rematriation

Rematriating the Land with Corrina Gould

Speaker: Corrina Gould | Air Date: February 3, 2022 | Run Time: 40 mins | The Native Seed Pod: Season 3

Rematriating the Land with Corrina Gould

Host Melissa Nelson sits down on the land for a wide-ranging conversation with Ohlone leader Corrina Gould of the Sogorea Te’ Land Trust, discussing rematriating Indigenous homelands, the history and strategy of land trusts and Native land taxes, resilience hubs in the Bay Area, and much more.

Corrina and Melissa talk about how to grow the network of Himmetka resilience hubs, emerging to respond to emergency and to be good hosts as Indigenous people based in urban areas such as in Lisjan, the traditional Ohlone village site in deep East Oakland, California. Corrina discusses multiple other sites that have returned to Ohlone hands, and dreams for the future of Sogorea Te’ and rematriating the land.

This conversation was recorded on August 2, 2021 at Heron Shadow.

 

Rematriate the Land geomorphic visualization by Maisie Richards and Inés Ixierda

 
It’s going to take a lot to heal but I think we’re at the beginning, people want to do something different, they are finding the power to move in different ways...
— Corrina Gould

Corrina Gould (Ohlone)

About Corrina Gould (Ohlone)

Corrina Gould is the tribal spokesperson for the  Confederated Villages of Lisjan. Born and raised in her ancestral  homeland, the Ohlone territory of Huchiun, she is the mother of three  and grandmother of four. Corrina has worked on preserving and protecting  the ancient burial sites of her ancestors throughout the Bay Area for  decades. She has developed an extensive network of partnerships and  collaborations within intertribal Indigenous communities and across a  broad spectrum of ethnic and community groups and organizations. A lead  organizer in the campaign to Save the West Berkeley Shellmound, Corrina  has won historic victories in the ongoing struggle to protect Indigenous  sacred sites. 

Corrina is the Co-Founder and a Lead Organizer for Indian People  Organizing for Change, a small Native run advocacy organization that works on Indigenous issues. From 2005-2009, IPOC led an annual Shellmound Peace Walk to bring about education and awareness of the  desecration of the sacred sites in the greater Bay Area.

In April of 2011 Corrina, Wounded Knee De Ocampo and a committee of  others, joined together and put a call out to warriors to create a  prayerful vigil and occupation of Sogorea Te’ in Vallejo CA. This is a 15 acre Sacred Site that sits along the Carquinez Straits. The  occupation lasted for 109 days and resulted in a cultural easement  between the City of Vallejo, the Greater Vallejo Recreation District and  two federally recognized tribes. This struggle was victorious and will  set precedence in this type of work going forward with others that are  working on sacred sites issues within city boundaries in California.

Corrina is the Co-Founder/Co-Director of the Sogorea Te’ Land Trust, the first Indigenous women led urban land trust in the country. She has helped to bring the work of rematriation into public consciousness. A  celebrated speaker locally, nationally and internationally, at schools,  universities, conferences and community events, she regularly offers  protocol, stories, guidance, history and vision.

Himmetka resilience hub in Lisjan, Oakland, California, on sovereign Ohlone territory stewarded by Sogorea Te’ land Trust. Photo courtesy of Sogorea Te’ Land Trust.

Sogorea Te’ Land Trust visiting The Cultural Conservancy’s farm at Heron Shadow.

CREDITS

Host/Writer/Director: Melissa K. Nelson
Producers: Mateo Hinojosa, Sara Moncada
Audio Editor and Engineer: Colin Farish
Audio Recordists: Luke Reppe, Sara Moncada
Photography: Inés Ixierda, Melissa K. Nelson

Song Credits

Music by: Colin Farish
Guitar - Colin Farish, Sudhananda Paul Greaver
Strings - Worn Chamber Ensemble, Fog Town Four Cello Quartet
Voice: Teresa Nelson, Capomo, Kanyon Sayers-Rood, Tina Malia
Percussion and Frame Drums - Glen Velez, Colin Farish, Capomo
Violin - Genevieve Walker
Piano - Victoria Theodore
Soundscapes- Colin Farish

Used by permission
Winds of the Muse ASCAP 2022

Sogorea Te’ Land Trust visiting The Cultural Conservancy’s farm at Heron Shadow.

Seed Rematriation with Shelley Buffalo

Speaker: Shelley Buffalo | Air Date: October 8, 2021 | Run Time: 41mins | The Native Seed Pod: Season 3

Speaker: Shelley Buffalo | Air Date: October 8, 2021 | Run Time: 41mins | The Native Seed Pod: Season 3

Seed Rematriation with Shelley Buffalo

Tama Flint corn picked at the green stage, with its great variety of colors.

Tama Flint corn picked at the green stage, with its great variety of colors.

In this episode, Shelley Buffalo talks with host Melissa Nelson about the healing power of ancestral foods, feeding the community with rematriated crops and medicines, and her work with Meskwaki Food Sovereignty Initiative, Red Earth Gardens and Seed Savers Exchange. They also explore the power of art and the beauty of seeds.

This is the second of three episodes focused on Seed Rematriation, and is a co-production of The Cultural Conservancy and Native American Food Sovereignty Alliance’s (NAFSA) Indigenous Seed Keepers Network (ISKN). These episodes are part of a collection of Seed Rematriation media that we have co-produced with NAFSA and Rowen White.

This conversation was recorded on March 4, 2021.

Just embracing your ancestral foods really does give you that connection to your ancestors. You know, the boarding school era and the dispossession of land era and all of that, all of that just washes away. In one season and in one bite of that food, you regain that connection and it’s just an incredibly beautiful and powerful thing.
— Shelley Buffalo
Tama Flint corn picked at the green (milky) stage being cooked over fire. The corn is processed by parboiling for about 15 minutes. This is the first step in processing for dry storage. Once cool, it is shelled from the cob and the kernels are dried in the sun over several days.

Tama Flint corn picked at the green (milky) stage being cooked over fire. The corn is processed by parboiling for about 15 minutes. This is the first step in processing for dry storage. Once cool, it is shelled from the cob and the kernels are dried in the sun over several days.

About Shelley Buffalo

Shelley_Buffalo_portrait_2020.jpg

Shelley Buffalo is an enrolled member of the Meskwaki Tribe, also know as the Sac & Fox of the Mississippi in Iowa. Shelley served her community as Meskwaki Food Sovereignty Coordinator and now offers consultancy for food sovereignty and local foods initiatives. She is an advocate for indigenous food ways, food justice, and rematriation. A mother of two sons, Shelley made a living as a house painter and artist before finding her passion in farming and seed saving.

The Meskwaki are unique in that their land based community is a settlement, not a reservation. Established in 1857 with the purchase of 80 acres near Tama, Iowa, the Meskwaki Settlement has grown to approximately 8,400 acres.

Ruth Buffalo (Shelley’s mother) and Charlie Old Bear (Shelley’s stepfather) spreading out the parboiled Tama Flint green corn to sun dry

 

Additional Resources 

CREDITS

Host/Writer/Director: Melissa K. Nelson
Producer and Editor: Mateo Hinojosa
Co-Producer: Sara Moncada
Special Co-Producer: Rowen White
Sound Recordist: Mateo Hinojosa, Cale Stelken
Sound Designer and Audio Engineer: Colin Farish
Photography: Cale Stelken, Shelley Buffalo, Mateo Hinojosa

Meskwaki Tama Flint corn picked at the green stage

Meskwaki Tama Flint corn picked at the green stage

Song Credits

Mohawk Women’s Dance
Sung by: Rowen White
Field Recording: Mateo Hinojosa

Opening Interlude
Drums, flute: Colin Farish
Cello: Premdip Ted Lasker

Closing Interlude
Colin Farish, Premdip Ted Lasker, & Alexandrea Oswalt

(c)(p)2021 Winds of the Muse ASCAP
Used with permission

All Other Music
Music by: Colin Farish

Sun-drying strips of winter squash in Meskwaki

Sun-drying strips of winter squash in Meskwaki


This short film, highlighting the essence of the Seed Rematriation movement, is part of the collection of media that we have co-produced with NAFSA and that includes this podcast episode. It features Shelley Buffalo and many seeds that have been rematriated.

Seed Rematriation with Jessika Greendeer

Speaker: Jessika Greendeer | Air Date: September 6, 2021 | Run Time: 34mins | The Native Seed Pod: Season 3

Speaker: Jessika Greendeer | Air Date: September 6, 2021 | Run Time: 34mins | The Native Seed Pod: Season 3

Seed Rematriation with Jessika Greendeer

Zoom-Conversation-Screenshot.png

In the first episode of Season 3 of The Native Seed Pod, our host Melissa Nelson talks with Jessika Greendeer of Ho-Chunk Nation, who is the Seed Keeper and Farm Manager at Dream of Wild Health in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Jessika and Melissa discuss the growing Seed Rematriation movement, seed keeping and agriculture, and her work at Dream of Wild Health.

This episode is the first of three episodes focused on Seed Rematriation, and is a co-production of The Cultural Conservancy and Native American Food Sovereignty Alliance’s (NAFSA) Indigenous Seed Keepers Network (ISKN). These episodes are part of a collection of Seed Rematriation media that we have co-produced with NAFSA and Rowen White of ISKN.

This conversation was recorded on October 8, 2020.

Being a seed keeper, it’s a big responsibility. It’s a heavy title to carry. Everything we do as Native people, we always think about our future generations: being able to hold the future in your hands and also being able to hold the past in your hands at the same time. It’s an amazing journey and I’m grateful to be on it.
— Jessika Greendeer
Red Beauty Corn

Red Beauty Corn

Additional Resources 

CREDITS

Host/Writer/Director: Melissa K. Nelson
Producer: Mateo Hinojosa
Co-Producer: Sara Moncada
Special Co-Producer: Rowen White
Audio Editor and Engineer: Colin Farish
Photography: Cale Stelken, Mateo Hinojosa

Song Credits

Standing on the Ridge
Music by: Colin Farish
Voice: Capomo
Keyboards, drums, sound design: Colin Farish
Violin: Savannah Jo Lack
Cello: Robin Bonnel
Oboe: Paul McCandless
Recorded and mixed by Colin Farish at Stillwater Sound, San Francisco CA, and at Forest Flower Studio, Mill Valley CA, recorded by Andre Zweers at Screaming Lizard Studio, Petaluma CA, and mastered by Sudhananda Paul Greaver.
(c)(p) Winds of the Muse ASCAP 2021. Used with permission.


This short film, highlighting the essence of the Seed Rematriation movement, is part of the collection of media that includes this podcast episode. It features Jessika Greendeer and seeds that have been rematriated.