Тёмный
REYNALDO A MORALES Educational Indigenous Media
REYNALDO A MORALES Educational Indigenous Media
REYNALDO A MORALES Educational Indigenous Media
Подписаться
Strategic Educational Communication - Educational Media Production and Research for Indigenous, Native and Islanders Peoples - USA - PERU
CAIRO, EGYPT STREETS
2:02
Год назад
The Ultimate Vajrayana Map
8:36
Год назад
Kathmandu at Night
2:59
Год назад
Trailer Mozambique
2:28
2 года назад
EMPEÑOS - Dirigida por Nuria Alkorta
36:25
3 года назад
Pangong Tso Lake Himalayas
3:00
4 года назад
Participatory Educational Media
3:25
6 лет назад
Nama'o The Ancient Story Teller
13:52
6 лет назад
Native Energy Odyssey SLC 2016
5:36
8 лет назад
Earth Partnership Rain Garden
2:40
8 лет назад
SDI School Impact
11:29
9 лет назад
Комментарии
@frankytrevor7
@frankytrevor7 27 дней назад
I'm a Navajo Indian that works the land without using free child labor
@indigenousedumedia
@indigenousedumedia 22 дня назад
This project is far from using child labor. These are educational interventions for community building processes inside and outside Native reservations around sustainable agriculture. In many ways educating local and native youth ensures that everybody understands environmental threats like mining for instance.
@indigenousedumedia
@indigenousedumedia 22 дня назад
My respects to Navajo Nation
@Dave-xp4vm
@Dave-xp4vm Месяц назад
I am related to Polly cooper if you know Oneida you will know of her
@CalledApart
@CalledApart 3 месяца назад
Shalom to you, my Hebrew Lost Tribe brothers and sisters. "The Valley of dry bones are awakening" and if I'm the first to say this to you, stay listening, other voices will surely come.
@chaparra71
@chaparra71 4 месяца назад
LOVE this video! ❤️
@LakhwinderSingh-fl1km
@LakhwinderSingh-fl1km 6 месяцев назад
❤❤🌾🌾🌾🚜🚜🚜💪👍👍🙏🙏💙💙
@Zoilanolia
@Zoilanolia 9 месяцев назад
Lindo!
@bullyarena3923
@bullyarena3923 9 месяцев назад
Good job my friends, your on the right track! Substitute the cattle and chickens for bison and turkeys, throw in some paint type horses and your off to the races. Traditional bean and vegetable varieties are still around as well as tobacco and pawpaws.
@williamnusbaum7654
@williamnusbaum7654 11 месяцев назад
So cool how the concept of nixtamal spread so far and changed name and form. Making that corn more nutritious
@samanthamonaghan7579
@samanthamonaghan7579 11 месяцев назад
Are they still around? This farm and community.
@indigenousedumedia
@indigenousedumedia 11 месяцев назад
The community of course. This is part of the great Oneida Nation. This reservation is located next to Green Bay city in Wisconsin. They have a very nice Hotel and Casino to stay. The tribe has a cultural preservation office and a museum, which includes the original cabins given by the govern when they were relocated from NY. You can ask for a guided tour. Oneidas are kind and gentle communities composed by traditional families that never forgot their past.
@indigenousedumedia
@indigenousedumedia 11 месяцев назад
oneida-nsn.gov/
@mns8732
@mns8732 5 месяцев назад
​@@indigenousedumediathey need to be relocated back to New York, at least own original lands. Casinos eat away at a person's soul.
@indigenousedumedia
@indigenousedumedia 5 месяцев назад
@@mns8732 Casinos were a "solution" from the federal government offered to Native Nations to replace their economic responsibility to compensate the Tribes in perpetuity for vast live and material losses and transferred to citizens. Tribes use the income for housing an diverse internal operations. i agree w your characterization of casinos. But then Tribes will need a level of subsidy or compensation and much more land to be economic independent. Nonetheless ALL Tribes in Indian Country are already involved in many economic development projects to replace casinos> Anyway the Supreme Court rejected the relocate back to their ancestral homeland in NY.
@glynnphillips9703
@glynnphillips9703 Год назад
Oh how I wish for some of your corn soup 😊
@glynnphillips9703
@glynnphillips9703 Год назад
I love you all very much
@glynnphillips9703
@glynnphillips9703 Год назад
It is so beautiful
@hands2hearts-seeds2feedamu83
Government wants to control the people, & the way to control the people is by conroling the peoples foods... @everyone
@hands2hearts-seeds2feedamu83
@everyone I would love to be a part of this, this is a dream of mine to live as a community, & grow our foods from the old seeds, & in the old ways. Is there anyone or a place where i can learn to grow harvest and save old seeds and the old ways... My soul misses the family community ways. Thank you for any help.
@indigenousedumedia
@indigenousedumedia Год назад
@@hands2hearts-seeds2feedamu83. @crystaldragon471 @glynnphillips9703 Thank you very much for your comments. As you know the extractive, non sharing commercial control of plant genetic resources for food and medicine has changed humanity with multiple negative implications. Since the creation of the Intellectual Property System around 1607 by the Virginia Commonwealth (encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/colonial-virginia/) with the intention of in-masse control and commodification of food and medicine and all of wrongly called 'RAW" material associated to domesticated plant communities for agriculture, food and medicine (Wild Crop Relatives). Is with them that these plants were food and were nutritious. Colonial interests were on enforcing and investing their military and mercenary force on controlling all plants first with the highest yield potential that can be sold and profited somewhere else. The barley, corn, potato and rice food-based regime of our times, taking human lives in parallel with a hyper development of a global pharmaceutical industry that uses the same materials. These artificial "markets" supported by enormous private research funding and industry investment, have been created regardless of human and animal health of nutrition, and regardless of environmental impacts on non-human populations due to pesticides and fertilizers. These external agents and the violence of their neocolonial intervention have created multiple impacts for ecosystems, rivers, streams, wildlife and pollinators. Indigenous Peoples were legally stolen of plants genetic resources in which they invested thousands and hundreds of years in research. In Peru, the city of Caral, among the oldest in the world, offered archeological evidence of the domestication of less than 20 of the current food staples around the world. No Indigenous Peoples in that region ever benefited from it. The sharing benefits of the use of those plant genetic resources that most world citizens would see as just Seeds, is indeed the most contentious issue of our time. It is deciding all what happens to our Earth, environmentally, in climate patterns, in the chemical pressures over ecosystems, the pressures on oceans for food and agrochemical industries. These industries of extraction, research, accession, digitization, had even converted into algorithms and digital sequence information (DSI) about these plants that were created more than 5,000 years ago, and are today the major food staples of our world. With the peoples who domesticated and developed these plant genetic resources in mega diverse countries and regions, living today in poverty and displaced. These civilizations, that by all means were portrayed as subhumans, uncivilized, outstripped of all no property and therefore no human rights. So, the destruction of infrastructure, the desperate attempts to make legal the territorial appropriation from entire civilizations legal to their colonial eyes in the land competition with other colonial powers. For their own legal reasons and records as powers, colonial monarchies had to appear legit and clear for the official history and curriculums in the making. This is the context of what is behind the curtains seeds issues in Indigenous Peoples collective rights take place. If you refer the opportunities to collect original, organic seeds, I would suggest to establish a legal/technical petition of private in-vitro collections. These private collectors are obligated to share. Returning our world to these seeds and re-certify organic land is a priority. In my next experience, Watch this documentary I produced with this collective: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-EScfVBAxAow.html, the Haudenosaunee Peoples and other members of US Tribes gathered around a land, and approached it as a collective. Then, they managed the legal and technical issues and worked together and harvested together. They found out that they were able to share, with no money involved. today in 2023, in simple trade of goods. Yes, we can. I am convinced we are fortunate Indigenous Peoples are still here.
@glynnphillips9703
@glynnphillips9703 Год назад
Can I get any seeds? Please let me know if I can 🙏all good blessings to you 🙏
@hands2hearts-seeds2feedamu83
It WOULD be such a blessing to have old world seeds & ways...
@glynnphillips9703
@glynnphillips9703 Год назад
All good blessings to you 🙏 ✨️
@anonsforever_
@anonsforever_ Год назад
I really loved this documentary. I love how these people are growing their own food. I love these people especially more than other Natives because our families live so close and look so similar (Italians in CNY).
@indigenousedumedia
@indigenousedumedia Год назад
Thank you very much!!!
@CameronGuarino
@CameronGuarino Год назад
i believe that what the settlers did to the natives of this continent should be in the forefront of the american people’s minds. what they had to endure is absolutely tragic and horrifying. we took so much from them and they still are feeling the effects today.
@indigenousedumedia
@indigenousedumedia Год назад
Thank you very much!!!
@rogercarroll1663
@rogercarroll1663 Год назад
Great, great work. Seeing the people on the land, harvesting and working with the fruit of the land was the best.
@debbieepstein6133
@debbieepstein6133 Год назад
Corn needs to be processed in order to provide nutrients. "The word “nixtamal” comes from a combination of the Nahuatl words for “lime ashes” and “corn dough” which describes the original method of creating the alkaline solution using hardwood ashes to raise the pH of the water."
@samanthamonaghan7579
@samanthamonaghan7579 11 месяцев назад
Ya mistakes were made, woops.
@hands2hearts-seeds2feedamu83
Education of the youth is the key... They children are our future...
@indigenousedumedia
@indigenousedumedia Год назад
Thank you very much!!!
@hands2hearts-seeds2feedamu83
New sub HERE. This way of life is SO beautiful, and loving of earth, humans, animals & plants
@hands2hearts-seeds2feedamu83
QUESTION How would SOMEONE go about starting a community "family" similar to this... This is a DREAM of mine. 100 acre woods _& ALL my beautiful PEOPLE.
@hands2hearts-seeds2feedamu83
According to my great grandmother, that is where they moved from when she was a child, and that we are related to people's there. I sure wish I knew more, she has moved on from this earth.
@greatemeraldgoat5029
@greatemeraldgoat5029 Год назад
Thank you for sharing
@glynnphillips9703
@glynnphillips9703 Год назад
I love you ✨️
@camillebernier9939
@camillebernier9939 Год назад
Some wonderful friends/ mentors of mine here in this video!
@insightstar
@insightstar Год назад
Beautiful... "The Seed Remembers" Albert Toops Carl Barnes Turpin, Oklahoma Barriers of protection for the genetics of the seed. Bagging the tassels on your corn stalks with not deter cross pollination because it is the silk on the ears that capture the pollen.
@debrapaulino918
@debrapaulino918 Год назад
Colonial food is poison to all of us. "My heart has been on the ground" since 1973 when I was made aware of it by a good human being I'm grateful to.
@debrapaulino918
@debrapaulino918 Год назад
The green corn! Beautiful like jade.
@monicacruz4407
@monicacruz4407 Год назад
Heart warming video. I loved the lady in the red sweater talking about how “community stuff” was weeded out. Nowadays any psychologist will tell you, we are wired for connection and it is the loss of community that is one of the main causes of poor mental health. Amazing project, so important to revive Native American culture in this way, it feels authentic, not just some paper thin, box ticking exercise. I’d like a community canning facility, such a great idea. Also I love that community togetherness and collaboration is valued above money, that is real value, those kids are very lucky. I can’t say enough good things about this film, thank you for making it. Subscribed 🙏👌🌱
@indigenousedumedia
@indigenousedumedia Год назад
Thank you sincerely!
@Thehaystack7999
@Thehaystack7999 Год назад
This is what Zion looks like to me. One heart, one mind. A love for one another.
@GemstonePhilosophy
@GemstonePhilosophy Год назад
I'm highly inspired by the traditional uses of corn, and the varieties grown by native people. I found some Hopi Blue corn seeds, and have been growing it for two years now. I live in a remote area where nobody grows corn, in NW Arizona. I'm still learning, and I hope to continue learning everything I can about sustainable agriculture and preserving these crops. Thank you to the Oneida people for your work and care for our history and future.
@GemstonePhilosophy
@GemstonePhilosophy Год назад
I've been using the three sisters using permaculture rain harvesting techniques with only minor irrigation in the late spring, while other areas have been grown completely dependent on the monsoons to germinate and survive. I can concur that this blue corn is incredibly drought resistant and reliable, and I will be continuing to grow this corn and collecting seeds. I started with 48 kernels 2 years ago. I now have enough to plant multiple acres. I've never felt more compelled to act and work towards a goal as I am to preserve the Hopi Blue corn. I would love to find some other varieties of squash and beans that may have traditionally been grown alongside the Hopi Blue corn.
@debrapaulino918
@debrapaulino918 Год назад
@@GemstonePhilosophy Look into getting the book called WEEDS. Idr author's name at moment but the cover is WEEDS just like that. Copyright 1940's I think. Easy simple read. There is a wild crawling vine, Morning Glory? You've probably seen them. Those little pink petaled climbers that wrap around everything. They have deep roots and break subsoil making shallower corn roots able to go deeper and branch out with hairlike roots. As a child he knew a farmer that let the nuisance vine do its thing and had superior corn. We are only beginning to relearn old wisdom. We're doomed if we don't. I'm not going to blame my ignorant city European ancestors just coz they were White. Let's be careful not to do that. They were victims as much as we are. Look into the history of the latter 1700's early 1800's when the feudal system ended in 1830. Medieval cottage industries and farming gave way to the Industrial Age. The Irish starved to death in the great Potato Famine. I hate with vehemence what happened to our Natives as much as I hate what happened in Europe to mine. Even in the new world they worked long hours including children in factories. Families crammed into two room apts. with dirty garbage strewn cities. If you were lucky to own a horse because you had a cart for market, you brought the horse in! No joke. Memoirs of an Italian immigrant woman of her Chicago childhood1870's. If we are going to make it as one people, we have to stop blaming. We are only more recently able to read and write. Europeans who had long been separated from natural wisdom and so many illiterate, thought nothing of dynamiting the Chicago River or is it the North River...anyway it was done by the Army Corps of Engineers in the 1920's to open a passage into Lake Michigan for sewage!!! Now there's carp in it. 🛌
@debrapaulino918
@debrapaulino918 Год назад
@@GemstonePhilosophy I really got off in a tangent but it's all so complicated.
@GemstonePhilosophy
@GemstonePhilosophy Год назад
@@debrapaulino918 I appreciate the knowledge you shared with me, so thank you. Morning glories grow quite abundantly in my area, and I have been collecting small amounts of seed, but will be sure to try this. I notice that morning glories will grow, sometimes dominantly over any other flora, in super alkaline and even salty soil. I could imagine the morning glory could be rather effective at breaking hard clay layers and would look great trellised up the corn with some legumes, or as an additional groundcover/weed suppressant. I believe datura was sometimes grown and consumed with morning glory seed as a sacred ceremony, but I do frequently see them growing together, and often in rather disturbed or barren sandy soil. Regardless, both plants prove to be exceptional nursery plants, whereas they grow vigorously in barren soil and create soil structure and microbiology. Admittedly, they do seem to like a fair amount of water to do well (growing dominantly in swales and other persistently wet soils), but can tolerate extreme elements nonetheless. I will also see if I can find this book. Probably won't be pulling out my bank card to buy it, but mind you, I have dozens of high quality gardening books, and have studied native flora across the western US. I'm not particularly "educated", but I'm experienced and knowledgeable. I always love to obtain good information, especially regarding traditional knowledge that should be preserved. You can guarantee this next grow season, I will be incorporating morning glory into my garden and saving more seeds. I've gone on a tangent as well now, so no need to feel embarrassed.
@GemstonePhilosophy
@GemstonePhilosophy Год назад
This is the most informative video on sustainable agriculture using traditional methods I've found. More people need to understand the importance of this knowledge, and have to the will to do something with it. I've been practicing the The Three Sisters in Arizona for two seasons now, growing Hopi Blue Corn, Scarlet Runners, and a variety of heirloom squash and pumpkins. I'm curious if anyone knows of a place to trade traditional heirlooms? I'm looking for Hopi Pale Grey squash, and any traditional variety of legume. Preserving the genetic lineage of these crops is perhaps the most vital thing we can do, in light of agricultural industrialization and genetic modification.
@debrapaulino918
@debrapaulino918 Год назад
Yes 💯%
@m.k.s.7417
@m.k.s.7417 Год назад
Hi, are there (m)any films/movies; made by: "Native_AmeriCANs!!"??
@deancalloway5118
@deancalloway5118 Год назад
What if Indians that were on this land before the English came. Did not teach the settlers how to hunt for food and to grow crops. It would be a better America today. My mother was Cherokee.
@ReapingTheHarvest
@ReapingTheHarvest Год назад
They didn't really have a choice. The conquerers were more advanced and would have learned the land either way.
@huy2496
@huy2496 Год назад
For indian nations to have survived would probably have rquired a smallpox vaccine. There was just no stopping the english with the numbers that were left.
@bryanwilliams6032
@bryanwilliams6032 Год назад
The world needs to copy what these people are doing but Bill Gates and the other globalist won't allow it they want to poison us with the herbicides and pesticides and GMO's Bill Gates needs to be in prison.
@ravenpineshomestead
@ravenpineshomestead Год назад
My great great grandfather fled from the trail of tears, ending the line of that heritage. And my family never spoke of it and so forgot many things over the generations. I found my own way of reconnecting with the earth through growing my own food, and it is truly spiritual.
@hands2hearts-seeds2feedamu83
One my GGgrandpa was left as a baby by his family while they was on the trail of tears & Ggrandma said her parents was of the long house people's.
@swifteagleworks
@swifteagleworks Год назад
They have a rich culture, full of skills. They don’t need to stay in schools hours and hours. Just learn reading and math to run their business. No need to waste time in useless long day school education. The tribes before pass down their culture and knowledge from their parents, grandparents, and community. They did not need modern education .
@osonhouston
@osonhouston Год назад
It was not about education it was about indoctrination and subjugation. Captain Richard Henry Pratt's speech in which he used the now well-known phrase to describe his philosophy of assimilation: "Kill the Indian in him, and save the man."
@Jessica-eb2rt
@Jessica-eb2rt Год назад
My family name is morales I’m just finding out we are from Cherokee Tribe how would I find out more
@ravenpineshomestead
@ravenpineshomestead Год назад
Start building a family tree, use online sources to go as far back as possible and contact city records to see where the nearest settlement was and where they moved to
@indigenousedumedia
@indigenousedumedia Год назад
Hi Jessica, all US Tribes have a culture presevation offices that deal wuth genealogies. I would suggest to use a DNA test to start and then contact the Cherokee Tribe that is related to your family and ask for help with their office.
@aliciaretes6421
@aliciaretes6421 2 года назад
Wonderful uplifting story!
@aliciaretes6421
@aliciaretes6421 2 года назад
Wonderfully inspirational! Thank you!!
@AlleyCat-1
@AlleyCat-1 2 года назад
This is so awesome & definitely needs to happen & expand. Unfortunately, a lot of the food has been ruined by those who think they know mother than Mother Earth or the Creator & is poisoning all. Many can learn from your community. Excellent to see this.
@pony3284
@pony3284 2 года назад
I just spoke with Jonathan Buffalo on the phone yesterday! I'm working on a project for a college and was referred to him for more information
@PlayerTenji95
@PlayerTenji95 2 года назад
Thank you for the trailer. Where can I go to watch the full thing?
@woodspirit98
@woodspirit98 2 года назад
I bet most people don't know that all sweet corn in use today around the world originated from the fields of Geneseo NY. The land of the Seneca's.
@woodspirit98
@woodspirit98 2 года назад
I miss corn soup and fry bread which is crazy since I live in the heart of iroquois country in western ny. Can't find it anywhere.
@indigenousedumedia
@indigenousedumedia 2 года назад
please find oneida market online now
@tubody123
@tubody123 3 года назад
Gracias, Reynaldo.
@soinda87
@soinda87 3 года назад
Like this.
@indigenousedumedia
@indigenousedumedia 3 года назад
Thank you!