Theresa Harlan is the founder & director of The Alliance for Felix Cove, dedicated to celebrating her Coast Miwok family’s life at Tomales Bay.
The Alliance was intentionally built and led by Indigenous women.
Learn more about Theresa and Alliance for Felix Cove @alliance4felixcove
🎧⛰️ In a new Bioneers podcast episode, “The Native American LandBack Movement Reaches Urban America,” hear from Corrina Gould, a celebrated activist of the First Peoples of the Bay Area and a leader in the #LandBack Movement: buff.ly/gaXXWEG
This national day of mourning, aka “thanksgiving,” learn about the history of the land you are on, the relationship of your own family line to stolen land, and consider what you can do to redistribute resources.
Donate at bit.ly/let-the-land-breathe or learn more at the link in bio.
The Land Loss Prevention Project was founded in 1982 by the North Carolina Association of Black Lawyers to curtail epidemic losses of Black owned land in North Carolina.
This Black History month, we uplift the rematriation efforts of Black and Indigenous Land happening around the world.
Our teammate Ashley needs your support-
18-acres of Indigenous land in NC, rich with cultural significance, is at risk of being lost to a forced sale.
They are aiming to raise $60,000 in order to protect it for future generations.
Visit bit.ly/bellfamilyland to donate!
Soko:te (California Bay Laurel) is providing us with its fruit this time of year! Ohlone people have harvested Bay Nuts for thousands of years and our team spent the day gathering and processing them. When roasted, the flavor resembles coffee and is also a natural source of energy.
This International Working Women’s Day, we gathered to uplift the women and gender expansive folks who have paved the way for revolutionary struggle around the world.
We are grateful to our collaborators for the hours of planning and organizing that made this day possible!
Intergenerational relationships to fire and to each other are nurtured on rematriated land.
Check out Horše Hiyis, directed by Ashley Salaz @mingus.mouse at @oaklandmuseumca Good Fire: Tending Native Lands exhibit opening November 7, 2025.
Working with floodwater at Pinnantak
Read more about the rain garden in our Fall newsletter, Ya Nuunukne through the link in bio or bit.ly/stltfall25
Article by Sam
Render of Pinnantak Rain Garden by BASE Landscaping
Project funded by the Alameda Countywide Clean Water Program