In Solidarity with Original Nations and Peoples

In Solidarity with Original Nations and Peoples

[nivo effect=”fade” slices=”5″ animSpeed=”500″ pauseTime=”8000″ directionNav=”button_hover” controlNav=”true” width=”650″]

[image caption=’Group in front of the Lummi Nation Casino with local filmmaker and guide, Freddy Lane, front and center.’]https://uucsj.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/P1010368.jpg[/image]

[image caption=’Group attends lecture by Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Timothy Egan on the life of Edward Curtis, a photographer who spent 30 years working with First Nations to document their stories & images.’]https://uucsj.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/2015-04-27-17.44.30.jpg[/image]

[image caption=’Ralph Solomon shows the group a geoduck during a tour of the Lummi Shellfish Hatchery.’]https://uucsj.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/2015-04-29-10.42.09.jpg[/image]

[image caption=’Freddy Lane & Smitty Hillaire showing the Lummi traditional method of smoking salmon over a fire.’]https://uucsj.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/2015-04-30-18.02.55.jpg[/image]

[image caption=’Group says goodbye during a final evening worship in the yurt at Cedar Tree House.’]https://uucsj.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/2015-05-01-21.23.34.jpg[/image]

[/nivo]

 

From April 25 – May 2, 2015, the UU College of Social Justice ran our first program focused on “Solidarity with Original Nations and Peoples” based in Bellingham, WA. Our group of 16 people from across the country learned about the history and current impacts of U.S. settler colonialism on this land’s original peoples, and the specific struggle of the Lummi Nation in Northwest Washington to protect Cherry Point, a sacred site threatened by a proposed coal terminal. If the terminal is approved, ships carrying over 48 million metric tons of coal to Asia annually would traverse the fragile Salish Sea and interfere with Lummi treaty fishing rights.

Our official partner for this program was the Lummi Nation Service Organization (LNSO). This program was possible based on the long-standing relationship of solidarity between the Bellingham Unitarian Fellowship and the Lummi Nation. The work of this congregation serves as a model to others around the country seeking to pursue right relationship with First Nations whose land they inhabit.

Participants have expressed that they are seeing with new eyes as they return home, and they have many plans to stand with First Nations – not only in climate justice struggles, but whenever and wherever they are called to act.

Statements from participants of the “Solidarity with Original Nations and Peoples” Delegation:

I can’t find the words to adequately express the depth of my gratitude for having had the privilege to participate in six days of presentations by and about Lummi Nation. It was beyond gracious to host our large group at Lummi Gateway Center as well as the tribal headquarters, Lummi Youth Academy, Northwest Indian College and Coast Salish Institute.

It is one thing to read books and websites. It is another thing altogether to spend time with so many people in the places that hold deep historical and contemporary meaning, and understand directly from those affected how the structures of settler colonialism have pushed and ripped at Lummi wholeness. What I take away from this week is a profound respect for the resilience, resourcefulness, and administrative brilliance of generations of Lummi who continue to fight not just to survive but to thrive, to build for the future and honor the past in both traditional and contemporary ways. 

-Jesse Ford, Philomath, OR

 

I was privileged to be a part of the UUCSJ’s  “Building Lummi Solidarity” week.  This was a life-altering opportunity for me.  I was deeply impressed by the many passionate, compassionate, creative, connected and effective people we met with.  I was similarly impressed by the challenges they have overcome and yet still face.  Though I thought I was conscious of how colonization had brutalized indigenous peoples, my consciousness was widened to a much greater depth than I could have imagined.  Suffice to say its personal now. 

-Gary Piazzon, Coupeville, WA

 

I’ve always felt that something was missing in my work; a connection to local, indigenous tribes.  I believe that all of the current injustice issues in the US are rooted in the original offenses to First Nations, which was driven by the Doctrine of Discovery.  However, I have felt inadequate and ashamed to reach out to local tribes because I am a white woman of settler descent. After my experience visiting Lummi Nation and witnessing the work of their community, I feel encouraged to reach out to a local First Nation in Massachusetts that has been actively involved in fighting for justice, the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe.  The memories and lessons learned on this trip will fuel my work for many years to come.

-Laura Wagner, Marlborough, MA

 

As a retired teacher, I am committed to sharing facts about Native history – “Doctrine of Discovery”, the truth about boarding schools, broken treaties, fishing rights, and burial rights…and most importantly, the rights of Sovereignty!   I do not take this commitment lightly!

-Cherri Mann, Port Townsend, WA

I have tried to find the right words to describe all that I have gained from my week with the Lummi Nation.  My cup of new knowledge is absolutely running over. I will use the information our Lummi partners shared as my inspiration for action: to speak out against the Cherry Point port expansion and the coal trains through their lands, for curriculum reform in our Idaho schools so that the true Native American story is told, and for recognition of all treaty rights when they are threatened.  As my tribute to our Lummi partners, I will pledge to do my best to live up to the standards they have set for me.

-Pat Rathman, Moscow, ID

UUCSJ at General Assembly

General Assembly (GA) is a special opportunity for Unitarian Universalists to worship, witness, learn, connect, and join together in advancing human rights. The UU College of Social Justice has planned some exciting workshops and events this year in Portland, OR. Also, you can stop by the UUA Expressway to say hello. We would love a chance to meet with you and help you find your place in the exciting work we do.

Here are the exhibit hall hours:

  • Wednesday, June 24, 12:30–7:30 p.m.
  • Thursday, June 25, 10:00 a.m.–7:00 p.m.
  • Friday, June 26, 10:00 a.m.–7:00 p.m.
  • Saturday, June 27, 10:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m.
  • Sunday, June 28, 10:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m.

SCHEDULE

WEDNESDAY

Activate! A Pre-GA Event
Wednesday, June 24, 9:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.
DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Portland

UUCSJ looks forward to offering the second annual Activate GA on Wednesday, June 24, 2015, in Portland, Oregon. Our day will begin by exploring systems of oppression and social change through a variety of interactive activities. We will then put our justice values into action by discussing climate justice and our role in it as people of faith. The program will conclude by developing action plans to articulate and engage justice work during General Assembly and back at home. It’s not too late to sign up! Find out more here.

THURSDAY, June 25

Talk the Walk: Speaking Justice in the Language of Our Faith
Thursday, June 25, 10:45 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
Oregon Convention Center, Rooms B117–119

Historical movements for justice have often been inspired and sustained by religious faith and practice. Ours is an activist faith, yet when we take action in the public sphere our religion is often invisible. How might we bring our own justice commitments into deeper conversation with our spiritual lives, and learn to speak our convictions in the language of our faith?

  • Lindi Ramsden, Starr King School for the Ministry Acting Dean of Students and Community Life
  • Rev. Kathleen McTigue, UUCSJ Director

Living in the Intersections: Service Learning Through a Justice Frame
Thursday, June 25, 3:00–4:15 p.m.
Oregon Convention Center, Rooms B113–114

Congregations undertake service-learning trips with the best of intentions. Yet such journeys can unwittingly perpetuate systems of injustice. Join the UU College of Social Justice to find out how service learning can be a pilgrimage of witness and solidarity, based on deep education & insight that lead us to new ways to build alliances for justice when we return home.

  • Mark Hicks, Fahs Collaborative Laboratory for Leaders in Faith and Learning Director
  • Rev. Kathleen McTigue, UUCSJ Director

How the Work of Change Can Change You
UUCSJ and UUA
Thursday, June 25, 4:45–6:00 p.m.
Oregon Convention Center, Rooms A105–106

Join Youth Caucus and the UU College of Social Justice in an exciting workshop where we’ll learn from participants in Activate (formerly NYJT) social justice trainings for youth. We’ll hear about what interests them about justice work, what they learned in programs in New Orleans and Boston, and how they are acting for social justice work back home. Come get inspired!

  • Laura Lubin, UUCSJ Associate for Youth and Young Adult Programs
  • Bart Frost, UUA Director of Youth and Young Adult Ministries

FRIDAY, June 26

General Assembly General Session III
Friday, June 26, 8:45 a.m.–12:00 p.m.

UUSC President Bill Schulz will present on UUSC and its 75th anniversary during this session. Immediately following, Rev. Kathleen McTigue will give a brief overview and update on the UU College of Social Justice. This will take place between 9:00 a.m. and 10:00 a.m.

If I Had a Hammer: Best Practices in Youth Service Learning
Friday, June 26, 1:15–2:30 p.m.
Oregon Convention Center, Rooms B113–114

Service trips are a tradition for many youth groups: it’s powerful to travel, learn, & volunteer together. But what makes a trip succeed? What shifts it from a fleeting experience into lasting insight? Join UUCSJ to explore our shared capacity for transformative youth trips. Come hear from participants, leaders & hosts — and share your wisdom, too.

  • Laura Lubin, UUCSJ Associate for Youth and Young Adult Programs
  • Sam Wilson
  • Deanna VanDiver

Solidarity Across the Food Chain
Friday, June 26, 4:45–6:00 p.m.
Oregon Convention Center, Rooms F151–152

Join the Food Chain Workers Alliance and the UU College of Social Justice for this interactive workshop, as we launch a new training program to unite UUs and food chain workers (in farms, restaurants, warehouses, and markets). Help build alliances across class, culture, and four key sectors to “HEAL” our broken food system: Health, Environment, Access, and Labor.

  • Hannah Hafter, UUCSJ Senior Associate for Service-Learning Programs
  • Rev. Kathleen McTigue, UUCSJ Director
  • Jose Oliva, Food Chain Workers Alliance Director

SUNDAY

UUCSJ Booth Closes at 2:30 p.m.
Last chance to visit us at the booth.

To find out more about General Assembly, including information on registration, the schedule, housing, and more, visit the UUA’s website here.

Click here to find out more about UUSC’s workshops and events.