Category Archives: Uncategorized

Two-Eyed Seeing with Elder Albert Marshall–Recording now available here!

Join us for this conversation with Elder Albert Marshall, HonDLitt – Mi’kmaw Nation, facilitated by Christine Heming.

Saturday, July 25 at 4:00 pm (Atlantic).

Climate change activists have been calling for indigenous peoples to be part of the solution to tackling climate change, emphasizing their traditional wisdom and practical knowledge.  Elder Albert Marshall’s two-eyed seeing is a guiding principle for how to join indigenous wisdom and knowledge with Western science and technology in a collaborative effort of co-learning how to live on this earth in a balanced and sustainable way.

Albert Marshall is a highly respected and much-loved Elder of the Mi’kmaw Nation; he lives in Eskasoni First Nation in Unama’ki (Cape Breton), Nova Scotia, and is a passionate advocate of cross-cultural understandings and healing, and of our human responsibilities to care for all creatures and our Earth Mother.  

In Albert’s words:  “So this is what we truly believe. This is what reinforces our spiritualities: that no one being is greater than the next, that we are part and parcel of the whole, we are equal, and that each one of us has a responsibility to the balance of the system”. 

Please enjoy the recording!

You can also read the transcript here!

MOVIE OF THE MONTH– Thursday, April 15 at 7pm (Atlantic)

From November 2020 to April 2021, we will offer a film to watch on your own time and a scheduled Zoom meeting to have a discussion based on the topic(s) presented in the film. The program will present a broad spectrum of views on our relationship with this earth and will include both documentaries and features from around the world.   

When?
Thursdays: April 15
At: 4:00 pm (MT) / 6:00 pm (ET) / 7:00 pm (AT) 
Zoom Linkhttps://us02web.zoom.us/j/89516097467?pwd=ZHZVbUtndEJVMU53dXdMVVYrdTFyZz09
Passcode: STECfilm
Meeting ID: 895 1609 7467

How?
1- We announce the movie in this newsletter and on the Collective’s website
2- You watch it at home or with a friend before the discussion date
3- We discuss it online in a Zoom Room, with a break-out groups format
 
Our Programmer for this series is British-born film brat Angela Pressburger, who has been a Program Consultant for the Vancouver International Film Festival since 2000 and has sat on documentary juries for both the Vancouver and Seattle film festivals. In 2001, Angela founded the Sunshine Coast Film Society, which is still running, and in 2012 she started the Tatamagouche Movie Group, many of whose members will be joining us for this film series. At one point she wrote a movie review column for the Shambhala Sun and she is also the co-founder of the short-lived Shambhala Agricultural Foundation, which turns out to have been just a little before its time. 
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April Films:

After a lively conversation about Africa and the state of protecting the land there at our last discussion, we decided we wanted to further explore the topic of  “soil”. These are two of the best on the topic as well as being excellent documentaries which will keep you entertained as you learn. Watch the films if you can, and if you’re inspired, please join us for the discussion


THE BIGGEST LITTLE FARM, 2018, USA, 91 min.
Recognitions: Best Feature Documentary, Boulder, Denver, Heartland, Hamptons, Miami, Mill Valley, Newport Beach, Palm Springs, Sarasota, Sedona, Thessaloniki, and Toronto; plus numerous Critics Awards.

A testament to the immense complexity of nature, The Biggest Little Farm follows two dreamers and a dog on an odyssey to bring harmony to both their lives and the land. When the barking of their beloved dog Todd leads to an eviction notice from their tiny LA apartment, John and Molly Chester make a choice that takes them out of the city and onto 200 acres in the foothills of Ventura County, naively endeavoring to build one of the most diverse farms of its kind in complete coexistence with nature. The land they’ve chosen, however, is utterly depleted of nutrients and suffering from a brutal drought. The film chronicles eight years of daunting work and outsize idealism as they attempt to create the utopia they seek, planting 10,000 orchard trees and over 200 different crops, and bringing in animals of every kind– including an unforgettable pig named Emma and her best friend, Greasy the rooster. When the farm’s ecosystem finally begins to reawaken, so does the Chesters’ hope – but as their plan to create perfect harmony takes a series of wild turns, they realize that to survive they will have to reach a far greater understanding of the intricacies and wisdom of nature, and of life itself.


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KISS THE GROUND, 202, USA, 84 min.
Recognitions: Best Documentary, LA Doc., London International Film Festival; and many Critics Awards.

About two-thirds of the world’s soil is desertifying, and the remaining topsoil will be gone within 60 years. Pesticides rebranded for farms from toxic chemicals developed by German scientist Fritz Haber, who also developed the poisons used in the gas chambers of the Holocaust, have been turning the world’s soil into dirt for decades, leading to poverty and global warming. There is hope, however, with “regenerative agriculture,” which could balance our climate, replenish our vast water supplies, and feed the world.

Josh Tickell and Rebecca Tickell examine the eye-opening history of soil narrated by three-time Academy Award® nominee and environmental activist Woody Harrelson. Including historical context about the Dust Bowl—the largest man-made environmental disaster—the film follows modern-day conservationists such as Ray Archuleta, who teaches farmers regenerative agriculture, and French Minister of Agriculture Stéphane Le Foll, who introduced the “4 per 1,000” Initiative, which 30 countries signed except for the US, China, and India. Kiss the Ground takes us around the world, showing a global movement to regenerate the world’s soil

Link to Watch the Film:
In Canada or the US: Netflix

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Online Discussion: Thursday, April 15, at 7:00 p.m. Atlantic / 6:00 p.m. Eastern

Zoom Link:  
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89516097467?pwd=ZHZVbUtndEJVMU53dXdMVVYrdTFyZz09
Passcode: STECfilm
Meeting ID: 895 1609 7467

See you in the Movie Zoom Room!

Angela

Corona and Climate Change – Discussion with Minister Isabella Lövin and Prof. Ottmar Edenhofer, facilitated by Christoph Schönherr

UNA Germany (DGVN) and the Swedish Embassy in Germany jointly hosted a virtual discussion on the connections between climate change and the Corona Pandemic on 24 September 2020 with – the Swedish Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for the Environment and Climate Isabella Lövin.

Here is the recording of the event that Christoph Schönherr had the honor of moderating a few weeks ago. The full recording lasts one hour.

Click here to view the recording.

The most interesting parts are Prof. Edenhofer’s responses at the following times:
15:55 min
35:00 min
45:40 min
54:15 min

Great progress!!

 

 

 

Archive of Recorded Talks and Live Events

You can find here the recordings of live events, sponsored by Shambhala Online and the Touching the Earth Collective

 

November Earth Salon: Elemental Body with Erika Berland

September Earth Salon: Seed Saving with Bob Cervelli

August Earth Salon: Foraging for Wild Food with Jeff Scott

July Earth Salon: The Time of Plenty with David Takahashi

June Earth Salon: Plant Characters with Lanny Harrison and Hannah Pearl Walcott

May Earth Salon: Dandelion Cuisine with Deborah Luscomb and David Wimberly

April Earth SalonAlign your Money with your Values: Individual Divestment with Michael Richardson

Spring Nyida Day 2022

March Earth Salon  Thích Nhất Hạnh’s Love Letters to the Earth with Nyingje Gonpel.

Winter Solstice-Children’s Day Celebration hosted by Touching the Earth Collective

December Earth Salon: Medicinal Plants with Savayda Jarone

November Earth Salon: Find Your Roots – in the Root Cellar with David Wimberley

Touching Planet Earth: Our Oceanic Heritage with Cynthia Moku-October 23

Touching The Earth Collective Community Meeting of October 10

October Earth Salon: Adventures in Bubbles and Brine: Fermentation Gleanings from Nova Scotia Masters with Phil Moscovitch

Harvest of Peace; hosted by Touching the Earth Collective-Sept 21 2021

September Earth Salon: Here Yesterday – Gone Todaywith Agnes Au and Daniel Naistadt

July Earth Salon: A Fieldtrip into the Four Fields with Adam Lobel

Summer Solstice-Midsummers Day June 20, 2021

June Earth Salon: Meeting the Earth at Karme Chöling ~ the Foragers

–   May Earth Salon: For the Love of Container Garden (May 9, 2021) with Karen Llewellyn

Earth Day Celebration (April 25) with Jocabed Solano 

Green Burial (March 2021) with Dawn Carson and Hanna Longard

Climate Awareness and the Dharma (March 9, 2021) with Irene Woodard

Sky / Earth / Heart: A Way to Meet the World (Jan 16, 2021) with Barbara Bash

Children’s Day 2020-Hosted by Touching the Earth Colllective

Working with Eco-Anxiety (Dec 13) with Melissa Moore

Humanity at a Crossroads, Part 1 & 2 (Oct 17  & Nov 14) hosted by Richard Reoch

Climate Victory Gardens (Nov. 7) with Bob Cervelli

24 Hours of Reality: Countdown to the Future (October 10) with Mayela Manasjan and David Takahashi

Gratitude (October Earth Salon), hosted by Deborah Luscomb and David Wimberly

Touching the Earth Collective’s community meeting of Sept. 26

Backyard Chickens (September Earth Salon) with Charlotte Mendel

Let Your Sustainability Values Lead the Way, with Mayela Manasjan (August 15, 2020)

Elder Albert Marshall’s Two-Eyed Seeing (July 25, 2020)

Drala Offerings with Agness Au & Daniel Naistadt (3 Recordings from May, June, and July 2020)

Sunday Gathering: Touching the Earth: A celebration of Midsummer’s Day  with Irene Woodard (June 21, 2020)

Waking up in the Climate Crisis: From Despair to Engagement with Dr. Renée Lertzman (May 24, 2020)

This is the Moment We Have Been Training For–Recording, a creative conversation in honor of Earth Day, with Acharya Judith Simmer-Brown and Jeff Wagner. (April 26, 2020)

Our House is on Fire: Responding to the Climate Crisis 
Zoom meeting with Boston Shambhala Center,
and Irene Woodard. (March 28, 2020)