Episodios
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THIS IS THE RUTWA LANGUAGE VERION OF : EPISODE 5 - Born From Here
Rutwa is the Indigenous language of the Batwa community with whom this episode has been created.
For the English version please look for Episode 5 - Born From Here.
Land Body Ecologies Podcast is a series of six stand-alone episodes sharing stories of solastalgia from land-dependent and Indigenous communities affected by environmental change. In Episode 5, Born From Here, we travel to the edges of the Bwindi Impenetrable Forests in Kanungu district in Southwestern Uganda. Looking to the dense green hills that hold fields of sunflowers and ridges overlooking sacred trees, listeners hear stories of the ancestral land of the Batwa community.
Clouds constantly rise and fall in the hills of Bwindi Impenetrable Forest. This is known as Muntaba and is a place the Batwa would not visit as it is meant to be spiritual and sited with gold. The Batwa were once forest dwellers who used to live in Ekyuya, Semuliki, Bwindi, and Mgahinga, their ancestral lands in Uganda. In the early 1990s, government authorities evicted the Batwa from the forest and their home in the name of free land for wildlife and forest conservation. The evictions left the Batwa struggling to survive and facing extreme discrimination on the margins of their former home. These forests lie within the biodiversity-rich Albertine Rift eco-region and are sites of global biodiversity importance, famously home to half of the world’s population of endangered mountain gorillas.
In Born From Here, we hear the lasting impacts on their health, culture, and livelihoods 30 years on from evictions. The episode features Batwa herbalists, artists, and rare insights from Elders on their experiences of living in and out of the forest.
Land Body Ecologies Podcast is produced by Invisible Flock and this episode, Born from Here, is also produced with Action for Batwa Empowerment Group.
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This is the B-side for episode 5 of Land Body Ecologies Podcast, Born From Here/ Nkanzarirwa Hanu.
The B-side shares ambient sounds of the Bwindi Impenetrable Forest. We hear from Batwa herbalists, artists, and rare insights from Elders.
For a full narrative exploration of the stories from our partners in the Batwa community download Episode 5 – Born From Here/Nkanzarirwa Hanu.
Land Body Ecologies Podcast is produced by Invisible Flock and this episode, Born from Here, is also produced with Action for Batwa Empowerment Group.
Learn more: https://www.landbodyecologies.com/podcast
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¿Faltan episodios?
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Land Body Ecologies Podcast is a series of six stand-alone episodes sharing stories of solastalgia from land-dependent and Indigenous communities affected by environmental change. In Episode 5, Born From Here, we travel to the edges of the Bwindi Impenetrable Forests in Kanungu district in Southwestern Uganda. Looking to the dense green hills that hold fields of sunflowers and ridges overlooking sacred trees, listeners hear stories of the ancestral land of the Batwa community.
Clouds constantly rise and fall in the hills of Bwindi Impenetrable Forest. This is known as Muntaba and is a place the Batwa would not visit as it is meant to be spiritual and sited with gold. The Batwa were once forest dwellers who used to live in Ekyuya, Semuliki, Bwindi, and Mgahinga, their ancestral lands in Uganda. In the early 1990s, government authorities evicted the Batwa from the forest and their home in the name of free land for wildlife and forest conservation. The evictions left the Batwa struggling to survive and facing extreme discrimination on the margins of their former home. These forests lie within the biodiversity-rich Albertine Rift eco-region and are sites of global biodiversity importance, famously home to half of the world’s population of endangered mountain gorillas.
In Born From Here, we hear the lasting impacts on their health, culture, and livelihoods 30 years on from evictions. The episode features Batwa herbalists, artists, and rare insights from elders on their experiences of living in and out of the forest.
Land Body Ecologies Podcast is produced by Invisible Flock and this episode, Born from Here, is also produced with Action for Batwa Empowerment Group.
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This is the B-side for episode 4 of Land Body Ecologies Podcast, The Crying Place.
The B-side shares open fields and the sounds of rain on the village hut roofs. We hear Swae roasting the coffee he grows, the sound of rice paddies through the water, and the songs sung by a family.
For a full narrative exploration of the harvest season of the Pgak’yau (Karen) community, download Episode 4 – The Crying Place.
The Crying Place is produced by Invisible Flock with Joni Odochao, Siwakorn Odochao, Jennifer Katanyoutanant and Land Body Ecologies.
Learn more: https://www.landbodyecologies.com/podcast
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The Crying Place shares a story of the Pgak’yau (Karen) community from the hilly regions of Ban Nong Tao, held at the base of rocky mountain faces and green forests. In this episode, listeners are invited to experience the harvest season of the Pgak’yau (Karen) community and encouraged to slow down for the earth.In Pgak’yau, Haku (ฮากุ) means the crying place. That is what we call the earth. In all important moments, we cry. When we are born we cry, when we feel happy we cry, and we cry because we suffer. Pgak’yau philosophy expresses the need to slow down for the earth, and the need to take care and take accountability for our world. This episode is narrated by legendary activist and campaigner Joni Odochao and his son Siwakorn Odochao on the ongoing land rights of the Pgak’yau community and their advocacy for traditional rotational farming. Both land rights and advocacy are realised “heu”, meaning little by little, step by step.The Crying Place is produced by Invisible Flock with Joni Odochao, Siwakorn Odochao, Jennifer Katanyoutanant and Land Body Ecologies. For further details, transcript and images from the process please visit the show notes. The B-side of this podcast is also available. To listen to this, please find it on our podcast page.
Learn more: https://www.landbodyecologies.com/podcast
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This is the B-side for episode 3 of Land Body Ecologies Podcast, The End Of This World.
This B-side holds the clicks of reindeer hooves and low reindeer barks as they circle through the annual corral. It draws listeners along to the sounds of autumn, and the sounds of the landscape changing. Beginning at the lake, it moves up into the mountains, past melting glaciers, windning through black birch forests before ending with the reindeers released back into the vast landscape as they begin their winter migration.
For a full narrative exploration of the convergence of Sámi territories, past, present, and future, download Episode 3 – The End of This World.
This episode is produced by Invisible Flock with Jenni Laiti, Carl-Johan Utsi and Land Body Ecologies.
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The End of This World, journeys through Sápmi, from Jåhkåmåhkke to Vájsáluokta to tell a story of a reindeer corral carried out on top of a mountain featuring a journey of several losses: of beings, of entire landscapes, and of cultural practices.
On Sámi territories, past, present and future converge: historical and present-day colonial forces in place are highlighted as the environmental loss and trauma that inflicts their land is addressed. Expanding hydropower, aggressive forestry, temperature rises, glacier retreat, and neo-colonial initiatives continue to impact the cultural, economic, spiritual, mental and physical health of Sámi reindeer herders and their wider community. By questioning what we should take with us to the next world, The End of this World suggests the importance of collective grieving: the need to come together in order to elaborate and process experiences of collective trauma and loss.
For further details, transcript and images from the process please visit the show notes. The B-side of this podcast is also available. To listen to this, please find it on our podcast page.
This episode is produced by Invisible Flock with Jenni Laiti, Carl-Johan Utsi and Land Body Ecologies.
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THIS IS THE OGIEK LANGUAGE VERSION OF EPISODE 2 - HONEY.
For a fully translated version please find Episode 2 - Honey (English Language Version)
In Episode 2: Honey, we explore the Mau Forest in the Rift Valley, Kenya, where the population of honeybees have declined in recent decades due to deforestation, forest encroachment and logging. Bees are central to the identity of the Ogiek, an indigenous community that calls the Mau Forest home despite decades of continuous experiences of eviction in the name of conservation. The bees buzzing sounds from the high-swinging hives of Mau Forest are a voice in the community’s story. For the Ogiek, honey is food, it is medicine, it is front and centre in both celebration and healing. Since time immemorial, the Ogiek have cared for the Mau forest, living symbiotically with the bees, indigenous flowers and trees. In Honey, LBE member Daniel Kobei and bee keepers of the Ogiek community reflect on this special connection, detailing how bees transition between physical and spiritual territories of the Ogiek.
Each episode of storytelling is paired with another side of the same story – a B-side like classic recording, where the landscape speaks for itself. The B-side of Honey features the Mau Forest at dawn, with the wind blowing through leaves and hyraxes scurrying through the trees. If you listen deeply, they too are telling the Ogiek story.
Land Body Ecologies is produced by Invisible Flock and this episode is made with the Ogiek Peoples’ Development Program.
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This is the B-side for episode 2 of Land Body Ecologies Podcast, Honey.
For the full episode please find Episode 2 - Honey.
This B-side is atmospheric journey through the world of the second Episode. It takes us to the forest of Mau in Kenya, the ancestral home of the Ogiek people and explores their honey keeping tradition which is integral to their culture, health and identity.
For a full narrative exploration of the importance and symbolism of honey and the full Ogiek story please download Episode 2 - Honey.
Land Body Ecologies Podcast is created and produced by Invisible Flock. This episode has been created with the Ogiek People's Development Program.
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In Episode 2: Honey, we explore the Mau Forest in the Rift Valley, Kenya, where the population of honeybees have declined in recent decades due to deforestation, forest encroachment and logging. Bees are central to the identity of the Ogiek, an indigenous community that calls the Mau Forest home despite decades of continuous experiences of eviction in the name of conservation. The bees buzzing sounds from the high-swinging hives of Mau Forest are a voice in the community’s story. For the Ogiek, honey is food, it is medicine, it is front and centre in both celebration and healing. Since time immemorial, the Ogiek have cared for the Mau forest, living symbiotically with the bees, indigenous flowers and trees. In Honey, LBE member Daniel Kobei and bee keepers of the Ogiek community reflect on this special connection, detailing how bees transition between physical and spiritual territories of the Ogiek.
Each episode of storytelling is paired with another side of the same story – a B-side like classic recording, where the landscape speaks for itself. The B-side of Honey features the Mau Forest at dawn, with the wind blowing through leaves and hyraxes scurrying through the trees. If you listen deeply, they too are telling the Ogiek story.
Land Body Ecologies is produced by Invisible Flock and this episode is made with the Ogiek Peoples’ Development Program.
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This is the Finnish language version of the first Episode of the Land Body Ecologies podcast, for the fully dubbed English version please download episode labelled as English Language.
The Free River tells the story of Kemijoki, Finland’s longest river that cuts across the country’s northern region. As the first hydroelectric power station was constructed on the river between 1945–1949, the damming of the river Kemi represented a death blow for a salmon-fishing culture that was centuries old, and changed forever the course and balance of this powerful thriving river and ecosystem. The story is grounded in the experiences of two sisters. A generation apart from each other, they both reflect on how the damming shaped their work and lives. In the episode, they journey through the land as they strive to understand the lasting suffering caused when the hydro dam was constructed across their family home and silenced their river.
For further details, transcript and images from the process please visit the show notes.
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The Free River tells the story of Kemijoki, Finland’s longest river that cuts across the country’s northern region. As the first hydroelectric power station was constructed on the river between 1945–1949, the damming of the river Kemi represented a death blow for a salmon-fishing culture that was centuries old, and changed forever the course and balance of this powerful thriving river and ecosystem. The story is grounded in the experiences of two sisters. A generation apart from each other, they both reflect on how the damming shaped their work and lives. In the episode, they journey through the land as they strive to understand the lasting suffering caused when the hydro dam was constructed across their family home and silenced their river.
For further details, transcript and images from the process please visit the show notes.
This episode is also available without the dubbing, to listen to this please find the Finnish Language Version on our podcast page.
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This B-side episode of The Free River is a wordless sound journey through the landscapes explored in the first episode of the Land Body Ecologies Podcast..
Beginning on the River Kemi upstream of the Valajaskoski hydro dam. Moving from the surface to below the ice the sound follows the journey of the river as it transitions from seemingly still quiet body of water to the furious sounds of the turbines, only audible beneath the surface. Its journey continues through the turbines and explores the sounds of the structure of the dam. Finally the river emerges out the other side. We end with the sound of the last remaining free river in Finland that has no dam from source to sea.
To listen to the full episode please find Episode 1 - The Free River on our podcast page.