finding and pambana

[re]claiming revolutionary musings

Posts tagged feminism

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Queering Solidarity in Palestine… Who Profits from the Occupation.

listening to Uprising with Sonali Kolhatkar on KPFK 90.7- i didn’t hear the beginning of it so I will find it later and post, but i think it is an interview with a white jewish womyn from “Who Profits From the Occupation” and the overall focus of the discussion is on a movement recognized as “Queering Solidarity in Palestine” and some topics discussed include queer activism in Palestine, coalition and acknowledgement through action of white-jewish privilege, feminist activist traditions in Palestine, systematic oppression and land theft as encouraged/supported/mandated through usa and gloabl white supremacist capitalist patriachal economies, divestment and boycott of products made on occupied lands (“settlements”) and exploitation of Palestinian laborers (products such as soda stream, hewitt packer and others). organizations/campaigns/websites they talked about (in the section i heard): GLOBALEXCHANGE.ORG/EAP (economic activism in Palestine); STOP SODA STREAM. STOP HP (hewitt packered). and the activist speaking is from “Queering Solidarity in WHO PROFITS FROM THE OCCUPATION.”  (i apologize for the vagueness but i will find the original interview and post it!) 

Filed under palestine queer activism israeli occupation soda stream hp globalexchange.org/eap feminism anti-apartheid wscp challenging white supremacy solidarity profit capitalism systematic exploitation labor kpfk sonali kolhatkar

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“What Womyn Deserve” Sonya Renee

thank you Ayanna for sending me this. she gives me LIFEEEEE!!!!!!!!!!! thank you so much Sonya Renee for speaking Truth to power, speaking Truth to us, being a bomb ass spoken word artist, beautifier of the language of the oppressor, collective feminist, bullshit-calling out of the wscp and hypocrisy of politicians and businesses and people who are refusing to see the patriarchal control and inaccuracy of ‘pro-life’ bullshit fallacies. THAAAANK YOUUU!

Filed under Sonya Renee Black Women Poets Spoken Word Poetry abortion pro-choice feminism Black feminism WOC capitalism wscp politicians propoganda patriarchy white supremacy war war on choice transnational feminism Feminism Women's Rights Women of Color Working Class Women Women Living in Poverty Everyone Speaking Truth to power Truth hypocrisy of the system calling out lies medical apartheid qwoc

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Interview with Tashi, Black Wombyn Farmer.

Why do you enjoy working on the farm and with the nation-wide CSA community? Is it particulary meaningful to you as a Black wombyn?

My identity as a black wombyn has informed by decision to farm and become a part of the CSA community. The concept Sankofa has also had a huge impact on those decisions. Meaning either the word in the Akan language of Ghana that translates in English to “go back and take” (Sanko- go back, fa- take) or the Asante Adinkra symbol. It is often associated with the proverb, “Se wo were fi na wosankofa a yenkyi,” which translates “It is not wrong to go back for that which you have forgotten.” As a black wombyn farming how can I not implement the sankofa concept in my life; I am choosing it as a life philosophy… I am learning from our ancestors and from some of the mistakes that have been made… I learn not to control the earth but work with the earth, using natural methods that some of our ancestors used to work with the patterns of the earth and combining them with new technologies that are in line with an ethos of interconnectedness that respects the earth.. i believe everyone has the basic human right to healthy and nutritious food and we all need to be a part of cultivating the food we consume. I recognize that the current reality of our world’s food systems are steeped in white-supremacist, capitalist, patriarchal ideologies and structures that affect everyone but disproportionately hurt marginalized communities (i.e. women, people of color). Through CCF I seek to create and (re)imagine a transformative food justice system that serves as an example of an alternative pro-human ideology, addresses the effects of oppression, thereby dismantling structures of oppression through our own positive creativity. I enjoy working on the farm, not only because i get to work with nature but also because I feel empowered relying on myself and my fellow farm-partners to supply my diet rather than multi-national-corporate-for-profit-businesses and I believe I am in solidarity with the women who produce 70% of the food on earth but are marginalized and oppressed by neoliberalism and patriarchy.

Would you describe the work you are doing as spiritual/metaphysical? Why?
I would definitely describe the work I am doing as spiritual. I am seeking a spiritual, ancestral and African derived consciousness for my own creativity. Making peace with the earth, an integral component to ancestrally driven spiritualized consciousness, involving a deliberate and critically aware relationship with ancestral spirits that reside all around us. Respecting nature is a practice that is closely associated with the practices that sustained our ancestors. Seeing nature as an essential force for human existence, and creating positive relationships within natural landscapes is an embodiment of ancestral consciousness. (“Making peace with the earth, we make the world a place where we can be one with nature. We create and sustain environments where we can come back to ourselves, where we can return home. Stand on solid ground and be a true witness.” –bell hook ( The Colors of Nature, “Earthbound: On Solid Ground”, 2002)). There is a spiritual practice that is involved at a daily and constant level when truly living aligned with the seasons of the earth. 


-Do you understand the Black community as having a distinct/special connection the physical landscape (in amerikka)? Yes, I do believe within the historical context of Africans forcibly placed in america, the Black community does have a very distinct connection with the physical landscape of this country. Aside from the indigenous people, the Black community have truly been the stewards of this land.

….Considering the tenuous relationship we, as Black people, have had with the amerikkkan land (for example: being commodified as land is in the same capitalist system, being stolen from our land, being forced to work land stolen from Brown folk, being denied access to land ownership, fearing our footprints in the soil as we escaped enslavement ), how would you characterize our relationship to land? How is it radical as in oppositional/creative/cool?

I would characterize our relationship to land as strained. In the aftermath of chattel-slavery, industrialization and in a time where the capitalist system is upheld, I am under the impression that many people of color, and especially many black folks in america want to stray as far away as possible from manual labor in fields…..(i gotta run but, i’m going to finish answering this question today. i apologize if any of these answers are unclear, i’ve been sick and running around for the farm. love you so much!)
-tashi

I appreciate you Tashi for sharing your Black wombyn ecological ancient WISDOM.

Filed under African Diaspora Afro-worldview Black Women Writers Black environmnetalism(s) Black farmers Black feminist Black land Black wombyn Black women farmers CSA Tashi africans are pretty amazing amerikkka amerikkka is stolen land ancient knowledge ecological freedoms environmental justice environmental racism feminism nature organic agriculture womanism food justice food green revolutionary spirituality Truth anti-capitalism Black people

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Renowned feminist and human rights activist Nawal El Saadawi was a political prisoner and exiled from Egypt for years. Now she has returned to Cairo, and she joins us to discuss the role of women during the last seven days of unprecedented protests. “Women and girls are beside boys in the streets,” El Saadawi says. “We are calling for justice, freedom and equality, and real democracy and a new constitution, no discrimination between men and women, no discrimination between Muslims and Christians, to change the system… and to have a real democracy.”

(Source: democracynow.org)

Filed under egypt africa feminism democracy nawal el saadawi protest revolution

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Those of us who stand outside the circle of this society’s definition of acceptable women; those of us who have been forged in the crucibles of difference – those of us who are poor, who are lesbians, who are Black, who are older – know that survival is not an academic skill. It is learning how to stand alone, unpopular and sometimes reviled, and how to make common cause with those others identified as outside the structures in order to define and seek a world in which we can all flourish. It is learning how to take our differences and make them strengths.

so important

Audre Lorde (via restoried)

(via cumbersomecummerbund-deactivate)

Filed under audre lorde feminism queer liberation freedom quotes difference transformation

425 notes

yep. don’t forget that these products are mostly made by targeted communities- women, people of color, people living in poverty, young people- for a pittance of a paycheck; and/or for these communities, despite/because of their damaging effects- i.e. obesity, diabetes, hypertension, environmental damage.

kimbrulee:

Retro Sexism and Uber Ironic Advertising

Another set of truth bombs from Feminist Frequency.

(via darkjez)

Filed under feminism sexism anti-racist advertising capitalism

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For a woman to be lesbian in a male-supremacist, capitalist, misogynist, racist, homophobic, imperialist culture, such as that of North America, is an act of resistance. (A resistance that should be championed throughout the world by all the forces struggling for liberation from the same slave master.)
Cheryl Clarke, Lesbianism: An Act of Resistance

Filed under lesbianism queer feminism anti-capitalism anti-racist