Don’t Call Me Resilient  By  cover art

Don’t Call Me Resilient

By: The Conversation Vinita Srivastava Dannielle Piper Krish Dineshkumar Jennifer Moroz Rehmatullah Sheikh Kikachi Memeh Ateqah Khaki Scott White
  • Summary

  • Host Vinita Srivastava dives into conversations with experts and real people to make sense of the news, from an anti-racist perspective. From The Conversation Canada.
    2021 The Conversation
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Episodes
  • FLASHBACK: Palestine was never a land without people
    Jul 18 2024

    Land has so much meaning. It’s more than territory; it represents home, your ancestral connection and culture — but also the means to feed yourself and your country.

    One of the things that colonizers are famous for is the idea of terra nullius – that the land is empty of people before they come to occupy it.

    In the case of Palestine, the Jewish settlers in 1948, and the British before that, viewed the desert as empty — something they needed to “make bloom.”

    But the land was already blooming. There is a long history of Palestinian connection to the land, including through agricultural systems and a rich food culture that is often overlooked by colonial powers.

    Our guests on this week’s episode of Don’t Call Me Resilient have been working on a film about the importance of preserving Palestinian agriculture and food in exile.

    Elizabeth Vibert is a professor of colonial history at University of Victoria. She has been doing oral history research to examine historical and contemporary causes of food crises in various settings, including Palestinian refugees in Jordan.

    Salam Guenette is the consulting producer and cultural and language translator for their documentary project. She holds a master’s degree in history.

    For more resources and information about this, go here: SHOW NOTES

    A full transcript of the episode can be found here: TRANSCRIPT

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    41 mins
  • FLASHBACK: Shattering the myth of Canada 'the good' -- How we treat migrant workers who put food on our tables
    Jul 4 2024

    Every year thousands of migrants come to work in Canada. From harvesting the food in our stores to caring for the elderly, these workers form a vital part of the economy. Yet despite being critical, they often face harsh conditions, isolation, abuse, injury and even death as a result of immigration policies designed to leave them powerless.

    Documentary filmmaker and OCAD University professor Min Sook Lee has been documenting the voices of migrant farm workers in Canada for two decades. What she has to say about the treatment of these workers during COVID-19 shatters any remaining myths about “Canada the Good.” How do we treat the workers who put food on our tables?

    For more resources and information about this, go here: SHOW NOTES

    A full transcript of this episode can be found here: TRANSCRIPT

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    36 mins
  • FLASHBACK: Indigenous land defenders on why they fight invasive development despite facing armed forces
    Jun 20 2024

    In this episode of Don’t Call Me Resilient, we take a look at the ongoing struggle for land rights and some of the women on the front lines of that battle. These women are the land defenders fighting to protect land against invasive development. Both our guests have stood up to armed forces to protect land.

    Their work is about protecting the environment. But it is much more than that: it is fundamentally about survival and about the right to live openly on what is stolen land.

    Ellen Gabriel has been resisting land encroachment for 31 years. She was at the centre of the 1990 Kanehsatake resistance, (known as the Oka crisis), a 78-day standoff to protect ancestral Kanien’kéha:ka (Mohawk) land in Québec.

    It was a moment in history that many say helped wake them up to Indigenous issues.

    Anne Spice is a professor of geography and history at Toronto Metroppolitan University. Anne, who is Tlingit from Kwanlin Dun First Nation, was recently on the front lines in the defence of Wet'suwet'en land. After she was arrested on Wet'suwet'en territory last year, a viral video showed the RCMP pointing a gun at the land defenders.

    Anne can be heard shouting, we are unarmed and we are peaceful.

    These are the moments that capture our collective attention. But Ellen and Anne’s work goes well beyond what the cameras show.

    For more resources and information about this, go here: SHOW NOTES
    A full transcript of this episode can be found here: TRANSCRIPT

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    38 mins

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