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  • In this episode Lisa, Gina, and Marybeth discuss their personal critique and opinions about the movie "Cabrini" just out by Angel Studios. The movie is a biographical drama about the Italian nun Francesca Cabrini who was sent by the Vatican to New York City in the late 1800's to aid the Italian immigrants who were living there. Madre Cabrini was the first American saint and is known for her many miracles as well the orphanages and hospitals she founded.

    Dr. Gina Miele is a professor of Italian literature, culture, and folklore at Montclair State University. She is a second generation Italian American and a fluent Italian language speaker.

    Marybeth Bonfiglio is a writer, ancestralist, and works with people of all lineages to help them reconnect and remember who they may have been before the plague of whiteness, colonization, and assimilation. She holds ancestral pilgrimages on the beloved island of Sicily for those longing to go deeper with land, culture and people through her organization, Radici Siciliane.

    To watch the first 19 minutes of “Cabrini”:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=__zaqjj2UFw

    Links:

    To learn more about Dr. Miele go to:

    Instagram: @profgmm

    Montclair University

    Academia.edu

    To learn more about Marybeth Bonfiglio go to:

    marybethbonfiglio.com

    Other show notes:

    The Coccia Institute

    “Are Italians White” by Jennifer Guglielmo and Salvatore Salerno

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  • Diana received a BA in British & American History and Literature (Harvard College, 2005), a MUP (Master’s of Urban Planning) in Cultural Heritage and Neighborhood Development (Harvard Graduate School of Design, 2012), and a MA in Landscape Studies (Harvard University, 2018). She loves public libraries, baroque chamber music, and speculative fiction, and is the mother of two boys, a cat, and two kitchens: one in Cambridge, MA, and another at “Beaver Meadow,” in Sunderland, MA. She served as the Doing History Curator for Cambridge Historical Society from 2016-2020, participating in AASLH award-winning and Mass Humanities grant funded programs, and in 2020-21 was the Researcher-in-Residence at the deCordova Art Museum’s exhibition “Visionary New England,” with her project “annsisters : the Lost Library of Latona.”

    To follow Diana and learn more about her work go to:

    Diana’s newsletter: CONVENTICLE

    Dianalempel.me

    Instagram: @the_annsisters

    Other links from our discussion:

    Prudence Carter

    Book: Ethnic Options by Mary C. Waters or this Short version Pdf

    Book: On Tyranny, by Timothy Snyder

    Karen Ward and Slí An Chroí

    New Bedford Waterfront Festival

    Music by: Auld Lang Syne

  • MaryBeth is a writer and a practitioner of ancestral folk magic of her ancestors (from Sicily and mainland Italy). She is deeply devoted to knowing and understanding her roots and learning their ancient and not-so-ancient ways of being together, and with the land. She also gathers people on her ancestral land of Sicily to anchor in the earth, village practices, food stories, ancestral arts, dance, music, and celebration—all within community.

    To learn more about her work: @marybethbonfiglio and @radicisiciliane

    Kara (she/they) lives on Ohlone land in Oakland, CA.She is a folk herbalist and an ancestral medicine connector. She creates a container for people to connect with their ancestors, the elements, the plants and with their bodies.The years of ancestral healing work she has practiced has led to ancestral medicine rooted in her Italian, Mediterranean and European folk ways. Kara offers seasonal plant medicine classes, private herbal consultations for specific concerns and preventative holistic self care. As well as private ancestral connection sessions, helping individuals to find their own ancestral medicine within. She is on instagram @cimarutaremedies and more info can be found at www.cimarutaremedies.com

    Links and notes from this episode:

    Angela Puca, Phd: https://www.youtube.com/c/AngelasSymposium/about

    The Taranta project: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jtswRJcVI1E

    Tribe from Brazil mentioned by Kara: Huni Kuin people https://www.iskubu.de/huni-kuin/

    Dare Sohei as mentioned by Marybeth: https://bodyaltar.org

    Background image: photo of altar by Kara Wood

    Music by: Auld Lang Syne

  • Donate: TINY HOME PROJECT


    In this episode we talk about her activist endeavors including her latest tiny house project located in Mohawk Territory at Akwesasne that supports individuals coming home from prison/rehabilitation and reintegrating into community. She has been successfully fundraising for the construction of the first Tiny home and it has been delivered. Donations continue to be needed to complete the inside renovations and fulfill the goal of several more tiny homes.

    Jonel is currently working for Kahwatsiraien:ton which is founded in supporting the families of Ohero:kon. She has dedicated six years as a council member and lead Auntie for all adolescent girls entering their first year of fasting in Ohero:kon “Under the Husk”, which is the Rights of Passage for youth in Akwesasne. Through ceremony these youth commit to four years of fasting in which they attend weekly gatherings throughout the winter months where traditional/modern teachings are presented to the young fasters and their families. All with the intentions of receiving a vision, insight or guidance on the purpose of their journey into adulthood.

    She recently spent five years cultivating support and experience around violence with the Seven Dancers Coalition, as Community Outreach, located in Upstate New York on the U.S./Can political border of her home territory in Akwesasne. The Coalition seeks to educate Tribal communities and service providers through trainings and presentations on Sexual Assault, Domestic violence, Campus Safety, Teen Dating, Sex Trafficking and Stalking. She was a recipient of 2020 Visionary Voice Award, nominated by the New York State Coalition Against Sexual Assault, granted by the National Sexual Assault Resource Center.

    She is also a member of the Section 84 parole board of Akwesasne and the Neh Kanikonriio Council which is a restorative justice initiative that integrates indigenous ways of mediation to reduce incarceration and provide a more interpersonal means of healing for both parties.            

    In 2019 Jonel was picked as one of ten women nationally to represent a fellowship for formerly incarcerated or directly impacted woman of color, through the Community Change organization. With peer to peer mentorship, community organizing skill building, and cultivating change in the hearts of women directly impacted by the social violence, prison systems and immigration.  In 2020 she was accepted to be on a national cohort of women through Columbia University’s Women Transcending fellowship that was organized to support formerly incarcerated women build power, gain resources and strengthen leadership development. In addition Jonel was extended an invitation to sit on the national #FREEHER board with the Circle for Justice Innovations which give out grant opportunities for women of color who are in their communities working to address mass incarceration.

    NOTES AND LINKS:

    +Go Fund Me: Akwesasne’s transitional tiny home project

    +Jonel Beauvais on Instagram: @jonelb27

    +Welcome Home Circle Facebook page: a circle of formerly incarcerated community members of Akwesasne who want to support those coming back into our community from Incarceration. See photos of the first tiny home here!

    +The Seven Dancers Coalition

    +Music by : Auld Lang Syne

  • Notes and Links:

    Blood + Belonging: An Ancestral Arts Wisdom School @ Marybethbonfiglio.com

    Radici Siciliane on instagram: @radicisiciliane

    Whapio Diane Bartlett at The Matrona; transformational Programs in the
    realms of Birth, Healing and Wisdomkeeping

    Music for this episode by: Auld Lang Syne

  • Notes and Links:

    For The Good Inc.

    Phoenix Radio: 95.5fm The Heat

    The Utica Phoenix Independent Newspaper

    Jane Elliot: Blue Eyes/Brown Eyes Anti-Racist Exercise

    Utica’s Juneteenth Music Fest Recording

    Music for this episode by: Auld Lang Syne

  • Notes and Links:

    The Center for Bioregional Living

    Book by Anna Tsing: Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet: Ghosts and Monsters of the Anthropocene

    Dreamtime Village, Madison, WI

    Michael Meade at mosaicvoices.org

    Adriana Magaña on Facebook

    Book by David Holmgren: Permaculture: Principles and Pathways beyond Sustainability

    Book by Bill Mollison: Permaculture: A Designer’s Manual

    Permaculture designer Looby Macnamara

    Women’s Permaculture Guild

    Consultations with Adriana Magaña and Andrew Faust: Center for Bioregional Living

    Seed Saver’s Exchange

    Mutual Aid Network Hub

    Beginning Music by Auld Lang Syne

    Ending Song by The Bounding Main

  • Links:
    Tom Porter (Sakokwenionkwas-“The One Who Wins”), Bear Clan Elder of the Mohawk Nation at Kanatsiohareke (‘Gah nah joe hah lay geh): Kanatsiohareke Mohawk Community

    Kaypacha Lescher weekly Pele Report: Astrology for the Soul April 29, 2020

    Book by Liz Greene: Saturn: A New Look at an Old Devil

    Music by: Auld Lang Syne

    Lisa Fazio and The Root Circle: therootcircle.com

  • Links:

    Music by Auld Lang Syne

    Syracuse Herbal Study Group

    NAIMH North American Institute of Medical Herbalism: Covid-19 Resource page

    Stephen Buhner’s Covid-19 Protocol

    Rosalee de la Forêt Video about the Elderberry Controversy

    Janet Kent and Dave Meesters: Terra Sylva School of Botanical Medicine

    Matthew Wood: Matthew Wood Institute of Herbalism

    Lauren’s recent blog post: Considerations for Covid-19

    Lisa’s blog post: Getting to Know White Pine

    Lauren’s blog post on Coltsfoot

    Lauren’s recent writing on Viruses and The Respiratory System

    Lisa’s google doc : Corona Season Herbs

  • Christine is a licensed cosmetologist, holistic beauty practitioner, and eco-human rights activist. She is the former owner and operator of Faces of Astarte,a once popular eco-salon/spa in Little Falls, NY, that attracted clients from across the United States from 2006 to closing a year ago in March 2019.

    Christine was catapulted into activism when her rural agricultural community was sited for a regional landfill and incinerator in 1989; she been an environmental, social justice and human rights activist since, her work recognized by the New York State Labor and Environment Network, Parents Magazine, Parenting Magazine, Herkimer County Legislature, and The White House; she was an official delegate to the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg South Africa in 2002.

    Christine pursued a conventional cosmetology license with the intent of introducing natural, safe, ecologically responsible approaches to self care. Her new mail order business Goddess Beauty LLC offers pure organic herbs used to color hair with new products coming soon ChristineShahin.com

    She is known throughout her community as the “mudder” and has introduced the use of Henna for hair coloring and as a medicine of beauty by “mudding” (henna-ing) women across the United States.

    Topics we discuss this episode:

    *The pros and cons of “sustainability”

    *Natural hair coloring with Henna

    *The herbal actions of Henna

    *Alopecia-hair loss types and herbal treatments

    *The traditional use of Henna by people of the SWANA region

    *The word SWANA-South West Africa North Africa

    *How to define a deeper understanding of “beauty”

    *The art of adornment as a sacred practice

    *Eco-justice and how Christine helped fight a landfill

    Links:

    *Christine’s Book: Natural Hair Coloring

    *Christine’s Equinox Retreat: A Retreat & Women Empowerment Spring Equinox Weekend

    *Musician Diane Patterson

    *The Tswaing Crater, South Africa: Twsaing Crater

    *Kids Against Pollution - KAP

    *The Babushkas of Chernobyl

    *Article by Christine in Arab American National Media Organization: Arab Beauty Naturally: Finding the Goddess in Lebanon

    *National Grid Power Authority Green Energy page: Green UP

    *Music by Auld Lang Syne: Seeds

    ***If the app your listening on doesn’t support links you can view them at: therootcircle.com or apple podcasts

    ****If you’d like to donate to the podcast and sustain our ongoing work here please go to: therootcircle.com

  • Links:

    Music by Auld Lang Syne

    Utica Herbal Study Group

    Article by Lisa: Radicle and Rhizomati: Notes From a Folk Herbalist

    We started this podcast on a “shoestring” with nothing but iPhone earbuds, our love of and devotion to the plants, and the dedication of our time but are hoping to eventually upgrade. If you can and would like to donate to support the continuance of this work it we would be sincerely grateful.

    To Donate: therootcircle.com