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Celebrate Earth Day with renowned activist and author Winona LaDuke as she presents: Rights of Nature

  • Spotted Horse Press by Winona LaDuke East Round Lake Road Ponsford, MN, 56575 United States (map)

Celebrate Earth Day with renowned activist and author Winona LaDuke as she presents: Rights of Nature

FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2022:

6:00-7:30pm (EST)—Winona LaDuke's presentation followed by a live Q&A with the speaker.

VENUE: Winona LaDuke's live presentation will be broadcast virtually over Zoom.

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER and to receive information on how to attend via Zoom.

Hosted by Sustainable Woodstock and Pentangle Arts, with support in part by the Vermont Humanities.

Free and open to all with a suggested donation of $10. (All proceeds will be donated to benefit the Abenaki Nation.)

Click here to donate.

About this event

Followed by an audience Q&A

Presented by Sustainable Woodstock & Pentangle Arts

Winona LaDuke is a Harvard-educated economist, environmental activist, author, hemp farmer, grandmother, and a two-time former Green Party Vice President candidate with Ralph Nader. LaDuke specializes in rural development, sustainable economics, food and energy sovereignty and environmental justice. She is also an international thought leader and lecturer in climate justice, renewable energy, and environmental justice, plus an advocate for protecting Indigenous plants and heritage foods from patenting and genetic engineering. Living and working on the White Earth reservation in northern Minnesota, she leads several organizations including Honor the Earth (co-founded with The Indigo Girls 28 years ago), Anishinaabe Agriculture Institute, Akiing, and Winona’s Hemp. These organizations develop and model cultural-based sustainable development strategies utilizing renewable energy and sustainable food systems.

Her seven books include: The Militarization of Indian Country (2011); Recovering the Sacred: The Power of Naming and Claiming (2005); The non-fiction book All Our Relations: Native Struggles for Land and Life (1999, South End Press); and a novel, Last Standing Woman (1997, Voyager Press). Her new book, To Be a Water Protector: Rise of the Wiindigoo Slayers (Fernwood Press/Columbia University), is an expansive, provocative engagement with issues that have been central to her many years of activism, including seven years battling Line 3 — an Enbridge tar sands oil pipeline in northern Minnesota.

Free and open to all with a suggested donation of $10. All proceeds will be donated to benefit Abenaki Communities in Vermont. Donations can be made through Pentangle Arts at: https://ci.ovationtix.com/35996/store/donations/46882.

Supported in part by the Vermont Humanities.

This event will be held online

Phone: 802-457-3981

programs@sustainablewoodstock.org