Register
NOW for the Atlantic Region Solidarity Network Annual Gathering
Fri., Nov. 14th at 7pm to Sun., Nov. 16th at 1pm at the Tatamagouche Centre.
Fri., Nov. 14th at 7pm to Sun., Nov. 16th at 1pm at the Tatamagouche Centre.
For more information, or to receive a registration form, contact kathrynande(at)gmail.com
Please send your registration no later than Nov. 9th. This helps the planning committee and the kitchen! The full fee for the gathering, which includes accommodations, meals, and registration is $176.50; bursaries as well as alternative arrangements are possible.
Making the Connections:
Resistance and Movement Building
Across Borders and Nations
Resource People:
Jen Moore, Mining Watch
Canada
Alma Brooks, Wabanaki Confederacy
Eliza Knockwood, Mi’kmaq Youth Bundle-Keeper
Gain inspiration and new
understandings of solidarity from resource people who are building solidarity
relationships across borders and nations, including the recent People’s Social
Forum in Ottawa, the U.N. Forum on Mining and Indigenous Peoples in May 2014
and the ongoing struggle against fracking in Elsipogtog, New Brunswick.
Join us
and our resource people:
Jen Moore, Mining Watch Canada, supports communities,
organizations and networks facing mining challenges from Mexico, Guatemala and
Honduras to Ecuador, Colombia and Chile. Jen was a social justice journalist in
Ecuador and has written about the struggles of indigenous and non-indigenous
communities affected by Canadian-financed mining companies. She gave leadership
to the Mining Justice Assembly at the recent People’s Social Forum in Ottawa.
Alma Brooks, Saint Mary’s First Nation
NB, is a highly respected Maliseet traditional leader with the Wabanaki
Confederacy. She has been a leader in
the New Brunswick resistance to fracking and other resource-based projects in
forestry and mining. Alma attended the May 2014 U.N. Forum on Mining and
Indigenous Peoples in New York.
Eliza Star Child
Knockwood, a Mi’kmaq woman from Abegweit First Nation,
PEI, spent the summer of 2013 in Elsipogtog NB working with indigenous and
non-indigenous people to resist fracking. She describes herself as a Youth
Bundle-Keeper, passing on traditional and contemporary knowledge to this
generation and ones yet to come.