Artist Title Album Label
Christine Bruce, Brenda Barritt intro to the episode
Christine Bruce eagles are sacred creatures, representing power, spiritual connection, and wisdom
Dr. Ian Mosby how the Canada’s Food Guide got its start and the nefarious ways it was used to impose the settler agenda on northern First Nations communities
Christine Bruce, Brenda Barritt segue into the second half
Dr. Ian Mosby a discussion of both band-aid and permanent solutions to the food security crisis that our history has contributed to; ways that the average Canadian can lobby for real change
Christine Bruce intro to Charlie Moraes and Clifford Capezzuto
Charlie Moraes, Brenda Barritt, Christine Bruce a tour of the hydroponics units in Sik-e-Dakh
Clifford Capezzuto, Brenda Barritt, Christine Bruce a tour of the grounds in Sik-e-Dakh
Christine Bruce, Brenda Barritt from the Local Food Movement on social media: we should all stir that pot, because when food becomes a weapon, community should become a shield. Build gardens. Build mutual aid. Stand together, everywhere.
Dr. Ian Mosby, Toronto Metropolitan University

Dr Ian Mosby, an historian of food, Indigenous health, and settler colonialism at Toronto Metropolitan University, provides a sobering historical tour of the Canadian landscape. His analysis examines how colonial programming was systematically used as a tool to dismantle Indigenous power and erode the cultural significance of traditional food systems. Then, Sik-e-Dakh’s Growcer Business Manager, Charlie Moraes, and Farm Manager, Clifford Capezzuto, take us on a tour of the community's food security project. Their work highlights how Gitxsan people are actively claiming their agency and replanting the seeds of community self-sufficiency through sustainable local agriculture.

Resources & Links
www.ubiworks.ca/

Land acknowledgement
the eagle

“Twisting” Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

randomness