In this episode Lisa, Gina, and Marybeth discuss their personal critique and opinions about the movie "Cabrini" just out by Angel Studios. The movie is a biographical drama about the Italian nun Francesca Cabrini who was sent by the Vatican to New York City in the late 1800's to aid the Italian immigrants who were living there. Madre Cabrini was the first American saint and is known for her many miracles as well the orphanages and hospitals she founded.
Dr. Gina Miele is a professor of Italian literature, culture, and folklore at Montclair State University. She is a second generation Italian American and a fluent Italian language speaker.
Marybeth Bonfiglio is a writer, ancestralist, and works with people of all lineages to help them reconnect and remember who they may have been before the plague of whiteness, colonization, and assimilation. She holds ancestral pilgrimages on the beloved island of Sicily for those longing to go deeper with land, culture and people through her organization, Radici Siciliane.
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In this episode Lisa, Gina, and Marybeth discuss their personal critique and opinions about the movie "Cabrini" just out by Angel Studios. The movie is a biographical drama about the Italian nun Francesca Cabrini who was sent by the Vatican to New York City in the late 1800's to aid the Italian immigrants who were living there. Madre Cabrini was the first American saint and is known for her many miracles as well the orphanages and hospitals she founded.
Dr. Gina Miele is a professor of Italian literature, culture, and folklore at Montclair State University. She is a second generation Italian American and a fluent Italian language speaker.
Marybeth Bonfiglio is a writer, ancestralist, and works with people of all lineages to help them reconnect and remember who they may have been before the plague of whiteness, colonization, and assimilation. She holds ancestral pilgrimages on the beloved island of Sicily for those longing to go deeper with land, culture and people through her organization, Radici Siciliane.
Episode 5: Permaculture Design and Ethics with Adriana Magaña
Wild Under Root
1 hour 15 minutes 58 seconds
5 years ago
Episode 5: Permaculture Design and Ethics with Adriana Magaña
In this episode I am joined by Adriana Magaña from The Center for Bioregional Living in Ellenville, NY. She is a drummer, permaculture designer, visionary, opinion haver, and life long student of the natural world. She makes her life in the Hudson Valley with her partner, daughter, and many plants, animals waters, microbes, and fungi. Adriana recently ran for Ulster County Legislator and is socially and politically active in her community.
The tools and methods of permaculture are an absolute necessity right now when the state of our global ecological, economic, and political conditions are impacting our daily lives, access to resources, and our ability to secure even the most basic of human rights and needs.
During our discussion Adriana and I explore her understanding of the 3 ethics of permaculture; Earth Care, People Care, and Fair Share as well as how the current Covid-19 pandemic has brought specific aspects of permaculture into focus including seed saving, securing clean and accessible water, and localized food sovereignty. We also discuss social permaculture and how important it is to the success of other aspects of creating sustainable systems while practicing the skills needed to survive and thrive in a world of uncertainty and socio-economic reconstruction.
Wild Under Root
In this episode Lisa, Gina, and Marybeth discuss their personal critique and opinions about the movie "Cabrini" just out by Angel Studios. The movie is a biographical drama about the Italian nun Francesca Cabrini who was sent by the Vatican to New York City in the late 1800's to aid the Italian immigrants who were living there. Madre Cabrini was the first American saint and is known for her many miracles as well the orphanages and hospitals she founded.
Dr. Gina Miele is a professor of Italian literature, culture, and folklore at Montclair State University. She is a second generation Italian American and a fluent Italian language speaker.
Marybeth Bonfiglio is a writer, ancestralist, and works with people of all lineages to help them reconnect and remember who they may have been before the plague of whiteness, colonization, and assimilation. She holds ancestral pilgrimages on the beloved island of Sicily for those longing to go deeper with land, culture and people through her organization, Radici Siciliane.