Food sovereignty is about the right of communities to self determine their food systems. It advocates for locally grown and culturally relevant food that centres health and nutrition outside the dominant models of global industrial food production. Cultivating food sovereignty is essential, not only for our individual and communal health, but also for preserving our heritage, both spiritual and cultural. It is an essential ingredient to build stronger and sustainable foundations for future generations.
Food sovereignty in practice has many different forms. It can emerge from the grassroots through everyday activism, such as growing a vegetable garden at home or with a local community, or building close relationships with local farmers and food producers, or learning about plant medicine. Seed preservation, a food sovereignty practice which allows us to map and archive food histories, is especially important for colonised and dispossessed communities. What these practices have in common is a reconnection to sustainable food practices that nourish better relationships with ourselves, our communities, and our planet.
THE EVENT: 30th October 2022, 7-8:30 PM GMT
Amanny Ahmad and Nessie Reid, who both engage with food sovereignty through embodied and personal practices, led An Intimate Discussion on Food Sovereignty. Being embedded in local and indigenous communities, they have learned strategies of self-preservation and survival, enabling and creating networks of solidarity and exchange around food sovereignty and food justice that transcends borders.
Through a thoughtful conversation, they explored:
Join us for a thoughtful discussion with Amanny Ahmad and Nessie Reid, who both engage with food sovereignty through embodied and personal practices. Being embedded in local and indigenous communities, they have learned strategies of self-preservation and survival, enabling and creating networks of solidarity and exchange around food sovereignty and food justice that transcends borders.
Join us on 30th October 2022, from 7-8:30 PM GMT for an intimate conversation that will explore:
SPEAKERS
Amanny Ahmad is an artist, chef, forager, Ikebana enthusiast, writer, food activist and traveller currently living in upstate New York. Born in Utah to Palestinian immigrants, Ahmad spent her early life traveling back-and-forth between the southwestern United States and her family’s village in the occupied West Bank, where her interest in foraging began, evolving as a way of preserving the culinary traditions of her family. Since then, Ahmad, who is a self-taught chef, has studied culinary traditions and wild food ways in Italy, Mexico, Palestine, and North America, in an effort to record and help preserve indigenous culinary traditions and methods of survival.
Nessie Reid is Co-Director of the Global Diversity Foundation with Emily Caruso. She lives on an organic farm in Wales with a herd of cheeky Welsh Black cows and is a Spiritual Ecologist with a focus on agroecology, food sovereignty, health, and land connection within both the UK and abroad. She has worked in Indonesia, India, Japan and within Europe on local and Indigenous communities’ rights to land for growing food, as well as the preservation of traditional artistic and cultural practices. She has a degree in Archaeology and the Study of Religions with Hindi from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS).
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