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Episode 6 - '25 Auntie Artist Yvette Molina (Mexican/American, Chippewa Turtle Mountain)19 Jun 202500:28:46

We are living in tremendously uncertain times and this month’s guest, artist Yvette Molina, reminds us through her expansive work of the relationship between justice and care. Yvette is Mexican-American of Chippewa of Turtle Mountain descent who is currently artist-in-residence at the Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, NY. Her collaborative exhibition, A PROMISE TO THE LEAVES, centers the four elements: earth, air, water, fire, and a fifth presence, the cosmos. By focusing on these ancient, essential forces, Molina invites us to remember that humans, plants, and all earthly beings are composed of star matter and sustained by the elements. Her work encourages us to understand care as inherently relational. Care for one another, human and non-human alike, is care for ourselves and all of creation.

Yvette’s artistic practice is rooted in community engagement and activism - through processional banners, ritual, storytelling, costumes, collage, painting, and sculpture. Her work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, including at the Stockholm Fringe Festival, the Brattleboro Museum and Art Center, the Visual Arts Center of New Jersey, Arsenal Contemporary Art, SPRING/BREAK Art Show, NADA FAIR, and the Legion of Honor and de Young Museums in California. She currently lives and creates in Oakland, California.


Nyá:wen to Indigenous Screen Office for supporting these important stories!

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Episode 5 - '25 - Aunties Emergent! Alex Jacobs-Blum visits with Grandmother René Thomas-Hill22 May 202501:13:28

Our Aunties Emergent mentoring program returns as guest host Alex Jacobs-Blum Gayogo̱hó꞉nǫʼ (Cayuga), Wolf Clan, Six Nations of the Grand River visits with Grandmother Renée Thomas-Hill Kanien’kehá:ka (Mohawk), Turtle Clan, Six Nations of the Grand River


As a Haudenosaunee woman, Grandmother Renee Thomas Hill carries the deep responsibility of upholding and sharing the teachings of “Our” Way of Life, guided by peace, power, and righteousness. Renee is founder of Grandmother’s Voice, a visionary Indigenous organization that aims to unite Indigenous voices while extending a warm invitation to individuals from all directions.

Renee is an auntie and grandmother to many and reminds us how the natural world cares deeply for us. “Right now it's the frogs that are singing and oh gosh, I get all excited hearing the frogs, and then when I wake up and I hear the birds singing, that's my medicine, says Grandmother Renee, “They're taking care of me. They're looking after me. The sun rises and it's taking care of me. So just those moments, slowing down and just appreciating everything that's around you is that medicine that builds up your immune system.”


Alex Jacobs-Blum (she/her) is a Gayogo̱hó꞉nǫʼ (Cayuga) and German visual artist and curator living in Hamilton, ON. Her research focuses on Indigenous futures and accessing embodied ancestral Hodinöhsö:ni’ knowledge. The core of her practice and methodology is a strong foundation in community building, fostering relationships, empowering youth, and Indigenizing institutional spaces. Her creative process is rooted in storytelling and challenging hierarchical power structures. Alex endeavours to facilitate transformative change infused with love and care.

Check out our February interview with Alex as our guest! 



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Eleng Kazangiljan, Paiwan/Indigenous Taiwan Law Grad21 Aug 202400:48:13

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Aunties Emergent! Otsistohkwí:yo visits with Tehahenteh, Language and Cultural Carrier24 Jul 202400:54:39

Here's the FB page for Skaronhyasekò:wa - The Mohawk immersion school where Otsistohkwí:yo works with early years students and where Tehahenteh taught when the school was being built. 

Tekarahkwarásare = The Eclipse  (the faces that lay over each other)

Kayanere'kó:wa - The Great Law (the great space between steps)

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Aunties Emergent Paige Bethmann with Filmmaker Loren Waters19 Jun 202400:45:23

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Auntie Shelley Niro, Legendary Kanyen'kehà:ka Artist, Filmmaker, Photographer22 May 202400:44:10
Eclipse 2024! with co-host Kaluhyanu:wes Michelle Schenandoah, Rematriation08 Apr 202400:45:24

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Auntie Samantha Doxtator (Oneida) Sky Knowledge Carrier/Eclipse20 Mar 202400:46:45

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Auntie Taiawentón:ti' Chelsea Sunday (Kanyen'kehà:ka) Whole Community Language Revitalizer21 Feb 202400:50:34

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AUNTIES EMERGENT: Nikaronhyá'a Dawn Martin with Jodi Lynn Maracle on the Beautiful Entanglement of Art and Language31 Jan 202400:52:47
Auntie Bear Fox (Kanyen'kehà:ka) Singer/Songwriter17 Jan 202400:41:58
Bear Fox website

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Aunties Emergent! Laura Couchie (Anishinaabe) on Her Art and Language Journey13 Dec 202300:24:09
Laura Couchie is Anishinaabe (Ojibwe), Two Spirit from Nipissing First Nation. She's a multidisciplinary artist and Indigenous language revitalizationist living in Dish With One Spoon territory. Her artistic practice has spanned several outlets over her lifetime including; performance (acting, comedy/improv, dance), music and beadwork. Laura has published op-ed pieces tackling issues such as cultural appropriation and "pretendianism". Her book "No Rainbow" was published in 2018, featuring sensual poetry and prose about love, longing and identity that spans earthly, spirit and human form. In 2022 and 2023, Laura had the honour of serving as a Final Juror for The City of Hamilton Arts Awards. Laura worked for many years in the urban Indigenous community and is a passionate advocate and public educator. Laura is in 3rd year of the Bachelor of Arts in Onkwehonwe Language at Six Nations Polytechnic.

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Episode 4 - '25: Katsitsionni Fox and Ty Defoe16 Apr 202500:33:42
On this episode from Rematriation's Indigenous and Haudenosaunee Matrilineality Symposium, Auntie Kahstoserawkathe visits with filmmaker/potter Katsitsionni Fox (Kanyen'kehà:ka) and interdisciplinary artist Ty Defoe (Ojibwe, Oneida) on their shared focus on Seeds through their individual projects. Wa'tkwanonhweráton to the symposium organizers at Rematriation and the vision Kaluhyanu:wes Michelle Schenandoah (Oneida). Great thanks as well to James O'Conner, Brett Barry, and Dominic Naggar for production and tech support!

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Auntie Dr. Kahente Horn-Miller (Kanyen'kehà:ka) Educator, Visual Storyteller29 Nov 202300:51:51

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Aunties Emergent! Otsistohkwí:yo with Tehota'kerá:ton15 Nov 202301:09:20

Host OtsistohkwÍ:yo or Melissa Elliott is Kanyen’kehá:ka (Mohawk) from Six Nations of the Grand River Territory. She is a mother, auntie, teacher and second language Kanyen’keha/mohawk speaker, storyteller and artist. She is currently working in efforts to decolonize education and language revitalization - working in her 7th year as the Ken Nikanenhá:sas (Little Seeds) Kindergarten Teacher and Kanen’shón:’a (Many types of seeds) Early Years Faculty Co-Chair at Skaronhyase’kó:wa Everlasting Tree School. Otsistohkwiyo is a trained Waldorf Early years teacher and New Adult Educator (NAE) with over 8 years of experience teaching young children and families through traditional Haudenosaunee and Waldorf pedagogical approaches. In her spare time, Otsisohkwi:yo offers training and mentoring on storytelling and utilizing the Waldorf pedagogy to create new forms of holistic, earth based, traditional Onkwehonwe (Indigenous) education. She sits on the Onkwawenna Kentyohkwa Board of Directors and on the Waldorf Early Childhood Association of North America (WECAN) Inclusion, Diversity, Equity and Access (IDEA) Committee. She is passionate about Kanyen’kéha (Mohawk language), grassroots community building, traditional storytelling, puppetry, parenting, holistic healing, and land-based practices. For more information you can contact Otsistohkwí:yo at otsistohkwiyo@gmail.com

Tehota'kerá:ton, Dr. Jeremy D. Green, is Kanien'kehá:ka (Mohawk), wolf clan and from the Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory. As both a scholar and Ontario Certified Teacher (OCT) of Indigenous language learning and acquisition in adult and youth learners over the past 25 years, Dr. Green’s transformative research and teaching is at the forefront of efforts to ensure that Canadian Indigenous languages and traditional cultures not only survive but thrive.

Tehota'kerá:tons completed research to date has focused on diverse localized language acquisition and status planning for indigenous language proficiency development for Rotinonhsión:ni (Six Nations) and other indigenous nations and communities. Tehota'kerá:ton also provides training and information to support these localized indigenous language acquisition planning efforts to create new speakers of indigenous languages focusing primarily on strategic planning for teaching, learning, assessment, evaluation, language use and conversational and ceremonial language and dynamic cultural practices.

 

 

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Auntie Katsitsionni Fox (Kanyen'kehà:ka) Filmmaker, Artist, Potter31 Oct 202300:53:50

Follow Katsitsionni on Instagram

Check out her website: Two Row Productions

Watch her Without a Whisper movie

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Uncle Dr. Theodore Jojola (Pueblo Isleta) - Indigenous Planner27 Sep 202300:42:46
Indigenous Design and Planning Institute

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Auntie Gerd Mikalsen (Sámi) Author, Farmer, Advocate30 Aug 202300:31:26

Contact Gerd's publisher to find her book in English: gollegiella@online.no

Here is the website for Gerd's book: https://samiskbibliotektjeneste.tromsfylke.no/2019/10/23/gerd-mikalsen-fathers-new-mother-tongue/

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Auntie Danis Goulet (Cree-Métis) - Director, Night Raiders, Advocate for Indigenous Filmmaking25 Jul 202301:07:02

AUNTIE: Wa’tkwanonhweráton Sewakwékon. On this edition of The Aunties Dandelion we visit with Danis Goulet – a Cree-Metis, award-winning director and screenwriter who is best known for her 2021 film Night Raiders which is set in a dystopian future. The widely popular movie had the highest budget of any Indigenous-led Canadian film and stars Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers as a mother who joins a resistance movement to save her daughter. In Night Raiders – as in all of her films – Danis focuses on how Indigenous worldview can bring new insight and practice to an industry largely devoid of human care and community.

 

DANIS: The film industry was built to exploit and so if you want to work in the film industry. So if you want to go into the film industry how do we do this in a way that is driven by values and then obviously in Indigenous production you’d be looking at what are your values that come from your community or your specific culture that can inform the film process. 

 

AUNTIE: Danis spent years advocating for Indigenous creators in the film industry and co-authored a 2013 report for Telefilm with Kerry Swanson that helped lay the ground work for funding, offices and initiatives that now support Native filmmakers – including The Aunties Dandelion – Nya:wen. Danis is a passionate visual storyteller who creates strong matriarchal characters and weaves her own Cree language into her productions as a spiritual guide.

 

DANIS: It is good for the spirit and any time there is a chance to put it on screen its like those are my favourite things to shoot to hear it. To commit it to screen where you know it is going to live on through this medium. 

 

AUNTIE: I’m Kahstoserakwathe and we are Yéthi Nihsténha ne Tekarónyakénare. The Aunties Dandelion. We’re focused on revitalizing our communities through stories of land, language, and relationships. And we want to say Nyá:wenkò:wa – or big thanks – to Canada’s Indigenous Screen Office – teyonhkiwihstekénha – for making this podcast possible through their New Media fund. 

 

We make space here for real conversations to unfold like when we visit in our communities. So take a breath, make some tea –  and listen to your Aunties. And when you are done – please follow us, provide some feedback, and share these visits with others. It helps us continue these visits together. 

 

 

 

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Auntie E.F. "Betts" Doxtater (Kanyen'kehà:ka) Artist/Educator/Author29 Jun 202301:03:04
Auntie Dr. Karletta Chief (Diné) Hydrologist/Community-Focused Scientist24 May 202301:15:44

Dr. Chief's Indigenous Resilience Center - “The Indigenous Resilience Center is the University of Arizona’s commitment to giving back to local tribes who have stewarded this land for millennia. Tribes have endured and sacrificed so much in terms of land loss and social and environmental impacts, much at the hand of the United States. Universities have benefited from this through their physical infrastructure and have a responsibility to be a bridge — to ethically address the challenges those communities face in ways that build trust and transparency.” - Dr. Karletta Chief

Native FEWS Alliance (Food, Water, Energy Systems) - "The dual vision of the Native FEWS Alliance (the Alliance) is to build a highly skilled Native American (NA) STEM workforce at the nexus of Food, Energy and Water and to co-innovate and deploy Indigenous place-based FEWS education and community partnerships."

Dr. Karletta Chief Bio

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Auntie Lori Campbell (Cree-Métis) Cultural Healer/IndigiQueer Activist26 Apr 202301:08:57

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Chandra Maracle (Kanyen'kehà:ka) Community Builder, Artist, Philosopher28 Mar 202301:08:26

Here is Chandra Maracle's Ted Talk on renaming post-partum depression

Kanikonnríyo - The good mind 

Kahkwa'ónwe - Original Food

Skaronhyasekò:wa - The Everlasting Tree School on Six Nations of the Grand River Rotinonhsyón:ni Territory

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Episode 3 - '25 - Ansley Jemison19 Mar 202501:23:34
This month we visit with masterful interviewer Ansley Jemison (Seneca Nation, Wolf Clan), host of the Original Peoples Podcast (OPP). We loved that the “Eastern Door” show (TAD podcast from Kanyen’kehà:ka territory) is crossing over with Ansley's excellent “Western Door” show. We had a rollicking time covering culture, art, traditional teachings, clans, while exploring sensitive topics that lots of people shy away from. Ansley is great at opening conversations in a safe and thoughtful way.

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Owennatekha Brian Maracle (Kanyen'kehà:ka) Language Revitalizer22 Feb 202301:01:56

Onkwawenna Kentyohkwa adult Kanyen'kéha language immersion website

Back on the Rez - 1997 book written by Brian Maracle 

Crazy Water: Native Voices on Addiction and Recovery - 1994 book written by Brian Maracle

The Canadian Encyclopedia entry on Owennatekha Brian Maracle 

The Canadian Encyclopedia entry on Kanyen'kéha (Mohawk) language written by Tehota'kará:ton Jeremy Green 

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Nikaronhya'a Dawn Martin (Kanyen'kehà:ka) Miss Six Nations, Teacher, Two-Spirit Advocate, Farmer24 Jan 202300:57:41

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Jeremy Dutcher (Wolastoqiyik) Singer, Language Carrier, Futurist PART 221 Dec 202200:40:33
Jeremy Dutcher (Wolastoqiyik) Singer, Language Carrier, Futurist PART 131 Oct 202201:09:20
Katygene Jackson and Kayla Jackson - Diné17 Aug 202201:17:23

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Kaluhyanu:wes Michelle Schenandoah - Oneida Rematriation Activist01 Jun 202201:45:02
LeAndra Nephin (Omaha/Ponca) - Therapist, Advocate, Podcaster27 Apr 202201:09:25

LeAndra's Not Invisible podcast.

Red House Series website 

 

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Paige Bethmann - Mohawk/Oneida Filmmaker29 Mar 202201:09:02

Click here for Remaining Native website

She Carries Her House Instagram 

Paige featured on Indian Country Today

New York Times article about Ku Stevens

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Terry Jones - Seneca Filmmaker25 Feb 202201:18:44

Terry Jones' website - Torn Jersey Media

Haudenosaunee Micro-Short Film Festival - Micro Mania Film Festival

Article about Terry giving commencement speech at Syracuse University

"Seneca Wolf Clan filmmaker Terry Jones, a Haudenosaunee Promise Scholar, Udall Scholar and Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship recipient was the Syracuse graduation commencement speaker Friday at the Syracuse University College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA).

In addition to those awards, Jones was also awarded the highest honor given at Syracuse University, the University Scholarship, which is only awarded to 12 students."

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Auntie Otsistohkwí:yo Melissa Elliott on the Power of Land, Language and Education01 Dec 202101:16:40

Click here for the Facebook link to Skaronhya:se'kó:wa - Everlasting Tree School

Here is the Wikipedia link describing Waldorf Education.

This is the website for the Mohawk language immersion program Onkwawenna Kentyohkwa at Six Nations of the Grand River

Click here for the link to A Mind Spread Out on the Ground - the book about Otsistohkwí:yo's family written by her sister Alicia Elliott.

 

 

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Episode 2 - '25 - Auntie Alex Jacobs-Blum - (Cayuga) Artist/Curator19 Feb 202500:49:13

AUNTIE: Wa’tkwanonweráton Sewakwé:kon. Today, we’re visiting with Alex Jacobs Blum who is Cayuga and Wolf Clan, from Six Nations of the Grand River.

Raised away from her territory, Alex now engages dual tracks of art and curation to find a pathway—to the natural world, her Haudenosaunee teachings and community - and to herself.

Alex shares her remarkable journey back to Cayuga territory in Central New York a few years back where she reconnected with ancestors to find her path forward.


AJB: You know growing up - there was a lot of shame built up around my identity, so I had been working to unpack and unlearn that. And then when I was there - you know I just felt so validated in myself and I felt so surrounded by so much care.


AUNTIE: Alex is well-known for surrounding others with the same type of care as she nurtures a supportive web of relationships, uplifts young artists, and weaves Indigenous perspectives into institutional spaces. Through her transformative work she disrupts hierarchical power structures in storytelling and creates space for collective, Indigenous, matrilineal voices to be amplified. And in the wake of her mother’s recent passing, Alex’s work has become a way to make sense of her own profound loss.


If you’re in region around Six Nations, you can experience Alex’s work firsthand—her In the Shadow of the Eclipse residency is on view at the Art Gallery of Hamilton until March 16, 2025. She also co-curated Ascending Horizons with Métis artist Kim Anderson, now showing at the McMaster Museum of Art until June 20, 2025.


We are Yetinistenha ne Tekaronkyakánere – the Aunties Dandelion and wa’tkwanonhweráton greetings, love, and respect to Canada’s Indigenous Screen Office – teyonkhiwihstekénha – who provide the support to keep this show running. And can you do us a big favor by liking and sharing our episodes – and subscribe to our feed on your favorite platform. It goes a long way to support voices of Indigenous changemakers. #IndigenousArt #IndigenousCreatives #Haudenosaunee #Cayuga #IndigenousVoices #Storytelling #ArtCurator #MatrilinealPower #IndigenousMedia #AuntiesDandelion #ListenToYourAunties 🎙️💫

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Auntie Kahehtoktha - Keeper of the Seeds25 Sep 202101:00:36

Kenhté:ke Seed Sanctuary: https://kenhtekeseedsanctuary.com

Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte (Tyendinaga Territory) https://mbq-tmt.org

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Episode 1 - '25 - Auntie Iehstoseranón:nha - (Kanyen'kehà:ka) She Keeps the Feathers22 Jan 202501:06:24

AUNTIE: Wa’tkwanonhweráton Sewakwékon! We’re starting strong in this Ohserá:se – this New Year – on The Aunties Dandelion podcast as we visit with Iehstoseranón:nha, who is Kanyen’kehà:ka and Bear Clan.

 

Iestohseranon:nha is a feather protector, community connector, and graphic artist. She is also a survivor of the Sixties Scoop – a term that refers to Canada’s mass removal of Onkwehón:we children into the welfare system and non-Indigenous families without consent of their own families or communities. That removal began in the 1960s and continues to this day.

 

Iehstoseranón:nha was 18 in 1989 when she found her biological family and spent these past decades reconnecting with her Mohawk territory at Akwesasne. She recognizes the unique emotional and spiritual perspective this epic journey brings.

 

IESTOHSERANON:NHA: Adoptees like me – Indigenous, Native, Onkwehón:we that are just coming home – we have spent our lives on the colonial side, with a Native heart and a Native spirit. And so we see in each other and we see our colleagues: we are the bridges, right? Because we can sit in both worlds and we can connect that in a different way than anyone else.

 

AUNTIE: Iehstoseranón:nha centers Indigenous women creatives as the owner, writer, and artist at Pass the Feather Indigenous, and founder of Indigenous Arts Collective of Canada – a registered charity. She was the first facilitator of the National Day of Truth Reconciliation on Ottawa’s Parliament Hill and founder of the National Indigenous Women Arts Conference. She takes the gifting of feathers seriously and I was grateful to receive a beautiful feather fan from her as we began our visit.

 

IESTOHSERANON:NHA: To be really, really truthful – it is friendship making, it’s relationship making. And I don’t give them to many people but when I do it’s because someone has touched me in a way and given me time in a way that I never expected them to. And so my first response is to share that medicine with them because that is important medicine that I think that people forget about. It’s that flight and that connection to Sky World.

 

AUNTIE: I feel a particular connection with Iehstoseranón:nha – whose name means “she keeps the feathers” because my name – Kahstoserakwathe – means Bright Feather – can you hear the similar Mohawk root word for feather - oshstòseri - in our names? It’s all about the feathers. We are Yetinistenha ne Tekaronkyakánere – the Aunties Dandelion and we’re sending a big wa’tkwanonhweráton to the Indigenous Screen Office – teyonkhiwihstekénha – who are providing us financial support for the third year in a row. And can you do us a big favor by liking and sharing our episodes – and subscribe to our feed on your favorite platform. It goes a long way to help us bring stories of Indigenous changemakers your way.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Auntie Germaine Tremmel(kénha), Lakota Water Protector18 Dec 202400:58:38

Honoring our epic Auntie Germaine Tremmel (kénha) in this powerful episode — a Lakota Water Warrior, lawyer, and descendant of Sitting Bull. 💧✨ We first met her in 2017, in the wake of the Standing Rock protection actions, and her wisdom and humour still pushes and pulls on us. Joining Kahstoserakwathe is Wisconsin activist and Food Sovereignty advocate Rebecca Kemble. Together, we remember Auntie Germaine’s profound insights — including her prediction of the global pandemic.

Germaine's voice carries truth, love and the spirit of resistance. Don't miss this unforgettable episode.

#PowerfulAuntie #WaterIsLife #LakotaWarrior #IndigenousWisdom

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Auntie Dr. Beverly Jacobs (Kanyen'kehà:ka) Justice Activist20 Nov 202401:16:17
Dr. Beverly Jacobs - University of Windsor bio

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Aunties Emergent! Filmmaker/Host Loren Waters (Cherokee/Kiowa) visits with Artist Dana Tiger (Muscogee/Seminole/Cherokee)23 Oct 202400:45:44

Dana Tiger's website

Loren Waters website

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The Aunties Who Are Saving Tuscarora Language25 Sep 202400:41:52

Nęyękwawęta'θkwáhshek - Tuscarora Language Program

Onkwawénna Kentsyóhkwa - Six Nations Kanyen'ké:ha language program that helped Tuscarora Nation

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Cree Author David A. Robertson on Mental Wellness, Reconciliation, and His Beloved Dad19 Feb 202600:46:31

The Aunties Dandelion Season Five begins with a full house, a generous conversation, and stories grounded in land, memory, and care. Last fall at the Cambridge Public Library, Kahstoserakwathe moderated a sold-out evening with celebrated author and media creator David A. Robertson of Norway House Cree Nation. This was TAD's first episode recorded with a live audience.


Together, they explored how land shapes emotional health, how identity unfolds through writing, and how family stories guide us across time.

David is a two-time winner of the Governor General's Literary Award, recipient of the TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award, and the Writers' Union of Canada Freedom to Read Award. In this conversation, he shares tender memories of his father, Dr. Donald Robertson, a pioneering educator whose influence continues to shape his work and life.


We also speak about David’s powerful six-part podcast Kiwew (S/he returns home), which became an unexpected and moving tribute to his father after he passed away during its creation.

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Dr. Jolene Rickard, Skarù:ręʔ, Turtle Clan18 Dec 202501:17:10

What a dynamic visit this month with Tuscarora Turtle clan scholar, curator, historian, and artist Dr. Jolene Rickard. At Cornell University, she teaches in the History of Art and Visual Studies and Art Departments, where she has long guided students through Indigenous studies leadership and practice. She co-curated two of the four permanent exhibitions at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian. Across her work, Dr. Rickard centers Indigenous knowledge, lived experience, and visual sovereignty.


Jolene is the curator of the ambitious outdoor exhibition Deskaheh in Geneva 1923 to 2023: Defending Haudenosaunee Sovereignty, which opened along the Quai Wilson in Geneva in 2023. The exhibition marks 100 years since Deskaheh Levi General sought to speak for the Haudenosaunee Confederacy at the League of Nations. Working with the Haudenosaunee External Relations Committee, the City of Geneva, and Docip, Dr. Rickard highlights the ongoing struggle for Indigenous sovereignty. Her work also addresses the health of her homeplace, including the impacts of the Niagara Falls Power Project and Love Canal on the Tuscarora community, bringing these conversations into museums, classrooms, and public life.

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Episode 11 - '25 - Auntie Betty Osceola, Miccosukee, Panther Clan19 Nov 202501:04:03

Betty Osceola (Miccosukee, Panther Clan) grounds us in the spectacular land and life of the Everglades in this visit with host Kahstoserakwathe. She explains how the region’s natural filtration system protects fresh water for millions, carries cultural memory for the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida, and sustains plant, animal, and water relatives.


Betty is well known for her prayer walks that became especially urgent when the cruelty of the “Alligator Alcatraz” outdoor immigrant detention camp surfaced last summer on traditional homelands in South Florida, and her research is instrumental in ongoing lawsuits around the facility. She says our struggle for equitable treatment cannot be separated from the health and well-being of the natural world.


Betty spent decades living what environmental justice looks like from an Indigenous perspective: caring for water as kin, community mobilization as a responsibility, and finding joy in walking, guiding, laughing, and listening. She asks us to consider how we reconnect to our own sources of care and to show up when the land says it needs us. This conversation is a clear invitation to walk our lands and raise our voices to protect the natural world and the humanity of our hearts. Stay to the end for her cute stories about mama ‘gators and their babies.


 Key Takeaways from Our Conversation with Betty Osceola



1. The Everglades is a living relative, not a resource.

Betty reminds us that the River of Grass is alive, speaking, and essential for the fresh water that sustains millions of people. Protecting it is not just an environmental act; it is a kinship responsibility. The "river" is a slow-moving sheet of water, full of swamp grasses, that flows from Lake Okeechobee to Florida Bay, moving only about a quarter-mile per day.


2. Ceremony is a form of resistance.

Through prayer walks and gatherings, Betty and her community practice ceremony as a form of activism. Each step, song, and offering re-centers human presence within a network of life that has been disrupted by extraction and control.


3. Alligator Alcatraz is part of a larger pattern.

Betty describes the proposed detention facility as one more example of how industrial and political systems see Indigenous land as empty or disposable. Her organizing through prayer, education, and direct presence helped bring national attention and legal action to pause construction.


4. Environmental justice and Indigenous rights are inseparable.

The conversation links the Miccosukee Tribe’s struggle for full federal recognition with the broader movement to restore balance between governance, ecology, and Indigenous sovereignty. Justice begins when Indigenous knowledge leads.


5. Joy and community are forms of survival.

Even amid ongoing fights for land and water, Betty’s stories centre laughter, family, and collective prayer. Joy is not a distraction from struggle; it is what keeps the work alive.


Photo by Lisette Morales, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons


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Episode 10 - '25 Aunties Emergent Alex Jacobs-Blum with Jaime Montour29 Oct 202501:08:05


Here is our lates Aunties Emergent episode, hosted by Cayuga curator and media artist Alex Jacobs-Blum. This is the second Aunties Emergent episode Alex has hosted this year - the first was with Grandmother René Thomas-Hill and her grounded approach continues to nurture the next generation of Indigenous storytellers. In this episode, Alex visits with Jaime L. Montour, an Indigenous woman of the Delaware, Turtle Clan, and Lenape Nations who lives in the Six Nations of the Grand River Territory.


Jaime, whose name Iotenerahtatenion means “leaves scattered by the wind,” brings a lifetime of experience connecting law, wellness, and spirit. She is a paralegal and the founder of JLM Professional Outsource and JLM AWAKENS, initiatives that weave together legal advocacy, holistic healing, and ancestral knowledge. With over 13 years of experience in family law and community service, Jaime shares powerful reflections on restorative justice, trauma-informed advocacy, and spirit-led reconciliation. Her voice reminds us that healing and accountability are deeply connected, guided by wisdom of land, language, and ancestor. ATTENTION: This episode includes stories of addiction and healing.

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Episode 9 - '25 Aunties Emergent Alycia Two Bears with Otakwan23 Sep 202500:45:01

The Aunties Dandelion is proud to share this new instalment of our Aunties Emergent series, guest-hosted by Alycia Two Bears, Mistawasis Nêhiyawak First Nation—an author, poet, full-spectrum birth worker, and land-based yoga teacher—who visits with Otakwan, Métisse, Otipemisiwak Nation—an educator, supermodel, producer, and activist. This mentoring series highlights the voices of young Aunties who are stepping into their gifts and responsibilities with courage, creativity, and honesty.


In this episode, Alycia leads a powerful dialogue on the urgent need to address bullying and lateral violence in our communities, focusing on expansive approaches to healing. Both Aunties share from the heart in a conversation that is as complex as the women themselves. They speak openly about the intersections of their identities, the responsibilities they carry, and the challenges of navigating community expectations. They invite us to reflect more deeply on how we care for one another, how we confront harm, and how we continue to build the full spectrum of our peoples.

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Episode 8 - '25 Aunties Revisited Series with Kahehtoktha Janice Brant (Kanyen'kehà:ka)20 Aug 202500:44:38

Four years ago, we sat down with Kahehtoktha Janice Brant one of the first Aunties we ever interviewed for this podcast.


She’s a Kanyen'kehà;ka Mohawk Seed Keeper, farmer, and co-founder of the Kenté:ke Seed Sanctuary. And honestly, that episode still stands out because of who she is - so we are very happy to include her in the first of our Aunties Revisited series.


Her name, Kahehtoktha, means “She goes the length of the garden,”. Janice has been doing this work for a long time - planting, protecting, organizing, teaching. And since that first interview, she’s only expanded what she’s doing.


We caught up with her again recently, in pajamas, with coffee. We also talk about her niece who’s starting to take on the seed work. Janice is still in it - and she is raising up the next generation of leaders.

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Episode 7 - '25 Auntie Kawennakon Bonnie Whitlow (Kanyen'kehà:ka)23 Jul 202501:27:42

Wa’tkwanonhweráton sewakwé:kon — greetings love, and respect to all of you listening, and a special shoutout if you're making your way to or from the Great Law Recital in Tyendinaga.


In this episode, we’re visiting with Kawénnakon Bonnie Whitlow. Her name means in her words, and over the years, she’s lived profoundly into that name — through art, education, original language work, and some unexpected places too, like the world of disc golf. She’s a little bit of a fanatic and I think she’s pulling me in as well.


Bonnie doesn’t make a lot of noise about what she’s done — but she’s taken on big responsibilities and projects. She supported Tuscarora language learning for two years, making a weekly three-hour border-crossing trip. She’s been part of rites of passage, cultural resurgence, and grassroots projects that bring language and land into everyday practice, the PeaceMaker’s Journey.


She’s also out here proposing and designing a disc golf course for Six Nations that carry Haudenosaunee teachings, creating space for play, movement, and community.In this conversation, Bonnie shares how her different paths  are not separate. They run alongside each other, weave together, and shape how she moves through the world.This episode is a real treat – and it’s a long one - cuz we got a lot to say. We are dipping our toes into video as well as audio so check us out in 15 minute increments on our YouTube channel.


Nyá:wenkò:wa as always to Indigenous Screen Office Teyonkhiwihstakenha – for supporting these stories.

I’m Kahstoserakwathe. We’re Yeti Nihstenha ne TeKaronyakenare The Aunties Dandelion. Thanks for coming along to - Listen to Your Aunties

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