大地を再生する
Summary
TLDRこのビデオスクリプトは、自然と深い結びつきを感じる農業に携わる人々とその活動を紹介しています。彼らは持続可能な農業、アグロエコロジー、原住民の食の文化を学び、土地を尊重し、再生農業の重要性を理解しています。彼らは土地の修復と元の形への復帰に取り組み、コミュニティが自己完済できるように支援しています。彼らの活動は、植民地化の遺産を変え、原住民や黒人青年を支援し、土地に対するリスペクトと癒やしを提供しています。
Takeaways
- 🌱 土に触れることは私を落ち着かせ、自然との深いつながりを感じさせる。
- 🎓 大学では持続可能な農業や先住民族の食文化を中心に学び、自然への強い結びつきを感じた。
- 🌍 地球を守るためには、食物の栽培方法に注目することが重要である。
- 🌾 パンデミック時に多くの団体が食物栽培と分配の重要性を再認識した。
- 👩🌾 私はベイエリアの都市先住民族女性の土地信託であるSegor Tayler Entrancesで働いている。
- 🌿 植物との関わりは癒しの空間を育み、私たちの仕事の重要性を理解する助けとなる。
- 🏡 私の両親は異なる背景を持ち、緑地へのアクセスが限られた環境で育った。
- 🧑🏫 教育の一環として、すべての世代に植民地化の遺産を変革する仕事に参加するよう呼びかけている。
- 💧 土壌はすべてであり、化学物質や農薬を使用せず、多様化を重視している。
- 🌀 再生可能な農業は先住民族の伝統的な実践に基づいており、それが広まることを望んでいる。
- 🤝 再分配は母なる地球を先住民族に返すことであり、次の世代のために住む場所を確保することを目指している。
- 🌍 伝統的な実践と先住民族の知識を尊重し、地球に対する配慮を促進することが重要である。
Q & A
スクリプトの主人公は何を感じるときに「自分がいるべき場所であると感じる」と言われていますか?
-主人公は、土が手につき、爪の間に土がはいると、自分がいるべき場所であると感じる。
主人公が学んだ専門分野は何ですか?
-主人公は、自然保護資源の勉強をしており、持続可能な農業、アグロエコロジー、先住民の食の文化を学んだ。
パンデミックが起こった際、主人公たちは何を学びましたか?
-パンデミックが起こった際、多くの組織は食を育て、配布基地を持つことの重要性を学びました。
セゴルティーメンバーとは何ですか?
-セゴルティーメンバーとは、主人公が活動するシグアルト・テイラー入口の都市インディジェノス女性土地信頼に所属する人々のことです。
主人公が働くシグアルト・テイラー入口とはどのような組織ですか?
-シグアルト・テイラー入口は、サンフランシスコ湾エリアに拠点を置く都市インディジェノス女性土地信頼であり、主に現在のイーストオークランドに拠点を置いています。
ナゾニとはどのような人物ですか?
-ナゾニは、シグアルトのメンバーであり、主人公がシグアルトの中でより親しくなった人物の一つです。
主人公が持続可能な農業に関連して学んだことは何ですか?
-主人公は、植物の植え方、植物が互いに好む配置、植物が空間を必要とする理由などについて学びました。
主人公が育てる植物の多様性はどのようにですか?
-主人公は200以上の品種を育てていたが、現在は約50の品種に減少していると述べています。
主人公が所属する組織が行う農業の方法は何ですか?
-主人公が所属する組織では、化学肥料や農薬を使わずに、多作作物を育て、蜜蜂や蝶々などの授粉者を考慮しています。
主人公が所属する組織の目的は何ですか?
-主人公が所属する組織の目的は、土地を元の形に戻し、食料や薬草を育て、祈り、踊り、集まる場所にアクセスできるようにすることです。
主人公が所属する組織が行う「レマチュレーション」とは何ですか?
-「レマチュレーション」とは、土地を元の形に戻すことを指し、インディジェノス人々に土地を取り戻すための取り組みです。
主人公が所属する組織が直面する課題とは何ですか?
-主人公が所属する組織は、カリフォルニアの多くの部族が連邦政府によって認められていないこと、そして食糧農業のシステムが植民地主義、奴隷制に基づいていることに対処しています。
主人公が所属する組織が目指す将来のビジョンは何ですか?
-主人公が所属する組織は、自己管理能力を高め、持続可能な農業を通じてコミュニティの強靱さを高めることを目指しています。
Outlines
🌱 自然とのつながりと土地の大切さ
この段落では、話者は自然と深いつながりを感じることの大切さを語ります。彼らは環境保護の勉強を通じて、持続可能な農業や原住民の食の文化に関心を持ちました。彼らは、地球を助けるためには、どのように食品が栽培されているかを見直すことが重要だと考えています。また、彼らはシゴルテ・テイラー入口という都市原住民女性土地信頼組織で働くことについても触れています。彼らは、植物と共に癒やしの空間を作るだけでなく、土地の元の形に戻すことに焦点を当てています。
🌾 再生農業と原住民の知識の重要性
第二段落では、話者は再生農業の概念と、それが原住民の伝統的な実践に根ざしていることを強調します。彼らは、化学肥料や農薬を使わずに多様な作物を栽培し、自然の循环を尊重しています。また、彼らは、冬の間は土地を休ませ、特定の作物や種子を使って土地を再生させ、栄養を戻しています。彼らは、原住民の知識と科学のジャーナルと同様に重要なことを認識し、未来の世代のために土地を守るために努力しています。
😂 笑いの中の深い意図
第三段落は、笑いが挟まれた音楽の中で終了していますが、具体的な内容は提供されていません。この段落の深い意図やメッセージは、現在のスクリプトからは特定できません。
Mindmap
Keywords
💡自然
💡サステイナブルファーミング
💡インディゲノスフードウェイ
💡パンデミック
💡シゴルテ
💡ナバホ族
💡教育
💡リジェネラティブファーミング
💡コロンビアシップ
💡土地の返還
Highlights
Feeling a deep connection with nature and soil, which provides a sense of belonging and freedom from societal judgment.
Majoring in conservation resource studies with a focus on sustainable farming, agroecology, and indigenous food ways.
The importance of growing food and having a distribution base became evident during the pandemic.
Working with segorite members to promote the use of non-spike plants for health benefits.
The Sigour Taylor Entrance is an urban indigenous women's land trust in the Bay Area, focused on remediation and community support.
Learning from Nazoni about planting techniques, plant preferences, and the importance of grounding oneself in nature.
Fostering a healing space through work with plants and understanding the broader implications of the work being done.
The speaker's personal background, with roots in the Navajo Nation and East Palo Alto, and the limited access to green spaces growing up.
The role of education in transforming the legacy of colonization and promoting sustainable community practices.
The focus on remediating the land and returning it to its original form for community use in growing food and medicines.
The decline in plant variety and the importance of indigenous practices in maintaining biodiversity.
Indigenous practices such as no-till agriculture, composting, and cover cropping have been ongoing for thousands of years.
The goal of regenerative agriculture is to create a resilient and self-sufficient community, not just a temporary trend.
The historical and ongoing racial oppression in agriculture and land ownership, with 98% of farmland owned by white people.
Being a black farmer and showing up to the land as an act of resistance and healing.
The sacredness of the land and the importance of treating it with respect, as exemplified by Saguarte's practices.
The concept of rematuration, giving the land back to indigenous people, and the importance of land trusts in this process.
Encouraging a right relationship with the earth and traditional practices, recognizing the value of indigenous knowledge.
The broader goal of shifting not just agriculture but also the world viewpoint towards a more respectful and sustainable approach.
Transcripts
[Music]
when i have soil in my hand
underneath my fingernails
i feel different
i feel like i'm where i'm supposed to be
at
working on the land i don't have to
think about people looking at me a
certain type of way
it's way deeper than just a line of work
[Music]
when i went to school i studied
conservation resource studies
that was the name of my major and i got
to form it around
sustainable farming agroecology
indigenous food ways
i just felt an inherent connection to
nature
if you really want to help the earth in
the biggest way
look at how people are growing their
food look how people are literally using
most of the earth
[Music]
as the pandemic happened a lot of
organizations were learning the
importance of growing food
and having a distribution base when that
happened we were doing a lot of work
with segorite members
i don't like spikes it's not spiky it's
good for you
put on your skin moisture skin
put on your face before you go to bed
you can put it on your on your body like
yeah you can moisturize your body
i work for the sigour taylor entrance
we're an urban indigenous womanly land
trust based in the bay area
we refer to this area as huchen
and we're mainly based in the village of
lashon which is present-day
east oakland yeah nazoni is great
definitely one of the people i got
closer to within segurate first
i know that they really are here to
support indigenous and
black youth
i've learned a lot from will
when to plant things what plants like to
be next to each other
what plants like to have their space
it's pretty important to ground yourself
it could be planting your feet in the
soil you want some gloves yes
it could be saying a prayer
by being able to work with these plants
it's fostering a healing space
but also making sure that we understand
the greater work that we're doing
my dad came from the navajo nation and
my mom
grew up in east palo alto
my parents met in oakland
growing up we had limited access to
green spaces
the majority of the time we lived in
apartments so there wasn't
much space to do your own garden
a large part of my work has to do with
education
we talk about calling on all generations
and all walks of life to really take
part in this work that is
transforming the legacy of colonization
we're trying to make sure that our
communities can sustain themselves
we are focused on remediating the land
returning the land to its original form
to have access to places where we can
grow food
medicines pray dance and gather together
[Music]
they're like more than 200 varieties
before i believe that now there's only
like 50.
a lot of varieties just die off if no
one's growing them
when i hear words like regenerative
organic
ultimately all of that comes from
indigenous practices that have been
passed down
soil is everything we don't use any
chemicals or pesticides
we don't believe in monoculturing we
like to diversify our field
we like to think about the pollinators
think about the bees think about the
butterflies
when the winter season is here when the
capacity to grow food and to be on the
land isn't as present we put the field
to rest
but also regenerate it through certain
crops and seeds
and then when it is time to grow food we
cut it down
it decomposes more nutrients back into
the earth
if you talk about composting cover
cropping no-till agriculture that's been
going on for thousands of years
it's really just stuff that we're trying
to come back to
we're trying to make sure that our
communities are able to tap into that
self-agency and be resilient
[Music]
if regenerative agriculture does become
the norm i hope that it's
it's with the motive of the people you
know for the earth
it's really seen as the solution
and not just a temporary trend
many california tribes are not federally
recognized
some of them are seen as extinct
if you look at the history of
colonization
not just for native people but for black
people
it's not that long ago so many
indigenous people have been
invisibilized and erased through time
and seeing the connections of that with
food and with land
it's very clear the current industrial
agriculture system
is oppressive because that's what it was
based on
colonization slavery
there are systemic problems that are
structural and actually
written in law that are racist
as someone who has experienced a lot of
racial oppression people are seeing now
from the black lives matter movement
that we still have a lot of trauma
today 98 of farm land is owned by white
people
coming to the land and when i show up to
the farm as a black farmer as a black
person
that's an act of resistance but being on
land in a way that's actually healing
and addressing
trauma and pain is revolutionary
when we're at the farm in present-day
albany
these are village sites these are burial
sites they're sacred places
and we should treat it as such
saguarte has done a lot to contribute to
my understanding of
respecting the land and being actually
present on the land
when i show up the first thing i do
isn't just start working
i have to tap in with the altar to say a
prayer
that helped awaken something that was
already inherently inside of me
and i think all of us have a connection
in that way
by having the land trust segurate is
able to do rematuiation
rematuration is saying give the mother
back the earth
you're giving the indigenous people the
land back
the work that we're doing is to ensure
that the generations after us will have
a place to live
we're encouraging people how to be in
right relationship with
others more thoughtful of what we're
doing to the earth
figuring out ways that we can respect
traditional practices and indigenous
communities
and recognize that this knowledge is
just as important as your published
science journal
[Music]
it's really having land spaces that
aren't just
thinking about how we can shift
agriculture
but how can we shift our world viewpoint
[Music]
[Laughter]
[Music]
[Laughter]
you
Ver Más Videos Relacionados
Truth and Reconciliation and Land Acknowledgements
POTLUCK FES'24 Spring OPENING SESSION:ソーシャルインパクトはなぜ必要か。「社会性」と「経済性」の両立を目指せ
GCNT Forum 2022 Interview Session: Mr. Ho Ren Hua - Chief Executive Officer, Thai Wah Pub Co., Ltd
株式会社マイファーム 耕作放棄地をブランドに変える オーガニックプロデューサーセミナー
ウガンダの最深部にある「未知の集落」がヤバすぎた…
TAP Group Co-Founder and Executive Chairman, Arif P. Rachmat
5.0 / 5 (0 votes)