Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines
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Top 10 Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines Episodes
Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines episode by adding your comments to the episode page.
Episode 6: Sunny Red Bear
Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines
09/15/20 • 37 min
Sunny Red Bear is a multi-talented Lakota activist from the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation. In Episode 6 of Not Invisible: Native Womxn on the Frontlines, we talk with Sunny about her various projects that touch on topics including MMIWG2ST. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Sunny saw a need for someone to bring resources to the elders in her community so she thought, “Why not me?” This episode is fueled by Sunny’s passion to create space for others as well as finding solutions for the world around her.
Episode 5: Jordan Marie Daniel & Rosalie Fish
Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines
08/17/20 • 39 min
Episode 5 of Not Invisible: Native Womxn on the Frontlines is another double feature with two motivated Native athletes who use their platform to bring awareness to the MMIWG2ST crisis. First, we hear from Jordan Marie Daniel, a citizen of the Kul Wicasa Oyate (Lower Brule Sioux Tribe) who used her love for running to make a statement during the Boston Marathon by wearing a red handprint over her mouth. But her advocacy goes beyond just running as her heart is committed to bringing forth issues such as equality and land protection to mainstream audiences. Her work has inspired others, including our second guest, Rosalie Fish (Cowlitz) to use her athletic platform as well.
Learn more about Sovereign Bodies Institute: https://www.sovereign-bodies.org/
Episode 2: Rebecca Nagle
Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines
06/03/20 • 33 min
Rebecca Nagle, journalist and citizen of Cherokee Nation, joins this episode of Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines to discuss representation, the effects of COVID-19 on data collection, the ongoing census, and the current Supreme Court case that could determine the fate of almost half the land in the state of Oklahoma.
Listen to This Land
Read more from Rebecca:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2018/11/28/half-land-oklahoma-could-be-returned-native-americans-it-should-be/
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/apr/24/us-native-americans-left-out-coronavirus-data
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/05/oklahomas-suspect-argument-front-supreme-court/611284/
Episode 19: Kahstoserakwathe Paulette Moore
Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines
05/23/22 • 36 min
This episode of Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines features a conversation with filmmaker, lecturer, artist and educator, Kahstoserakwathe Paulette Moore.
Moore is Kanyen'kehà:ka (Mohawk) and an enrolled member of Six Nations of the Grand River territory where she is based. Moore is a fluent (ACTFL intermediate-high) Kanyén'kéha speaker and recent graduate of Onkwawénna Kentsyóhkwa - an adult language immersion program at Six Nations.
Moore is a 2022 recipient of the Banff Spark Accelerator Fellowship designed to address the systemic gap in gender equality and representation by providing essential opportunities and resources to help build significantly more Canadian women-owned businesses that excel both domestically and across the global media industry.
Moore is a founding member of The Aunties Dandelion: a relationship-centered collective created in 2019. The Aunties Dandelion vision is to create an expansive human community informed by traditional Onkwehon:we (Indigenous) teachings with story sharing and healing narratives at the core. Key projects include The Aunties Dandelion monthly podcast (official 2021 selection of imagineNATIVE Film and Media Festival) and two speculative arts films. VeRONAka (2020) is a 10-minute fictionalized version of the true story that Kanyen'kehà:ka clan mothers gave Covid 19 a Mohawk name - so that we are able to respect the illness, understand why it is here and then invite it to leave.
To listen to the complete conversation head on over to The Aunties Dandelion Podcast and be sure to follow The Aunties Dandelion on Instagram.
This episode of Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines was produced by Viktor Maco, Spirit Buffalo and J.B. Hart. Edited by Abbey Franz. Research by Sarah Rose Harper.
Hosted by LeAndra Nephin.
This season of Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines is produced with support from Earth Rising Foundation, our Patreon producers, Reena Krishnan and Kathy Duerr.
Additional support from our patrons at Patreon and Buy Me a Coffee.
Would you like to be a guest on Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines? Or know someone who would? Drop us an email at [email protected].
Like this episode? Then please be sure to leave us a 5 star review on Apple podcasts so others can enjoy it too!
Episode 4: Meskee Yatsayte & Tabatha Frank
Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines
07/28/20 • 38 min
Episode 4 of Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines is a double feature of two powerful women. First, we hear from Meskee Yatsayte (Potawatomi/Diné) from Navajo Nation Missing and Murdered Relatives. Meskee’s work is about including all missing Native kin, including men and boys, elders, the disabled and the trans/non-binary community. Next we hear from Tabatha Frank (Tla-o-qui-aht Ahousat/Muchalaht) whose striking face paint has become an iconic symbol of the MMIWG2ST movement. Her advocacy work on her own and with Butterflies In Spirit, a dance group that shares the story of those who are missing and murdered, has impacted her own life.
Watch the PBS News Hour interview with Meskee: https://www.pbs.org/newshour/brief/304420/meskee-yatsayte
Follow Butterflies in Spirit on Instagram
Episode 3: Regan de Loggans
Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines
06/29/20 • 45 min
Regan de Loggans (Mississippi Choctaw/ K'iche' Maya) is a two-spirit art historian, curator, educator, and organizer based in so-called Brooklyn on Lenape land. On this episode of Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontline, Regan and journalist, Shea Vassar discuss mutual aid, advocacy on social media, anti-Blackness within the Indigenous community, and including the G2ST in our MMIWG2ST advocacy.
Support the Indigenous Kinship Collective: https://venmo.com/indigenouskinshipcollective
Check out Regan's Mutual Aid Zine
Read Reagan's article: Mistikôsiwak: Monkman at the Met
Episode 1: Allie Young
Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines
05/15/20 • 33 min
The debut episode of Not Invisible: Native Womxn on the Frontlines features a conversation about the current COVID-19 crisis sweeping the Navajo Nation, the creativity of Native youth, & flipping the Native script on film and TV with cofounder of Protect the Sacred, Allie Young.
Follow:
https://www.protectthesacred.care/
https://twitter.com/protect_sacred
https://www.instagram.com/protectthesacrednow/
Support:
Navajo & Hopi Families COVID-19 Relief Fund
Read:
Indian Country's Response to COVID-19
Not Invisible: Native Womxn on the Frontlines (Trailer)
Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines
05/04/20 • 2 min
Not Invisible: Native Womxn on the Frontlines are the stories of Native womxn activists, scholars, athletes, filmmakers, writers, lawmakers and more who are on the frontlines saving the environment, defending the land, and protecting their communities.
Through an ongoing series of in-depth interviews we are capturing the lives and the work of those women who refuse to be invisible, who are standing against violence, corruption and ignorance, and who are inspiring others to take control of their future.
Not Invisible is Red House Series production. Watch for Episode 1 coming May 14th, 2020.
Episode 7: Renee Sans Souci
Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines
09/28/21 • 26 min
On this episode, Host LeAndra Nephin speaks with Educator and Activist, Renee Sans Souci. The discuss water protection, activism and her own journey towards healing.
With a degree in education from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and being an Umonhon woman and practitioner of traditional healing, Renee Sans Souci combines her life experiences with a learning process that helps learners to engage in their own cultural identities and languages. Renee has been a Teaching Artist with the Lied Center for Performing Arts since 2009. She has presented at numerous conferences and workshops on various topics related to #MMIW2GS, Native Science, History of Indian Education, Native languages, Poetry, and Sustainability. Sans Souci was featured, last year, in the PBS American Masters Series, UNLADYLIKE 2020: Susan LaFlesche Picotte: The First American Indian Doctor. She was also a finalist for a 2020 Inspire Award, Celebrating Women Leaders in Lincoln, Nebraska.
Not Invisible: Native Women on the Frontlines (Season 2 Trailer)
Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines
06/24/21 • 2 min
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FAQ
How many episodes does Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines have?
Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines currently has 23 episodes available.
What topics does Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines cover?
The podcast is about Society & Culture, History, Documentary, Podcasts, Native and Indigenous.
What is the most popular episode on Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines?
The episode title 'Episode 5: Jordan Marie Daniel & Rosalie Fish' is the most popular.
What is the average episode length on Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines?
The average episode length on Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines is 31 minutes.
How often are episodes of Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines released?
Episodes of Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines are typically released every 16 days, 18 hours.
When was the first episode of Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines?
The first episode of Not Invisible: Native Peoples on the Frontlines was released on May 4, 2020.
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