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DESCRIPTION:Join Sogorea Te' Land Trust and Movement Rights for a webinar where we will 
 share the power of the Rights of Nature and LandBack movements from those 
 leading the way, and explore the potential for collaboration or connection 
 between them. \n\nIn the last few years, two Indigenous-led movements have 
 been boldly leading a way forward for tribal communities and climate 
 justice by reclaiming sovereignty rooted in ancestral knowledge. Both of 
 these movements radically shift the colonial system embedded in the\nDNA of 
 the United States (and Canada), and how we relate to the land, water and 
 spirit \nof Turtle Island. \n\nMar 18, 2021 12:00 PM in Pacific 
 Time\n\nZoom registration: 
 https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_mZu1wvKTSWSZO8RrkB60RA\n\nWe 
 have opened registration to 500 people live on Zoom with Q&A and special 
 opportunities to get involved. \n\n\nQuotes and Bios from 
 panelists:\n\nCasey Camp Horinek, Ponca tribe of Oklahoma\n\n“For the 
 Indigenous people of Turtle Island and around the world, the Rights of 
 Nature has been a way to reclaim our sovereignty and exercise our 
 traditional responsibilities to our Mother, the Earth. In passing Rights of 
 Nature into tribal law, the Ponca also reclaimed our original treaty 
 boundaries, which the US government has whittled away with every broken 
 promise and Treaty they’ve ever signed with tribal nations.” -Casey 
 Camp Horinek, Ponca tribe of Oklahoma, Ponca Environmental Ambassador and 
 Movement Rights founding Board chair. \n\nBIO: 
 https://www.movementrights.org/board/\n\n__________________\n\nKrystal Two 
 Bulls, Northern Cheyenne/Oglala Lakota\n\n“When we say ‘Land Back’ we 
 aren’t asking for just the ground, or for a piece of paper that allows us 
 to tear up and pollute the earth. We want the system that is land to be 
 alive so that it can perpetuate itself, and perpetuate us as an extension 
 of itself. That’s what we want back: our place in keeping land alive and 
 spiritually connected.” -Krystal Two Bulls, Northern Cheyenne/Oglala 
 Lakota,  NDN Collective LandBack Director.  \n\nBIO:  
 https://ndncollective.org/people/krystal-two-bulls/\n\n__________________\n\nJoye 
 Braun Wanbli Wiyan Ka’win or Eagle Feather Woman, Cheyenne River 
 Sioux\n\n“They decided, we’ll just go over to Standing Rock, those 
 Indians ain’t going to do nothing. Well, we did. We have never ceded this 
 land. If Dakota Access Pipeline can go through and claim eminent domain on 
 landowners and Native peoples on their own land, then we as sovereign 
 nations can then declare eminent domain on our own aboriginal homeland,” 
 - Joye Braun Wanbli Wiyan Ka’win or Eagle Feather Woman, Cheyenne River 
 Sioux, Community Organizer, Indigenous Environmental Network.\n\nBIO: 
 https://www.facebook.com/Indigenousrisingmedia/posts/tomorrow-join-iens-joye-braun-for-the-be-the-revolution-summit-online-webinar-fo/3226055450744592/\n\n__________________\n\nCorrina 
 Gould, Confederated Villages of Lisjan Ohlone\n\n“The Ohlone people never 
 lost their connection to this land. The land gives us everything that we 
 need in order to survive. That’s how people lived for thousands of years 
 on our land and other Indigenous people’s land. You work with the land so 
 that it can continue to provide, but that you honor that relationship by 
 not taking too much.  Through a voluntary land tax and donations from land 
 owners, this organization is working to create an alternative land base and 
 cultural site for Indigenous people in California’s East Bay.” -Corrina 
 Gould, chair and spokesperson for the Confederated Villages of Lisjan 
 Ohlone.  \n\nBIO: Corrina was born and raised in Oakland, CA, the village 
 of Huichin. A mother of three and grandmother of four, Corrina is the 
 Co-Founder and Lead Organizer for Indian People Organizing for Change, a 
 small Native run organization that works on Indigenous people issues and 
 sponsored annual Shellmound Peace Walks from 2005 to 2009. These walks 
 brought about education and awareness of the desecration of sacred sites in 
 the greater Bay Area. As a tribal leader, she has continued to fight for 
 the protection of the Shellmounds, uphold her nation's inherent right to 
 sovereignty, and stand in solidarity with her Indigenous relatives to 
 protect our sacred waters, mountains, and lands all over the world. 
 \n\nCorrina's  life’s work has led to the creation of Sogorea Te’ Land 
 Trust, a women-led organization within the urban setting of her ancestral 
 territory of the Bay Area. Sogorea Te' Land Trust works to return 
 Indigenous land to Indigenous people. Based on an understanding that 
 Oakland is home to many peoples that have been oppressed and marginalized, 
 Sogorea Te works to create a thriving community that lives in relation to 
 the land. Through the practices of rematriation, cultural revitalization, 
 and land restoration, the Land Trust calls on native and non-native peoples 
 to heal and transform legacies of colonization, genocide, and to do the 
 work our ancestors and future generations are calling us to do. 
 \n\n__________________\n\nTom Little Bear Nason,  Esselen tribe, 
 California\n\n“We’re the original stewards of the land. Now we’re 
 returned.” -Tom Little Bear Nason, chairman of the Esselen tribe of 
 Monterey county, California.  \n\nBio: Tom Little Bear is the Tribal 
 Chairman of the Esselen Tribe of Monterey County and the Tribe has recently 
 received 1200 acres off acred lands located in their aboriginal homelands 
 of Big Sur in Monterey County. The land is crucial to the tribe because the 
 Tribe has been landless for over 250 years since the colonization of 
 Spanish Missionaries who ripped all of the Esselen Tribal members from 
 their ancient homelands and villages in 1770s. Leaving thee tribe without a 
 place to call their own. This land holds a sacred mountain called “Pico 
 Blanco” or “Pixchi” in Esselen. This is the center of the Esselen’s 
 universe and holds the creation story for the tribe. Coyote, Humming Bird 
 and the Eagle created the Esselen World as they have known it for countless 
 generations. \n\nLittle Bear is an elder and has been a land and water 
 protector since he was chosen at the age of 8 to become the leader and to 
 carry on the tribes long tradition of protecting sacred lands of the Native 
 Americans. Little Bear has defended dozens of government projects to dam up 
 rivers and to level off mountain tops for telescopes and towers. Most 
 recently the tribe under his leadership worked to remove the largest Dam in 
 California state history on the Carmel River in Monterey County. This was a 
 monumental task that has spawned numerous other dam removal projects on 
 tribal lands in California, Oregon and Washington States. He is currently 
 working on further protections of sacred lands, forests wildlife and rivers 
 within their tribal territory and defending Mother Earth.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/03/03/18840477.php
SUMMARY:Rights of Nature & LandBack: Indigenous-led movements for the Protection of Mother Earth
LOCATION:Online event
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/03/03/18840477.php
DTSTART:20210318T190000Z
DTEND:20210318T200000Z
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