Showcasing Traditional Apache Dishes: Modern-day Foraging, with Twila Cassadore
Mountain Prayer and Song Ceremony with Earth Offering, with Rosa Tupina Yaotonalcuahtli
Woman’s Circle: Healing your Divine Feminine through Indigenous Teachings: Featuring Apache and Azteca Grandmothers, with Twyla Cassadore and Rosa Tupina Yaotonalcuahtli
All Is Born of Water – All Is Sustained of Water: A Talk on Water Sovereignty, with Vernon Masyesva
Integrating Indigenous Wisdom into Modern Thought: Q/A with Apache and Azteca Grandmothers, with Vernon Masayesva, Twyla Cassadore and Rosa Tupina Yaotonalcuahtli
Twila Cass adore is a member of the San Carlos Apache Tribe of Arizona, a traditional Apache forager, food educator, and advocate for Indigenous food sovereignty. Through her work, Twila teaches Western Apache food traditions at a global level as a means of fostering physical health, healing, spiritual connection, and cultural identity. She interviews tribal elders, takes foraging trips into the wilderness, and delivers public presentations to share her research.
Abuela Tupina for the past fifty years has walked alongside Native healers and ceremonial knowledge keepers throughout the U.S. and Mexico, predominantly from the Mexica (Azteca), Huichol and Raramuri traditions, to inform and nurture the vitality of her purpose in this world. When she was called to the Danza de Luna Xochimeztli in Teotihuacan, Mexico, under the leadership of Abuela Tonamitl Retiz, she knew she had found the space to heal her intergenerational trauma and to guide other women’s healing. In 2012, after being initiated as an Abuela in the Danza de la Luna tradition, Abuela Tupina planted her sacred ceremonial circle, Danza de la Luna Huitzilmeztli, where she continues to lead and nurture her capuli (community and family) of dancers and supporters.
Vernon Masayesva is the former Tribal President of the Hopi Nation in Arizona and a world-renowned cultural leader, water activist and educational trailblazer. Mr. Masayesva has been involved in the tangled intricacies of coal and water mining on the Black Mesa in Northern Arizona for decades. He is an international speaker on the subject of water and is honored among many world leaders, including former President Bill Clinton who has referred to Vernon as an “environmental hero”. Today, he is Director of Black Mesa Trust, founded in 1999 by the Hopi Nation to address the severe environmental impact and destruction brought on by the Peabody Coal Company’s water withdrawals from their principal aquif