Panel of local Indigenous people discuss Native American Food Sovereignty

Virtual video conference screenshot of Indigenous food sovereignty panel (starting from the top left, going clockwise): Sharon M. Day, Alanna Norris'19, Jessika Greendeer, Alexandera Houchin, and panel facilitator Carmelita Sharpback MAHS'20.

Over 70 people joined a virtual panel discussion on November 24 with 亚色影库 and the communities to discuss Native American food sovereignty. The panel consisted of four local Native American community members and advocates, Sharon M. Day, Alanna Norris, Alexandera Houchin, and Jessika Greendeer. The discussion was facilitated by St. Kate鈥檚 Master of Arts in Holistic Health Studies student Carmelita Sharpback MAHS鈥20. Sharpback is an enrolled member of the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska and she is also an academic community strategist with the Abigail Quigley McCarthy Center for Women.

Sharpback welcomed everyone to the virtual event, then panelist Sharon M. Day, executive director of and enrolled member of the Bois Forte Band of Ojibwe, said an Ojibwe prayer to offer traditional thanks to center the event and the participants on the discussion about Indigenous food sovereignty. St. Kate鈥檚 Director of Equity and Inclusion Sandra Mitchell, CSJ Consociate Karen Zeleznak, and St. Kate鈥檚 student sustainability coordinator Rachel Schauer 鈥21 presented the CSJ and 亚色影库 joint Land Acknowledgement of the ancestral homelands of the 顿补办葻贸迟补 People, specifically the Wahpekute and Oceti Sakowin.

The discussion was in response to a synchronous virtual screening of the film presented by multiple departments and groups from St. Kate鈥檚 and the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet and Consociates. 鈥淕ATHER鈥 is a documentary that traces the intentional destruction of Native American foodways and the renaissance to reclaim indigenous agriculture and food systems.

Sharpback and the panelists discussed their reactions to the movie 鈥淕ATHER.鈥

 鈥溾楪ATHER鈥 is a beautiful platform to discuss food sovereignty while illustrating what it takes to reclaim that right behind the scenes,鈥 said panelist Jessika Greendeer, Seed Keeper and Farm Manager for and enrolled member of Ho-Chunk Nation (Baraboo, Wisconsin).

 鈥淔ood sovereignty is about caregiving, not caretaking. That is how I feel when I put my time and energy into growing plants,鈥 said Panelist Alexandera Houchin, who is an enrolled member of the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe and lives in her tribal community, Nahgahchiwanong (Cloquet, Minnesota) where she volunteers her time with the Ojibwe school master gardener. Sharon M. Day reflected, 鈥淪overeignty gives me agency to build reciprocal relationships between the earth, plants, and people鈥 We are all part of a community. Everyone, and everything, has a job and a purpose鈥 It is not about the enrichment of one person, but a resurgence based on our values and a society where everyone has enough.鈥

Panelist Alanna Norris鈥19, nutrition program coordinator for Dream of Wild Health and enrolled member of the Red Lake Nation of Ojibwe graduated from St. Kate鈥檚 with a bachelor degree in nutrition science. When asked about the quality and nutrition of the food grown in traditional Indigenous methods, Norris said, 鈥淩esearch of soil quality shows that it affects the quality of the food. By enriching the soil, it enriches our food. If you know where your soil is coming from, you are going to have a great outcome for your produce.鈥 Greendeer, who supports regenerative soil farming at Dream of Wild Health, said, 鈥淓xcess carbon in our atmosphere is because we have a broken system. By practicing Indigenous farming and incorporating Indigenous knowledge, we pull that carbon back into the soil and are being a good relative to the earth鈥 Our plant relatives are trying to take care of us.鈥

The panel discussion took place just days before Thanksgiving. When the panel was asked about Native American views of the holiday, they shared their own family traditions, including mourning, fasting, gathering with family, and story-telling. Day said, 鈥淲e have thanksgiving every day,鈥 asking the attendees to be grateful for what the earth has provided, not just on special days, but all days.

During the closing remarks, Jessika Greendeer offered a call to action. 鈥淟earn about the story of your land 鈥 the land you live on. Find out about your ancestral 鈥檚eeds,鈥 your ancestral foods鈥 We live in relation to all things.鈥

November is Native American Heritage Month, an important time to reflect and consider the history of Indigenous people. At St. Kate鈥檚, we value reflection and the importance of listening and being in community with 鈥淥ur Dear Neighbor.鈥 This panel discussion elevated crucial voices in the discussion of Indigenous food sovereignty. With this knowledge, St. Kate鈥檚 community members can learn and discern wisely, so we can live and lead justly.

This event was sponsored by members of the following groups and communities:

Abigail Quigley McCarthy Center for Women

Outdoor Active Katies for Sustainability (OAKS)

亚色影库 Holistic Health Studies Program

亚色影库/CSJ Food Insecurity Project

亚色影库鈥檚 Multicultural and International Programs & Services (MIPS)

亚色影库 Office of Equity and Inclusion

 

View the 鈥淕ATHER鈥 library resource guide here: