Raíces Verdes
By Raíces Verdes
Hosted by Samara Almonte, La Fresa de Rancho
Artwork by Dario Castellon
Raíces VerdesOct 21, 2022
Beyond Representation: Recap of 2022
Hello all, its been a while since our last episode! A lot has been happening since Raíces Verdes last episode was release Dec, 2021. During the first half of the episode I recap different collaborations and work over the past 10 months that have helped expand Raíces Verdes storytelling from podcasting to other mediums. Towards the second half of the episode I dive more into the topics of representation, and how Raíces Verdes' focus is shifting away from meeting a "diversity quota" in the environmental & sustainability field, and instead working towards storytelling and community building that is rooted in self-determination, healing and reconnecting to our green roots. Lastly, I talk about how my understanding of my own identity as a reconnecting Indigenous women, or P'urhepecha women has shaped the new direction Raíces Verdes is heading towards and what this means for the kind of content we want to develop in 2023.
To connect with Raíces Verdes visit https://raicesverdesmedia.com/ or follow on Instagram: @nuestrasraicesverdes
If you want to donate to Raíces Verdes and support our growth visit: ko-fi.com/raicesverdes
Mentions in the episode:
Alimentando al Pueblo: Community Stories video
Healing and Storytelling in Times of COVID-19
Sage Magazine Issue 07 ft Samara Almonte
Brave Space Project: Expedition Reclamation
SHADO Magazine editorial pieces
Indigenous Knowledge: All About Mezcal
Wanted to end 2021 with a fun and perhaps unusual topic. Today we are talking about mezcal! You can probably tell right away based on how much I talk in this episode compare to others, but I LOVE mezcal. And you might not believe it but there are lot of conversations to be had about environmental justice and decolonization when it comes to this ancestral beverage. So in this episode I interview Elisa Ruiz-Gutierrez, co-owner of Mezcal Vxhee and a 5th generation mezcalera from Santiago Matatlan, Oaxaca (the capital of mezcal). We discuss what is mezcal, and what are some of the inequities her Zapoteco family and community face as they continue to produce this artisanal drink. To support this Indigenous, women-owned business and learn more about Elisa visit:
https://www.mezcalvxhee.com/
https://www.facebook.com/mezcalvxhee/
https://www.instagram.com/mezcalvx
Finding Roots Amongst Diaspora
This episode features Francis Mendoza. Francis goes by he/they/sila pronouns and lives on the ancestral, unceded and contemporary land of the Chocheño people in present-day Oakland, California. They are the Manager of Community Development for the Children & Nature Network and Director of the JEDAI section of the National Association for Interpretation (JEDAI means justice, equity, diversity, accessibility and inclusion). Francis is a first-generation Filipinx immigrant who identifies as a male-presenting, gender non-binary Asian-American Pacific Islander.
I have been following Francis on social media for a while now, so I am glad we finally had the opportunity to collaborate on an episode together. This conversation was the perfect balance of real shit being discussed and also making space for laughter and chisme :) I always enjoy connecting with Filipinx folks, because our stories of diaspora (me being from "Latin America" diaspora) are so similar and we have also have so much to teach each other. Francis shares insights from their work as a naturalist, former park ranger, and thoughts on Indigeneity and how someone living in diaspora can be in good relationship with the land we occupy that is not our ancestral territories. To engage with some of Francis's work check out: https://linktr.ee/akialoa, and follow him @roving_ranger on Instagram! https://www.instagram.com/roving_ranger/
Links and resources mentioned during the episode:
https://gyfoundation.org/The-Bridge-Project
https://sogoreate-landtrust.org/shuumi-land-tax/
https://www.childrenandnature.org/
Raices Verdes Episode: https://nuestrasraicesverdes.com/podcast/abolition-the-outdoors/
https://www.instagram.com/outdoorsforall_oldfort/
https://www.parks.ca.gov/NewsRelease/1040
(Re)nourishment of the Spirit
In Motion with Vulnerability
Hello listeners, it's been a while since I have been behind the mic. This is the revival of Season 3, since I dropped off in the middle of it and I just wanted to give a quick update of what I have been up to and thoughts around creating a mission and vision for Raices Verdes. There have already been so many changes this year and I am just in motion with more to come. I am in motion with vulnerability, working to open my heart up and let the healing begin. So tune in if you want to share a moment of vulnerability with me and stay tuned for the next episode!
Feminists Frameworks to Climate Change
In this episode we featured Andrea Vega Troncoso a queer, dominican, decolonial feminist and climate justice advocate. Originally from Santo Domingo, DR, Andrea now lives in Lenape lands or Brooklyn, NY. She’s currently working at WEDO (the Women’s Environment and Development Organization), supporting their global advocacy work at the intersections of climate, environmental, gender and development justice.
During the first part of the episode Andrea shares with us what it means for her to work under a "feminist framework" for climate action. Andrea expands on the idea of "care work as climate work and care jobs as green jobs", and centering the lives of Black and brown women who perform care work across the world. Next we focused on Andrea's undergrad thesis as an example of looking at the climate crisis affecting the DR and other islands through a feminist framework. Her thesis looked closely at how intertwined coloniality is to our current crises, especially the climate crisis. Lastly, we discussed the violence that "Latinidad" or the homogenization of Latin America contributes to the further marginalization of Black and Indigenous people within climate justice. As people of the "Latin American" diaspora, we felt it is our responsibility to continue having honest conversations about our different positionalities based on race, gender and class within the climate justice movement. To learn more about WEDO visit https://wedo.org/
And to (re)listen to other episodes discussing the complexities of Latinidad and its intersection with environmental justice check out these episodes:
- https://nuestrasraicesverdes.com/series/chicanismoandindegeneity/
- https://nuestrasraicesverdes.com/podcast/latinidad-representation-for-who/
Imperialism & the Environment in Central America
This episode features Sussan García, the founder of The CentAm (Central American) Collective, an educational digital space for Central Americans in diaspora in the Global North. Sussan is a recent Arab Crossroads Studies graduate from New York University Abu Dhabi. She was born to two young Guatemalan immigrants and raised in occupied Canarsee land (Queens, NYC). In the episode, Sussan shares with us parts of her radicalization journey and how this led to the creation of the CentAm Collective. We also discussed how climate disasters disproportionately affect Central America and the communities protecting natural resources in CentAm. Lastly, Sussan walked us through the recent social media organizing campaign that CentAm Collective has been part of to bring historical context to the term "banana republic" and its ties to Chiquita banana company.
You can find the resources discussed in this episode using the links below and to stay updated with The CentAm Collective's work:
- https://www.instagram.com/thecentamcollective/
- https://www.thecentamcollective.org/
- https://linktr.ee/thecentamcollective/
Toxic Masculinity & the Outdoors
In this episode, Alejandro Lozano a Mexican Immigrant Outdoors Filmmaker, Media content creator for Latino Outdoors joins us to talk about toxic masculinity and its connection the outdoors. We discussed Alejandro's first interactions with the environment as a young boy through learning how to spiritually connect with nature with his father. Later in the episode Alejandro shares how he combats the social pressures from society that demand toxic masculinity from him, and how his adventures in the outdoors with other men of color have influenced his healing journey.
To learn more about Alejandro's work visit:
https://www.instagram.com/don_aguacate/
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9NPl4HoV20g7zQtTWEj8bQ/videos
And to connect with a local Latino Outdoors chapter in your area visit: https://latinooutdoors.org/.
What other conversations would you like to see around gender and the outdoors? Let us know in the comments section on social media or email the podcast at raicesverdespodcast@gmail.com
Promo Ep: Dtocs - Ecofriendly tableware solutions
For more information about the products:
dtocs.com/
www.instagram.com/dtocsplates/
www.facebook.com/dtocsplates/
What our Ancestors Saw in the Stars
NEW EPISODE: Feel like astrology is apolitical? Well think again! In Episode 3 of Season 3, I had the pleasure of interviewing Giselle Castaño, a queer mixed race Mexican Jewish astrologer, currently residing in Duwamish territory. In this episode we discuss the erasure of Black and Indigenous knowledge in astrology, how we all embody all four elements of astrology, and what astrology can teach us about environmental justice! You can learn more about Giselle and the services they offer through www.gisellecastano.com!
Other references made by Giselle:
Indigenizing Environmental Science & Mutual Aid
Season 3 Episode 2: In this episode we have Dr. Jessica Hernandez, an Indigenous scholar, scientist, and community advocate based in the Pacific Northwest. She discusses with us the importance of indigenizing environmental science to center Indigenous voices and knowledge. We also discuss the importance of mutual aid for Indigenous communities, and the harm that "helicopter research" in communities of color can cause. Listen to learn more about Dr. Jessica's work and the two collectives she co-runs, Earth Daughters and Pina Soul, SPC. To learn more about Dr. Jessica, visit www.jessicabhernandez.com | Artwork by Art is Jupiter (@artisjupiter)
Archiving P'urhépecha Knowledge Through Art
Welcome to Season 3 of Raíces Verdes! In this first episode, we have P'urhépecha artist Diana Morales as a guest on the show. Diana is an artist born in Santa Cruz Tanaco, Michoacan, Mexico raised in Santa Ana, California unceded Tongva and Acjachemen territory. She is the creator of Arte Es Medicina, an Instagram platform dedicated to sharing P'urhépecha oral stories and collective efforts through art.
In this episode we discuss her artwork in connection to her experience as part of the P'urhépecha diaspora, and her hopes for bringing community together through her art. To find Diana's art visit www.instagram.com/arte.es.medicina or to purchase her artwork visit www.etsy.com/shop/ArteEsMedicina
In the Fire: The Medicine For Tragedy is Community
Latinidad: Representation for Who?
Protectors Of The Salish Sea
To support their work visit protectorsofthesalishsea.org/
www.facebook.com/ProtectorsOfTheSalishSea/
Radical Black Ecology
Abolition & the Outdoors
Slowing Down to the Beat of the Earth
protectorsofthesalishsea.org/
www.facebook.com/yesfarmofficial/
www.gofundme.com/f/seattle-bipoc-organic-food-bank-fund
www.rashawnna-at-klove4art.com/
msha.ke/jase.the.crone/
Black Environmentalism & Settler-Colonial Education
Born and raised in unceded Duwamish Territory also known as Seattle Washington, Abena is a Black woman of Ghanaian decent with kinship in the In-land Ashanti and Coastal Fante tribes. She received her Bachelors Degree from Western Washington University in Interdisciplinary Studies with a minor in Education and Social Justice in 2018. Entitled “Understanding Black Connections to Land and Place through Anti-Blackness in the United States” she spent her 4 years in undergrad creating her own major of study; unpacking how environmental injustice came to be within differing Black communities, learning Black environmental ways of knowing and being, and the importance of self actualized education that is culturally responsive in the wake of enslavement.
Islam As the Deepest Green Root
Islam & Ethical Fashion
IG: @faithfullysustainable
Latinx, Muslim & Sustainable
IG: @cassandra_laflor
TikTok: @cassandra_laflor
YouTube: Cassandra La Flor
Raices Press: Healing Through Storytelling
nuestrasraicesverdes.com/episodes-2/season-ii/raices-press-healing-through-storytelling/
Raices Press: www.instagram.com/raices_press/
The Chisme on Ecofascism & Healing
For COVID-19 resources go to nuestrasraicesverdes.com/resources/covid-19/
"I will plan your ass out of this city!"
nuestrasraicesverdes.com/resources/urban-planning-spatial-justice/
Holy Olives & Imperialism
Medicine In Our DNA
No Borders on Indigenous Land
Placed-based Identities
New Series! Beyond Chicanismo : Indigeneity & the Environment
Uncolonized : No ThanksTaking
Craig of the Creek : Media Representation
Conclusions to Season 1!
Hospitals & Food Systems
Health & Rural Environments
Immigration, Health & the Environment
Farming As Generational Wealth
Sustainability Abroad
Mauna Kea: Protecting Sacred Lands
www.puuhuluhulu.com
org.salsalabs.com/o/2699/donate_page/aloha-aina-support-fund
www.paypal.me/HULINVDA
www.instagram.com/protectmaunakea/