We are deeply committed to participating in righting the wrongs of colonialism and of the oppression and forced assimilation of Indigenous Peoples worldwide, by engaging in not only reconciliation but also reconcili-action.
The Maasai take their culture with them wherever they go. WORDS AND IMAGES Melanie Furman “My grandparents only ate cow’s milk, cow’s meat, cow’s blood, and wild fruit they would…
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by Eliza Smith People on traditional canoes on Lake Bunyonyi in western Uganda, paddling toward the boat landing at the local marketplace. Photo: Eliza Smith, 2017 . It was a specific…
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by Marilee K. Gloe Entering the Siq, Petra. The floor of the tall, narrow passage unreachable by the desert sun leaves it a corridor of coolness. Photo: Marilee K. Gloe, 2004…
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by Aran Shetterly . Milpas beyond town, making a patchwork of the mountain slopes. Residents walk up to two hours from Santa Cruz Tepetotutla to land designated for cultivation. Photo:…
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by Tom Corcoran . Ramly tells Minang stories by the firelight in the Gamaran Forest. The art of storytelling is still very much alive in Minang culture. Photo: J. J. Kohler, 2015…
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by Dawn Wink . . . in the bottom of a dark canyon, I stood in a shroud of voices. They spun up the canyon walls, radiating through the dusky…
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