Another new friend I met at the ribbon skirt workshop today. She is from Namgis First Nation. We chatted while working on our skirt patterns. A fellow creative, Aquarian weirdo
She was blown away that I've met/spent time with her cousin & also know several of her friends in Alert Bay. Her cousin owns/runs the only bannock place on Cormorant Island - Duchess Bannock and Dessert.
I'm a part of this local #nonprofit #BIPOCWomen #CollectiveCommunity
SNIWWOC is a #Canadian non-profit organization committed to the #empowerment of #women. We operate from a holistic and integrated service model that addresses the social, cultural and political realities of immigrant and indigenous communities. Our work is informed by a commitment to reproductive justice. Reproductive justice recognizes that struggles for sexual and reproductive rights is not a singular issue. It has to be linked to wider struggles against oppression (racism, sexism, colonization, immigration rights, income, education, etc). These intersecting oppressions can limit a person's ability to have control over their body.
Our Mission:
To support BIPOC women, youth, and children to take greater control of their lives. We strive to provide culturally appropriate services in different languages, and all our programming is developed and delivered by #WomenOfColour.
Our Mandate:
To work against barriers that limit women and girl’s access to healthcare and full reproductive choice using food, art, and education.
Connection:
We know social isolation, perceived or not, has a negative impact on health outcomes - this isolation is particularly hard on #BIPOC women. We aim to lessen this isolation by creating intentional spaces where women of colour can connect and heal through food, art, and education.
Programs:
We have a variety of free programs such as a dental hygiene clinic, counselling, peer support, groceries, online yoga, and domestic violence support groups that may normally be inaccessible to women of colour due to low-income or isolation.
Education:
We provide women of colour with education and information on how to navigate Canada’s healthcare system.
Support:
We support and advocate for Indigenous women, Black women, immigrant and refugee women and women of colour, and connect them to appropriate support streams.
Events:
We host regular events across the country with the aim of raising awareness and building community. These include a monthly dinner series, regular workshops, music celebrations, an annual neighbourhood festival in Quadra Village, and much more.
#PleaseDonate to support SNIWWOC
https://www.sniwwoc.ca/donate
Come join the #volunteers team
https://www.sniwwoc.ca/volunteer
A few years ago, I was commissioned for a few portraits for a #WomensHistoryMonth flashcard project. I really enjoyed learning about these incredible women & their contributions.
I first chose Viola Desmond: she is to #Canada what Rosa Parks was to US history. Viola was a black businesswoman from the Maritimes in Canada, & her challenging of racial segregation helped to start the modern civil rights movement here.
How Social Movements Fail to Change the Workplace Culture for Women of Colour | Journey to Diversity Workplaces https://bit.ly/3QCk3Fm #J2DW #WomenOfColour #SocialMovements #WorkplaceChange #ChangeInTheWorkplace #Race #Women #cdnpoli @cdnpoli
Five #bands keeping the #spirit of #RiotGrrrl alive.
Although it did a lot of good for #women in #alternativemusic, riot grrrl was fundamentally #flawed in its #politics.
It also predominantly focused on #white, #middleclass #women, often #marginalising #womenofcolour and #outrightly #excluding #trans #women.
#Women #Transgender #LGBTQ #LGBTQIA #Entertainment #Music #Representation #Culture
https://www.loudersound.com/features/five-bands-keeping-the-spirit-of-riot-grrrl-alive
The #FringeOfColour Festival started screening yesterday. This year's theme is the lifecycle of a plant. Films are divided into strands. Today @toni and I watched the Nourish strand. It contains 6 different short films. Each one is visually stunning, deeply evocative and powerful.
First is Back on Home Soil. It's piece celebrating and remembering the artist's Ofem Ubi's grandmother who passed away. It's a deeply moving, poetic and photographic exploration of grief, family and home filmed in #Nigeria. As well as deeply moving this piece made me chuckle few times.
Next one is a very short film 'Dear Omolere'. A poetic letter to Mojereoma Ajayi-Egunjobi's grandmother filmed in British countryside. This piece explores ancestry from the point of view of a member of diaspora. The author explores her feeling towards her ancestors and a sense of responsibility to follow in their footsteps.
Third film 'Maud' is s a conversation between four Black artists currently making art in #Scotland - Adebusola Ramsay, Sekai Machache, Zoë Zo, Zoë Tumika & Zoë Guthrie and Camara Taylor. They talk about Maud Sulter and her legacy and how knowing a Black Scottish artist affects them. I never heard of Maud Sulter before watching this film and I certainly want to find out more about her.
Next is very short film 'Pagpapa(-)alam: To Wish You Well, So You Know' by Cecilia Lim. This audiovisual poem is accompanied by a zine exploring the people in the film and their stories. It's filmed in the borough of Queens, New York and shows Women and Femmes of Colour taking care of each other and their communities. #womenOfColour #femmesOfColour
In The Spring, Madeline Shann explores the presence of Black people and People of Colour in the British Countryside. Many shots were filmed in wonderful Whistman's Wood in Devon. I particulalry liked when dancer Rudzani Moleya is shrunk to look a bit like a pixie dancing in the moss. #peopleOfColor
Last but not least 'Violeta & Sofia' by Noah Berhitu and Alejandra Rogghé Pérez, explores relationship to heritage and culture in migrant communities through a communaly prepared meal. It was filmed in #Belgium.
Themes of #ancestry, #food, #language, #grief, #resilience and community are weaving in and out of each piece complementing each other. I found them very relatable. For me food also plays a central role in feeling connected to my culture.
Another strong theme is that of grandmothers. My grandmothers were definitely influential and in many ways I find it easier to celebrate their memory. As women they were both more accessible on emotional level and also more present in everyday life. My memories of them are full of scents, flavors, plants, garments. They feel close and tangible. It's inspiring to see how others express similar experience of their loved ones.
I certainly feel nourished by each film and I am looking forward to watching the other strands.
https://www.fringeofcolour.co.uk/nourish
https://invidious.weblibre.org/watch?v=zJuX3uNNju8
#IlhanOmar speaks to the #GOPieceOfShit morons
As a Jew, I don't need antisemitic MAGA/GOP/#farright #whitesupremacist #fascists claiming they care about #antisemitism!
Don't need the #farright in the ´Labour' Party claiming to give a shit about antisemitism.
Both of them (#UK & #US #rightwing politicians) exploiting Jews, my people, to attack #POCs (especially #WomenOfColour), #Muslims, #immigrants and #progressives!
Battered Women Report Released
"#Academia is not very welcoming or nurturing of #WomenOfColour (among others) and often, I am tempted to leave it for something less isolating. However, I choose to stay in it (...) for three primary reasons." Sissy Katsoni chats with Rohini Sen (Jindal Global Law School). https://voelkerrechtsblog.org/chatting-with-rohini-sen/