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Seeking Support!

July 7, 2016

Good Morning Dear Ones,

Our friend Goot-Ges reached out to us last night as she is trying to get her daughter Kwiadda up to the Unist’ot’en Art camp.
Goot-Ges is an incredible land defender, healer, story-teller and Mama
and it would be incredible to get her and her daughter to the camp.  (She is also one of the participants in this book and interviews Wulf on the radio!)

  We let her know that we would share her request for support, found below.

 Please share this with your peeps and send some funds, anything helps, if you can.

 Any contributions (or prayers and messages of love) can be made by e-transfer to yakguudang@gmail.com .

 Thank you lovelies,

Beyon and Wulfgang

*********

Hello,

My name is Goot-Ges, an independent mother of
three beautiful babies. I am Nisga’a, Tsimshian, and Haida. Came to the
city for some healing, and to have some safety for me and my children.
Had some money saved up to be on this trip,or to secure a new place to
live, but had some unexpected vehicle repairs, which ended up being
double than what I could afford.

My oldest child Kwiadda is trying to make it to the Youth Art Camp at Unistoten, July 18-29th.
We are currently in Vancouver, and are looking to get back to the north
for the camp. I just finished working on a blog to outline what our
journey is, as my big project right now is Yakguudang, this translates
into Respect all life in Haida language. The vision behind Yakguudang is
to keep our coast clean from any potential oil and gas projects.
Healthy environments create healthy communities. And i believe that
social justice and environmental justice are connected. 

Our last
project with Yakguudang was stopping Naikun wind farms from developing
in Haida Waters to power WCC lng export facility being proposed for tuck
inlet in unceded Tsimshian land of Prince Rupert. That was a success,
to date no project there. If anyone can help us out in anyway, it would
be greatly appreciated.

Click here to find out how you can get involved

Thank you for your time, and anything will help us. Even a good prayer, or a message of love.

Sincerely,

Goot Ges, aka Fire Woman.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: art, Haida, Indigenous, Nisga'a, resistance, solidarity, tsimshian, voicesbook, yakguudang, youth

Vancouver Cooperative Radio 100.5FM

June 28, 2016

Vancouver Cooperative Radio 100.5FM

If you missed Wulf being interviewed by Big Fire Women, one of the Women Land Defenders featured in Voices, you can check it out here!

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: front lines, Land Defence, radio, resistance, solidarity, voices book

Imperial Metals AGM

June 28, 2016

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On May 27th the Corporate Scum behind the Mount Polley disaster, where a four kilometer tailings pond emptied into Polley Lake, Hazeltine Creek and Quesnel Lake, met on unceded Musqueam territory for their annual shareholders meeting.

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Secwepemc Warrior, Kanahus Manuel, and supporters were there to greet them and remind the decisions makers of the company that they do not have permission to be on unceded Neskonlith Secwepemc territory and in fact have been told to leave.

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Although Kanahus had the legal documentation to enter the AGM as a Proxy Voting member dozens of the Colonial Corporation of Canada’s hired guns blocked her way.

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Imperial Metals is responsible for one of the most horrific acts of terror in this region since agents of the Hudson Bay company committed acts of violence through biological warfare, known as smallpox.  The destruction of the land upon which the Secwepemc people live and contamination of their food sources is part of a legacy of colonial violence and genocide committed by the Corporation of Canada and the Corporations they partner with.

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Sovereign Indigenous communities living on their unceded territories, who are not a part of the so called Canadian State, all over the region are resisting the invasive and destructive actions of Imperial Metals.  The Tahltan people have been fighting hard against Imperial Metal’s Red Chris Mine, which has recently been given the ‘permits’ to operate at full capacity despite the opposition of the people responsible for the lands.

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Members of Ancestral Pride, an Indigenous resistance organization from the village of Ahousaht on Nuu-chah-nulth territory have been organizing against Imperial Metal’s plans to open pit mine the sacred Chitaapii Mountain located directly across from the village.

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On unceded Wet’suwe’ten territories Imperial Metals has been illegally operating an open pit copper mine without permission of the hereditary peoples responsible for protection of the lands there.  Although the mine is currently not in operations due to low copper costs, it must not be permitted to open again.

We support the Talhtan, Secwepemc, Nuu-chah-nulth, Wet’suwe’ten and all sovereign Indigenous peoples and their protection of the lands we all rely on to live. 

We’re also looking forward to visiting with Kanahus and Sacheen of Ancestral Pride in August and to be including them in Voices.

If you want to know more about how you can support these rad women led movements get at us and shoot us an email!

xox

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: acab, Ahousaht, Ancestral Pride, anticolonial, decolonize, ftp, imperial metal, Imperial No More, ImperialNoMore, Indigenous, indigenous soveriegnty, kanahus manuel, mining, Mount Polley, protest, resistance, secwepemc, stop imperial metals, Unceded, voices book

Vancouver Cooperative Radio 100.5FM

June 27, 2016

Vancouver Cooperative Radio 100.5FM

tune into VCR 100.5FM in Coast Salish territory (so called vancouver) or
online around 2pm to hear us talk about the project with Big Fire Woman
the radio show: When spirit whispers hosted by Gunargie. that’s in
about a half hour!! check it out! suuuper excited about it!

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: interview

June 19, 2016

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We left Lekqungen Territory to cross the Salish Sea on the last day of May on our way to Lax U’u’la (Lelu Island) in Tsimshian territory.  On our first day out of so called vancouver we stopped in at Ulluisc to deliver donated food supplies, cash donations and photographs to Christine Jack, the caretaker and protector of the mountains there.  We were also able to sleep along the banks of Wedzin Kwah in the Gitemden Clan’s territory.  Wedzin Kwah is the life giving river that flows through Wet’suwet’en territory and has been fiercely protected by hereditary leadership of the Unist’ot’en clan.  Wedzin Kwah is a tributary to the Skeena river and we would eventually follow the Skeena along the highway of tears to the sea.

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Lax U’u’la, is located at the mouth of the Skeena river.  Adjacent to the island are the Flora Banks, an area made up of glacial silt from the last ice age where eelgrass flourishes.  The Flora Banks and the eel grass that grows there is a crucial habitat for young Salmon smolts who as adults will run the Skeena river.  The eelgrass provides shelter from the strong currents and tides while the smolts acclimatize to their new lives in saltwater and adult salmon re-adjust to begin their journey up the river.  This is a place where one generation of salmon passes another.  The straight next to Lax U’u’la teams with porpoises, humpback whales pass through the region and wolves hunt the deer who find bountiful food on the island.  We were told the ancestors and wild spirits of the animals protect Lax U’u’la.

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It is on this small marshy island, covered in berries, ancient cedars
and eagle’s nests that Petronas and Pacific North West LNG (PNW LNG)
scheme to build an export facility for gas fracked in the North East of
so called bc.

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There are 8 facilities planned for the Tsimshian’s territories around colonial Prince Rupert.

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In August of 2015 five Women of Haida, Gitxsan and Tsimshian descent, with the support of the Hereditary House Leader for the Gitwilgyoots tribe responsible for Lax U’u’la, began an occupation of the Island.  Since that moment they have been offering their prayers, utilizing the medicines of the island, raising their children and going out onto the water to courageously stop the work of surveyors hired by PNW LNG.  Many warriors and supporters have joined these women in their fight for the land, waters and air.

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We were honoured to have the opportunity to sit down with Christie Brown in her home and talk about her experiences protecting Lax U’u’la and beginning the occupation.  Once on the island we joined Goot Ges and her three children who harvest medicines there, offer prayers and join supporters in stopping industry on the water.  We were able to assist with cooking meals for supporters, constructing a cedar smokehouse, building a composting toilet and joining patrols to protect the island. 

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If you are interested in learning more about Lax U’u’la you can check out their facebook page or this short documentary.

If you would like to support the Land Defenders who are out there protecting the salmon, waters, land and air there are two specific needs:

The first is for financial donations to fuel the boats necessary for patrols, and you can donate to the go fund me, or e-transfer funds through: Lelu_island@hotmail.com.

The second is a need for people to be out there on the land.  Supporters are welcome and skills related to working collaboratively, navigating conflicts, care work, boating, cooking and construction are super helpful.

If you have questions about accessibility or anything at all, please do not hesitate to contact us!

xo beyon and wulfgang

https://www.voicesfrontlines.com/we-left-lekqungen-territory-to-cross-the-salish/

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: activism, eelgrass, flora banks, frontline, gitwilgyoots, indigenous resistance, indigenous sovereignty, Indigenous women, Lax kw'alaams, lax u'u'la, Lelu Island, no fracking, NO LNG, no pipelines, nolng, Salmon, update, voices book

June 17, 2016

Christine Jack, a spiritual leader among the St’at’imc people, gives an
update from Ulluisc where she has been living on the land protecting the
territory from further industrial devastation.  
facebook.com/reoccupationofjunctioncreek/
voicesbook.tumblr.com/

(Source: https://player.vimeo.com/)

https://www.voicesfrontlines.com/christine-jack-a-spiritual-leader-among-the/

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Christine Jack, indigenous sovereignty, Indigenous women, reoccupation of junction creek, Ulluisc, update, voice for the voiceless, voices of indigenous women on the frontlines speak, voicesbook

June 14, 2016

Hello Dear Ones,

Sacheen is an incredible land defender, life
giver, traditional midwife and indigenous sovereigntist.  Wulf’s been
honoured to have know her for many years and we are excited to share her
voice and work with you in our book.

Right now we are sharing this fundraiser for Sacheen and her partner Crow to take time to heal and train.  

Please share this opportunity to support and hold up two powerful protectors of the land and contribute if you can.

 <3 Wulfgang and Beyon

click here to support

Also check their webpage for more info: ancestralpride

https://www.voicesfrontlines.com/hello-dear-ones-sacheen-is-an-incredible-land/

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Ancestral Pride, gofundme, Indigenous, indigenous sovereignty, Indigenous women, Land Defenders, voices book, Warriors

June 8, 2016

At the offices of PNG the company who will inevitably fail to push through a liquid fracked gas export facility on the unceded Lax U’u’la territory also known as Lelu Island. RCMP have been increasing their pressure on the hereditary people the Gitwilgyoots clan and their supporters. Land Defenders protecting the territory went to industry offices today to pray and remind company representatives that they are breaking Tsimshian law. #fracking #nofracking #solidarity #landdefence #unceded #tsimshian #leluisland #protect #lng #voicesbook #indigenousresistance #frontline #warriors #nolng #indigenoussovereignty

https://www.voicesfrontlines.com/at-the-offices-of-png-the-company-who-will/

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Fracking, frontline, indigenousresistance, indigenoussovereignty, landdefence, leluisland, LNG, nofracking, nolng, protect, solidarity, tsimshian, Unceded, voicesbook, Warriors

June 6, 2016

“I feel in awe as to the tremendous life
that I get to be among because we quite honestly forget that a tree has a
life, that a piece of grass, that a dandelion, that the kinnikinnick is just so
alive. Being a caretaker is creating a system for me to actually coexist with
them.”

-Christine Jack, Ulluisc 2016

Christine
Jack is a two-spirit St’at’imc life-giver and spiritual leader.  In March of 2015 she was asked by her Elders
to protect a place called Ulluisc.  Since that moment, Christine became caretaker
and made Ulluisc her permanent home.  Ulluisc,
“a place for the people to gather”,
is high in the mountains nestled in the Yalakom Valley and is an ancestral
village site where the St’at’imc, Tsilcotin and Secwemc people came
together.  The forests, creeks, and
mountains of Ulluisc are a place where medicine grows, where the pines stand
next to the cotton woods and shade the alders; where bears raise their cubs,
deer find their shelter and eagles build their nests.  The last time there was clear cutting in
Ulluisc was 2015 the logging company responsible, intended to continue
cutting through 2016 and beyond. Christine Jack has halted their progress, and
as long as she remains it will never happen again.

For more information about Christine and Ulluisc go to the voice for the voiceless fb page and check out our Update.

https://www.voicesfrontlines.com/i-feel-in-awe-as-to-the-tremendous-life-that-i/

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Christine Jack, indigenous sovereignty, Ulluisc, voice for the voiceless, voices book

June 5, 2016

“The deer is important to me because I’m
a hunter.  It has become a really
powerful, powerful medicine for me.”

“The Elders
asked me then if I had time to put aside to do this stand here for the village,
the old village our ancestral village as well as for the animals out here because
the logging is tremendously huge in our valleys.”

-Christine Jack, Ulluisc 2016

Christine
Jack is a two-spirit St’at’imc life-giver and spiritual leader.  In March of 2015 she was asked by her Elders
to protect a place called Ulluisc.  Since that moment, Christine became caretaker
and made Ulluisc her permanent home.  Ulluisc,
“a place for the people to gather”,
is high in the mountains nestled in the Yalakom Valley and is an ancestral
village site where the St’at’imc, Tsilcotin and Secwemc people came
together.  The forests, creeks, and
mountains of Ulluisc are a place where medicine grows, where the pines stand
next to the cotton woods and shade the alders; where bears raise their cubs,
deer find their shelter and eagles build their nests.  The last time there was clear cutting in
Ulluisc was 2015 the logging company responsible, intended to continue
cutting through 2016 and beyond. Christine Jack has halted their progress, and
as long as she remains it will never happen again.

For more information about Christine and Ulluisc go to the voice for the voiceless fb page and check out our Update.

https://www.voicesfrontlines.com/the-deer-is-important-to-me-because-im-a-hunter/

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Christine Jack, indigenous sovereignty, Ulluisc, voice for the voiceless, voices book

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