, I’m basically functioning as a conscientious predator. I don’t have a predator relationship with the cattle. They know me. I leave them more than I push them. They associate me with forage and water and things like that. But in terms of the decisions I’m making in moving them, I am functioning as predator.

What that means is I’m keeping the cattle in a group, bunched up, so they practice what we call non-selective grazing. Rather than having the freedom to wander willy nilly to whatever watering hole or lush low area to eat exactly what they want, when they’re concentrated they eat more competitively, less selectively. They walk over more, so they’re laying litter down, they’re eating things they wouldn’t otherwise eat and distributing that selection pressure across the whole range of grass they’re on. It’s basically using cattle behavior, using the fact that they are prey species, to the advantage of the landscape in lieu of the predators that we used to have that would do that job for us.

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Are there other ecosystem services your system?

Sure. One thing that we get really excited about that not a lot of people know about is when you manage large animals you can concentrate their impact in ways that is sort of like terra forming. For example, there are certain waterways that will be very steep. When we run fence lines and move the herd across these waterways at certain times of the year, they break down the steep inside shelf of these drainages and streams which allows that soil to resettle and reseed and vegetate such that after two or three times of this, the stream bank is henceforth stabilized. Stream bank stabilization is a byproduct of moving large animals across landscapes.

Once it’s stabilized, then perennial species such as willow can then actually have a foothold to grow and further stabilize the area. From an erosion mitigation perspective that’s valuable.

It’s also valuable just in the sort of permaculture sense of flow it, spread it, sink it. You have more gradual stream banks in more areas that divert water laterally. It’s holding more water in the soil. It’s a lot of water to pool up sometimes, which is important for wildlife, especially amphibian breeding and life cycles. Just keeping water on the landscape longer that would otherwise eventually run, in our case, into the Russian River and out again.

Another ecosystem service that we provide is simply the propagation of seeds. There are some times of the year that the Stipa pulchra, purple needlegrass, is going to seed, and the cattle graze it so its seeds mostly survive their rumen. We are spreading those seeds to other areas that didn’t have them otherwise, at least not have them in the same amount. Of course, you can say that’s happening with annual grasses too, and to some extent that’s true, but the difference between propagating a perennial versus annual grass is the perennial, once it’s established, will be there for potentially decades if not hundreds of years to come if it’s managed, whereas that annual grass will be there next year, and not necessarily again.

We’re also able to do target grazing on specific areas. One grass of concern on the watch list here Pepperwood is Medusahead, which is considered an invasive annual. It really takes over like a monoculture. It smothers others plants and creates the conditions only for its own survival. So we are able to interrupt that life cycle if we’re nearby with the herd. We graze it really hard such that it is delaying or completely removing its ability to go to seed that year.

Of course, there’s seeds in the seed banks, but if you can prevent several acres of a given exotic annual going to seed for one year, that gives everything else a chance to hold its own. It gives the perennials a chance to grow larger, gives them a chance to propagate. We’re playing competitive interference here and selecting for and against different species, depending on the context.

Something that’s really important in the grazing practices that we do is, for the most part, we never graze the same spot of turf in the same phenological period as the year prior. So the areas I’m grazing now, I’m grazing as we’re plunging into dormancy. Almost everything is dormant. Whereas last year, I was grazing it about a month-and-a-half earlier. I was leaving a lot more material behind. I was grazing it last year when the soil was softer. Now I’m grazing when the soil is harder. All of that impacts the decisions I make with the herd.

And the reason for that is to maintain the health of the plants?

Exactly. It’s to mix things up. And it goes both ways. It’s to spread and distribute benefits. It’s also to mitigate potential damage. For example, if we are interfering with grasshopper, sparrow breeding grounds because we’re running big animals through it and we’d be stepping on some nests, that means we’re not going to be doing that at the same time next year. We are a disturbance interfering with the breeding cycle of some species some times of the years on certain areas, just the way large herds of elk would and many of the large herbivores in the Pleistocene period prior to them. But that means that it’s just that spot on the preserve for just that week or two window where that’s happening, and everything else is left alone.

What is your response to the folks who say that animal production has a very impactful carbon footprint?

I would say for the most part they are right, and right to be concerned. The follow-up question is if that’s not true for all animal production across the world, when is it not true. And that really matters. I am not an advocate of eating meat just to eat meat, and I would say even if it’s grass fed, people should look very closely at their relationship between that given herd and how that herd is getting its food, just as we should be concerned about how we’re getting our food.

Unfortunately, as I’m sure you know, a lot of the data informing broad statements about what we should eat come from that which is easily measured. So it comes from, as we like to call it, industrial animal agriculture, economies of scale that rely on commodity grain for animal feed, that rely on these massive gestures of shifting one economic widget to another to produce the final product. Working at that large scale, it’s inevitable that costs will be externalized beyond what the average consumer should feel comfortable partaking in.

What I like to tell people is 1) this scale at which you’re participating in your food system really matters; and 2) you can’t make intelligent decisions about especially meat, animal products, unless you understand the bioregion that you are living in. For example, my customers are generally people who wouldn’t be eating beef if it weren’t for my beef, but they’ve learned about the role of managed ruminants, not just in grassland health, in soil health, but in actually sequestering carbon such that they are not just climate friendly but carbon negative. So they aren’t just doing better, but actually improving the environment relative to the global situation as a whole.

I’d say if you can’t confirm that, someone should reconsider eating meat. But also know that everything we eat has a carbon footprint. So far as I can tell, it’s only perennial agriculture and really well-managed animal agriculture that has the capacity to be carbon negative.

Think about where the data is coming from, get to know your bioregion, and then eat according to that. I’d say it’s the latter step – getting to know your bioregion or the bioregion from which your food comes from – that most of us really fall down on, because that’s really hard to do. But I think it’s our birth right and responsibility as human beings and human animals that need calories at the end of the day to take on. Once you know those things and you can be an active agent in shaping your surrounding environment, that’s sovereignty right there. If you don’t practice that privilege and that muscle, then we are just pawns in a global unconscious conspiracy. So it starts at home, at first in your bioregion.

Respectful Collaborations

Sage LaPena (Wintu) presents Indigenous ethnobotanical traditions at the 2014 Bioneers Pre-Conference Intensive.

What if classrooms across the country, from Pre-K through University, taught all students about America’s First Peoples?

Imagine if more people understood the value of Indigenous knowledge for ensuring the health of our planet for future generations. This knowledge would not only improve the way that we restore and protect ecosystems, it would build bridges across cultures.

At Bioneers, we know that people from all backgrounds are eager to learn from deep knowledge cultivated over hundreds of generations of living within landscape. At this year’s Indigenous Forum Panel, “Working Towards Respectful Collaborations: Integrating Indigenous Knowledge in Educational Institutions,” leading Native American educators will be discussing ways to integrate Indigenous knowledge into our educational systems in a culturally appropriate manner. It’s a crucial path if we are to teach the young effectively about climate change, environmental and climate justice, and to raise new generations of thoughtful, visionary leaders.

This year’s Bioneers Conference will also highlight some of the ways that Indigenous knowledge is being used to address today’s most critical issues. Come learn about:

For those who are interested in digging deeper into Indigenous ways of knowing and healing Mother Earth, please attend the Bioneers’ Indigeneity Program’s pre-conference intensive, Looking to Our Original Instructions for Climate Solutions. Leading elders, activists, and youth from across Native America and the Pacific will come together in fellowship, traditional foods, arts and prayer to focus increasing place-based mobilization to a “just transition” from fossil fuels. We look forward to seeing you there!

 

Biomimicry Finalist Interviews

Seven Global Change-Makers Discuss Nature-Based Solutions to Critical Food Systems Issues

Seven of the eight finalist teams from the 2015 Biomimicry Global Design Challenge – hailing from Chile, Thailand, Slovakia, Italy, and the USA – Skyped in to discuss their projects and share their experiences rethinking the global food system using nature-inspired design.  The teams will be presenting at the upcoming Biomimicry Pitch Event and Technology Showcase in San Francisco, and one lucky team will be awarded the $100,000 Ray C. Anderson “Ray of Hope” Prize at this year’s Bioneers Conference. Join us at the conference to meet these young change-makers in person!

Alison Lewis and Casey Howard – Living Filtration System – USA

The Living Filtration System is a closed-loop drainage system that uses soil micro-organisms to retain nutrients in the soil, so that they can be absorbed by plants rather than leaving fields as runoff. Learn more »

“I would love to see this turn into a non-profit or a benefit corporation, so we can really maintain that mission that we started with, of mitigating the environmental impacts, and having that be the bottom line.”

Michelle Leach – Oasis Aquaponic System – USA/Central America

The Oasis is a low-cost, solar-powered aquaponics system capable of producing at minimum 200 pounds of Tilapia and 200 pounds of tomatoes or other vegetables annually.  Learn more »

“Looking to nature really helped us to overcome some big problems with our design. I’m not sure that we would have found a way around those problems without being able to take that step back and say, “How would nature do this? Is there a simpler way to do this?”

Pat Pataranutaporn – Jube: Bio-Inspired Solution for Food Crisis – Thailand

Jube uses local, natural materials and a design based on carniverous plants to trap edible insects. Learn more »

“I started this project  by looking at nature, and now I feel I’m more connected with nature, and I keep getting new ideas – not just for this project but for new projects and beyond.”

Camila Hernandez & Camila Gratacos – BioNurse – Chile

BioNurse is a device made from a biodegradable container and biological contents appropriate to each site. It is designed to restore degraded soils, improve moisture retention, and increase food production. Learn more »

“We took inspiration from the yareta, a ‘nurse plant’ that grows in the Andes mountains in a harsh environment. This plant gives the optimal conditions for growing different species inside them.”

Felipe Hernandez – Hexagro – Italy

Hexagro is a modular, groundless, tree-like agriculture system designed to bring farming into urban homes and create digitally-connected urban agriculture communities.   Learn more »

“Nature was the key solution to our product, because it showed us the way to be more efficient on a product and system level.  ”

Frantisek Toth and Zuzana Tončíková – BioCultivator – Slovakia

Inspired by the Texas Horned Lizard, which has adapted to arid climates by absorbing water vapor through its skin, BioCultivator is a self-contained, self-irrigating balcony gardening solution.  Learn more »

“Before I knew about biomimicry, for me organic design was only about the shape of the product, only about external appearance. But now, when I use a biomimicry approach, I realize that it is about interdisciplinary cooperation.”

Alessandro Bianciardi – Mangrove Still – Italy

The Mangrove Still is a modular desalinization and water purification system, built with recyclable and re-usable materials, inspired by coastal mangrove ecosystems. Learn more »

“Nature is the only real example of sustainability that we have.”

Putting Community Rights and Rights for Nature Above Corporation Rights

See more Matt Wuerker cartoons at www.politico.com/wuerker

Bioneers was founded on the premise that most of the solutions to our major ecological and social crises already exist. This is even truer today than it was 27 years ago. Why then has the global crisis ratcheted up from urgency to emergency?

The rhinoceros in the room is corporate power. Perhaps the greatest single cause of inequality and runaway environmental destruction is the concentration of extreme wealth and power by corporations and moneyed interests. Meanwhile, they’ve perfected legal frameworks that afford them the legal constitutional standing and rights of “personhood,” but without most of the responsibilities or consequences we individual “persons” have to face.

This year’s Bioneers Conference highlights a stellar line-up of groundbreaking leaders in the growing movement to overturn this preposterous plutocracy and “democracy theme park.” Thomas Linzey and Mari Margil of the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund are true legal revolutionaries who have now helped hundreds of communities to successfully challenge the corporate juggernaut in their backyards. They are advancing radical new legal frameworks that privilege the rights of communities and enshrine “Rights for Nature” in local jurisprudence and national constitutions (most notably in Ecuador and Bolivia). Following their joint keynote on Friday, October 21st, Linzey and Margil will host a practical workshop along with Shannon Biggs of Movement Rights, sharing tested and practical organizing strategies that all of us can take home to our communities.

On Friday night, we’ll be hosting the international premiere of an exciting new film about Thomas and Mari’s work, We the People 2.0. Directed by Leila Conners, who co-directed Leonardo DiCaprio’s powerful movie “The Eleventh Hour,” the screening will include an introduction by Thomas and Mari.

We The People 2.0

Other keynotes and accompanying afternoon panels will directly address deconstructing corporate power, as well as how to create equitable and life-affirming economic models for a green and just economy.

Bill McKibben, the most influential climate activist of our era, a brilliant journalist and a founder of 350.org, will deliver a keynote on Saturday the 21st, sharing his vision of how we can turn the tide in the face of corporate power including the fossil fuel industry’s decades-long disinformation campaign to sustain profits and knowingly destabilize the earth’s climate. He’ll join an afternoon strategy summit, The Day After Tomorrow: A Post-Paris/Pre-Election Climate Summit with visionary climate leaders Annie Leonard of Greenpeace, Indigenous activist and 350.org campaigner Clayton Thomas-Muller, Vien Truong of Green for All, and the Sierra Club’s Michael Brune.

Two other dynamic keynotes on Sunday, October 23, will continue the conversation. Green entrepreneur Danny Kennedy, co-founder of Sungevity and Managing Director of the innovative California Clean Energy Fund, will illustrate how to achieve a clean, distributed, and democratized energy system. Vien Truong of Green for All will show how the exemplary California climate policy model puts environmental justice front and center as both an effective climate strategy and a powerful engine of equity and jobs. That afternoon, Danny, Vien and sustainability guru Gil Friend  (founder and chairman of Natural Logic and currently Chief Sustainability Officer of the City of Palo Alto, CA) will team up to jam about how best to scale up our efforts to create irresistible momentum toward a green and just economy.

And there’s so much more!!

No Time for Half Measures: Upending Destructive Paradigms. These leading thinker-activists are working to move beyond our deeply flawed economic system and help birth a new world with social justice and climate stability at the heart. With: the incomparable Annie Leonard, Executive Director of Greenpeace USA, and Alnoor Ladha and Jess Rimington of The Rules, an exciting new think tank

Mass Movements: Rising to Address Economic Inequality: Learn about successful struggles to empower workers and create equity. With: Annette Bernhardt, UC Berkeley Labor Center; Saru Jayaraman, ROC United; Andrea Dehlendorf, OUR Walmart; and Laphonza Butler, Fight for $15.

Our Power Campaign National Gathering - August 2014

Flexing Our Power: Creating an Economy For Life: This powerful session will explore how frontline communities are resisting and building new governance structures rooted in deep democracy, cooperation, and clean energy. It’s co-produced with The Climate Justice Alliance and features Miya Yoshitani, Asian Pacific Environmental NetworkMateo Nube, Movement Generation; Jihan Gearon, Black Mesa Water Coalition; and Antonio DiazPODER.

Leveraging Business for Good: A select group of visionary, mission-driven, socially and eco-conscious entrepreneurs will show how they are achieving business success demonstrates by adopting a very different model of business, sometimes called “Capitalism 2.0.”

Living Seeds

Seed sharing at the Bioneers Conference. Photo by Jan Mangan

Open-pollinated seeds embody genetic information developed over thousands of years of adaptation – allowing food crops to respond dynamically, season after season, to a variety of environmental conditions.

People and plants have co-evolved together, and the knowledge stored in seeds is a result of that symbiotic relationship. Seed saving and adaptation, by farmers selecting seeds from the plants that have the characteristics they most desire (flavor, stature, yield, resistance to drought, etc.), are the very genesis of agriculture.

Seed Sharing at 2011 Bioneers Conference
Seed Sharing at 2011 Bioneers Conference

10,000 years ago, the first farmers gathered seed heads from wild grasses in the Middle East and cultivated them. That process of selection and breeding has continued ever since, evolving those seeds into today’s modern wheat varieties. As plants and seeds respond to human stewardship, people are rewarded with an abundance of more flavorful and resilient crops, ensuring food security and allowing civilizations to flourish. The cultural story differs with each plant, but the process is essentially the same.

Grassroots knowledge and skills have traditionally driven this dynamic legacy, but consolidation of the seed industry, corporate control of seed supply, and patenting of seeds is robbing the public of its seed sovereignty.

You can reclaim democratic grassroots control of seeds by actively participating in the ongoing, 10,000 year-old practice of saving and sharing seeds at the Bioneers Seed Exchange. Master seed savers host this annual event, sharing seeds as well as their extensive horticultural knowledge.

For information on the state of seeds, listen to this short excerpt from Matthew Dillon of Seed Matters at Bioneers 2012, on how grassroots seed saving is an important political act:

And check out Living Seeds’ interviews with master seed savers, from a Bioneers seed-saving intensive:

Using Biomimicry to Redesign the Food System

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(Photo credit: AgriGaia)

Eating is our most intimate relationship with nature. Every time we take a bite of food there is an ecological, economic and social consequence. Food and all its associated activities – growing, processing, distributing, retailing, etc. – impact the environment more than any other human endeavor.

Bioneers, for 27 years, has been at the forefront of promoting innovative ideas and practices for developing a healthy, just, and sustainable food system. Bioneers can trace its origins to Seeds of Change and the Native Scholars Program, which worked with indigenous farmers to help conserve traditional cultural practices and seed stocks. Later on, we designed a blueprint for a statewide healthy food system with the Dreaming New Mexico project. Today, we are proud to be hosting the Biomimicry Institute’s Global Design Challenge for Food Systems Innovation at this year’s Bioneers conference.

Transforming the dominant food system will require a reframing of how we view nature. The industrial perspective, which sees nature as an antagonist, has resulted in failed solutions that cause waste, toxicity, malnourishment and degradation of the very resources on which agriculture depends. However, viewing nature instead as a cooperative, intelligent and generous partner opens up new pathways of possibility.

Janine Benyus, the brilliant biologist who developed the concept of Biomimicry, said, “The Biomimicry Revolution introduces an era based not on what we can extract from nature, but on what we can learn from her.”

But how does that help fix the broken food system?

Fortunately for all of us, Janine is not only asking that question, but also challenging others to work with the inquiry: “How would nature solve this?” At the 2016 Bioneers Conference, the Biomimicry Institute will award the $100,000 Ray C. Anderson Foundation “Ray of Hope” Prize to the most innovative biomimetic design to achieve global food security. The brilliance of grassroots, creative, nature-inspired design will be shared and placed into the intellectual commons to inspire and catalyze change. This honor is just one of this year’s not-to-be-missed events covering the intersection of Biomimicry and food systems.

Bioneers At Standing Rock

An update from the front lines by the Bioneers Indigeneity Program

#DAPL, #waterislife, #KeepItInTheGround, #sacredstonecamp, #bioneers

Many bioneers are on the frontlines protesting the 1,200 mile, $3.7 billion Dakota Access Pipeline, or DAPL. Dallas Goldtooth, Kandi Mosset, Xiuhezcatl Martinez, and Clayton Thomas-Muller are among the thousands of Indigenous peoples from Alaska to Florida who have joined “the largest gathering of Native Americans in more than 100 years,” according to the BBC. They are protesting on behalf of the millions of people whose drinking water is threatened by the pipeline construction, as well as the plants and animals that also depend on clean water.

Indigenous Environmental Network Organizer and Bioneers faculty member Dallas Goldtooth describes the effort:

“As Oceti Sakowin people, our relationship to the land and water is the foundation of our identity. Understand this, we will stop this pipeline… Our resistance is based on love for our people and the land, not out of hate for others. We utilize peaceful direct action to demonstrate our will and lead with the original instructions our ancestors have left for us. . . We must keep this oil in the ground for the benefit of all future generations.”

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Dallas Goldtooth at the Standing Rock Camp.

(photo: Josué Rivas, the Guardian)

Fossil Fuels and Cultural Trauma

The proposed pipeline cuts along several Native American reservations, crossing through sacred tribal lands that are protected by treaty. Over the Labor Day weekend, Energy Transfer Partners, the company behind the pipeline, illegally bulldozed burial grounds and sacred sites of prayer in a violent attack on the Native “protectors” who are standing bravely on behalf of the water and land. Paid security personnel pepper-sprayed and released attack dogs on the protectors.

We are reminded in this horrifying moment to acknowledge the ongoing traumas that our Indigenous brothers and sisters around the world face every day, as they stand on the frontlines resisting the fossil fuel industry. Standing Rock is another pinnacle moment in our human history. Or, as Bioneers co-founder, Nina Simons, put it, “Standing Rock is this generation’s Selma.”

“It’s a familiar story in Indian Country,” writes the Chairman of the Standing Rock Sioux, David Archambault,” in a New York Times Op Ed piece.

“This is the third time that the Sioux Nation’s lands and resources have been taken without regard for tribal interests. The Sioux peoples signed treaties in 1851 and 1868. The government broke them before the ink was dry.  When the Army Corps of Engineers dammed the Missouri River in 1958, it took our riverfront forests, fruit orchards and most fertile farmland to create Lake Oahe. Now the Corps is taking our clean water and sacred places by approving this river crossing. Whether it’s gold from the Black Hills or hydropower from the Missouri or oil pipelines that threaten our ancestral inheritance, the tribes have always paid the price for America’s prosperity.”

Too often, Indigenous voices are silenced when it comes to threats to environmental and social health. The protection of Indigenous homelands and cultural landscapes are critical to the wellbeing of all Americans. Beyond the flagrant and shocking destruction of burial grounds and sacred sites, beyond unleashing attack dogs on innocent victims of the fossil fuel industry, this issue shows that Indigenous voices of protest speak for all of us. We all have the right to clean drinking water. Our children and grandchildren don’t deserve to inherit the global warming crisis caused by our generation’s relentless fossil fuel consumption.

How To Learn More

You can follow what’s happening live at Standing Rock, by following the Sacred Stone Camp and Dallas Goldtooth via social media.

To learn more about Native American activism against the fossil fuel industry, check out these past Bioneers’ videos:

You are also invited to join us for live discussion October 20-23 at the Marin Center in San Rafael, California. Many of the bioneers protecting our rights at Standing Rock will be at the 2016 Bioneers Conference to talk about these critical issues. Highlights include:

For more information, feel free to contact us at natives@bioneers.org

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Cara Romero (Chemhuevi) and Alexis Bunten (Aleut/Yup’ik)

Bioneers Indigeneity Program

Youth Leaders Plant Seeds of Change at Bioneers 2016

The Bioneers 2016 conference is fast approaching, and the role of youth in the Bioneers experience is more critical than ever. The Youth Leadership Program offers a welcoming, interactive space at the conference that engages and activates youth (ages 13-23) to emerge as the next generation of leaders across social and environmental movements. We understand that today’s youth are bombarded with grim messages about the state of the world; with environmental, racial, gender, and socioeconomic injustices all around them, youth are at risk of being lost to apathy and cynicism.

The 2016 National Bioneers Conference is the antidote! We provide compelling, relevant opportunities for youth that ignite personal empowerment and inspire community activism. The Youth Unity Center will be filled with incredible workshops, including Malik Diamond’s HipHopForChange, Barbara Jefferson’s Liberation in Action, and Increase the Peace: Conflict Resolution led by Destiny Arts.

The Youth Leadership Program also nurtures youth expression, featuring arts as a method of activism: a poetry slam hosted by the renowned eco-hip hop artist Xiuhtezcatl Martinez of Earth Guardians, an open mic session, and various drop-in interactive art projects.

Check out Xiuhtezcatl’s performance from 2014 for a taste:

We welcome marginalized communities, with a safe space for meaningful dialogue in the Youth of Color Caucus and the LGBTQ Talking Circle. Youth can also participate in the Community of Mentors, small group meetings with seasoned leaders held throughout the conference. (For details, please see the Youth Leadership schedule.)

So come join us at this year’s gathering! Meet and network with other young activists in the environmental and social justice movements. Deepen your personal power and step up to leadership.

We offer a conference registration discount for students, and a limited number of scholarships to cover costs for young people to attend. You can apply for a scholarship here.

Want to help build a better tomorrow? Help deserving youth experience Bioneers by donating to our Barn Raiser Fundraising campaign – launching today! Help us bring more youth to Bioneers than ever and invest in youth leadership, for a just and sustainable future.

But don’t take our word for it. Listen to the young leaders already involved:

Indigeneity Program Presents Native Youth Leadership Initiative 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.

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Noah Blue Elk Hotchkiss (Southern Ute Indian Tribe/Southern Cheyenne/Caddo Nation) addresses the audience.

 

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!”

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Bioneers’ Indigeneity Program Director, Cara Romero, shares the story of the Bioneers’ Indigenous Youth Leadership Program

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 change makers 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 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.”

Igniting Inclusive Leadership at Bioneers 2016

At this critical time, the world desperately needs leadership – from all of us – to transform how we live on Earth and with each other. The kinds of leaders we’re highlighting at this year’s conference create a regenerative loop that’s energizing, inviting and joyful. Each of them inspires leadership in those around them.

Some of these leaders have been role models for me. They have used their own pain, traumas, and learning to inform and transform how they show up in the world. Their vulnerabilities have become their strengths. By walking through the fire of the worst challenges life has thrown at them, they’ve become beacons that illuminate ways toward liberation, equity, healing and democracy.

Three women who embody that kind of leadership open this year’s conference on Friday, October 21:

Eve Ensler has become more compassionate, more connected to nature, and a more effective leader after undergoing treatment for cancer. She will perform Coconut, about reclaiming our sacred relationship to our bodies. She’s also hosting two afternoon sessions: a conversation on intersectionality with the dazzling Kim Crenshaw (who coined the phrase), and a conversation with three remarkable men on the tyranny of masculinity.

Ericka Huggins’ personal transformation took her from political prisoner, Black Panther leader and human-rights activist to an advocate for integrating spirituality with engaged action, whole-person education and restorative justice. The light that shines within her is truly transformative. Her keynote should not be missed: The Role of Spirituality in Social Justice Work.

Katsi Cook, an environmental-justice researcher and midwife from the Mohawk nation, is weaving Indigenous women leaders across Turtle Island into a network. This will exponentially strengthen their efforts to protect and defend their cultures and communities, as well as our collective home on Mother Earth. Given the fierce commitment, relational intelligence and community-organizing skill of many of the Indigenous women leaders I’ve encountered, this makes me feel incredibly hopeful.

I’m particularly enthused about this year’s experiential workshops. That is how I learn most deeply, and I have learned that inner awareness often translates into outer effectiveness. In Cultivating Women’s Leadership, we’ll offer a taste of the kinds of practices we offer in our six-day residential intensive, to experience what leading from the feminine feels like. When we prioritize relationship ahead of tasks, all the work gets easier and more fun.  In Engaging Leadership: From Insight to Impact, we’ll explore varied lenses into the kinds of inner insights that can liberate greater leadership results.

Leadership in Service to Healing

Many of us are being called to leadership that’s about cultural, social or individual healing.

For me, today’s most vital leadership is guided by relational intelligence, which features arts, embodiment and social repair as essential elements.  Climbing PoeTree, the luminous performance arts/activist duo, titled their keynote Creativity – The Antidote to Despair. Here’s a preview from Alixa, one half of the duo:

Relational intelligence at every age, to bring our whole selves to this time, is also featured in The Science Behind Trauma and the Art of Healing Relationships,  Multicultural Women Explore Social and Ecological Healing and Revolutionary Medicine.

All of Bioneers’ Council sessions are designed to surface collective wisdom in the presence of each others’ brilliance, and I’m especially eager to participate in the session on Life in the Balance, about restoring equilibrium through the sacred masculine and the sacred feminine.

Perhaps our greatest social wound is between women and men. Studies reveal that the deepest bias within the human psyche – deeper than race, faith, class or age – is about gender. Will Keepin and Cynthia Brix will be offering a keynote, workshop and intensive on transforming gender oppression, which promise to help with this much-needed healing.

And at the center of all relational intelligence is equity. This year’s conference is abundant with opportunities to explore gender, race, class, economic and intersectional justice as it emerges in many movements, including climate justice. Green For All’s Vien Truong will share her wise perspectives on how to build a new clean-energy economy that brings prosperity and justice to low-income communities and communities of color.

Many of today’s most effective movements and groups are practicing distributed leadership, where the responsibilities and burdens are rotated or shared.  For my way of seeing, the relationship economy and practices of generosity, respect and reciprocity will be hallmarks of this emergent leadership. Women are leading much (though by no means all) of it, and these voices exemplify the leadership I hear Mother Earth herself calling us toward.

You won’t want to miss it, and I hope to see you there.

Register for the 2016 Bioneers Conference here »