Twila Cassadore is an Arizona-based forager, food educator, advocate for Indigenous food sovereignty, and member of the San Carlos Apache Tribe who teaches Indigenous food traditions throughout the Western Apache tribes. [1] [2] Through her work, Cassadore promotes the importance of foods consumed by Apaches prior to the forcible relocation of Native Americans to reservations and subsequent reliance on government rations. [2] She interviews tribal elders, takes foraging trips into the wilderness, and delivers public presentations to share her research. [2]
Cassadore has been a food educator for the past 25 years, launching a project called the Western Apache Diet Project to interview tribal elders and popularize traditional foods such as acorn and grass seeds. [3] She interviewed over 100 tribal elders, ultimately helping to identify more than 200 traditional Apache edible plants and nearly as many traditional Apache recipes for a database funded with a 2013 grant of $37,500 by the First Nations’ Native Agriculture and Food Systems Initiative. [4]
Limited access to foods with high nutritional content and sedentary lifestyles are linked to health problems in the Western Apache population, including high levels of obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure, and heart disease; substance abuse, domestic violence, and suicide are also prevalent. [4] Cassadore has spoken about struggling with addiction and mental health crises in her own life, including suicide attempts, prior to beginning her career as a food educator. [2] She notes that many of the tribal youth she works with have similarly experienced trauma, saying, "I was sexually assaulted before I even attended kindergarten. This is something we never will talk about. Many on the rez have gone through this.” [2] Cassadore has stated that foraging helped her heal. [2] In a seminar on the Western Apache Diet Project, she said, "I have been drug-free since 2002. And reconnecting with myself and my identity was done through harvesting. And harvesting some of these food in the locations that were my ancestors are from, the clan maps of where some of these places we’ve gone to and reconnecting with who I am and it rooted me back to where I came from. It gave me a sense of purpose." [5]
One component of Cassadore's foraging includes leading hunts for the gloscho (desert woodrat), hunts that were in the past led only by men. [2] The San Carlos Apache Culture Center Museum, the Natural Resources Apache Foods Program, and the Apache Tradition and Culture group sponsored a hunt in March 2020 open to the public. [6]
She has appeared with television host Padma Lakshmi on the series Taste the Nation. [7] [8] She is also featured in Gather , a documentary film on Indigenous food sovereignty. [3]
The Tohono Oʼodham are a Native American people of the Sonoran Desert, residing primarily in the U.S. state of Arizona and the northern Mexican state of Sonora. The United States federally recognized tribe is the Tohono Oʼodham Nation.
The Iñupiat are a group of Indigenous Alaskans whose traditional territory roughly spans northeast from Norton Sound on the Bering Sea to the northernmost part of the Canada–United States border. Their current communities include 34 villages across Iñupiat Nunaat, including seven Alaskan villages in the North Slope Borough, affiliated with the Arctic Slope Regional Corporation; eleven villages in Northwest Arctic Borough; and sixteen villages affiliated with the Bering Straits Regional Corporation. They often claim to be the first people of the Kauwerak.
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The San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation, in southeastern Arizona, United States, was established in 1872 as a reservation for the Chiricahua Apache tribe as well as surrounding Yavapai and Apache bands removed from their original homelands under a strategy devised by General George Crook of setting the various Apache tribes against one another. Once nicknamed "Hell's Forty Acres" during the late 19th century due to poor health and environmental conditions, today's San Carlos Apaches successfully operate a Chamber of Commerce, the Apache Gold and Apache Sky Casinos, a Language Preservation program, a Culture Center, and a Tribal College.
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Terrol Dew Johnson is a Tohono O'odham basket weaver, sculptor, and health advocate, who promotes Indigenous foods to prevent diabetes.
Janet McCloud was a prominent Native American and indigenous rights activist. Her activism helped lead to the 1974 Boldt Decision, for which she was dubbed "the Rosa Parks of the American Indian Movement." She co-founded Women of All Red Nations (WARN) in 1974. The first convening of the Indigenous Women's Network was in her backyard in Yelm, Washington in August 1985.
Rita Pitka Blumenstein was the first certified traditional doctor in Alaska. She worked for the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium. Blumenstein was a member of the International Council of 13 Indigenous Grandmothers—a group of spiritual elders, medicine women and wisdom keepers—since its founding in 2004.
The Swinomish Indian Tribal Community, also known as the Swinomish Tribe, is a federally recognized Tribe located on Puget Sound in Washington, United States. They are an Indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest that includes the Central and Coast Salish peoples who lived in the Samish and Skagit River valleys, nearby coasts, and islands. The Tribe's population includes Swinomish, Lower Skagit, Upper Skagit, Kikiallus, and Samish peoples.
Blu Farias Hunt is an American actress. She is best known for her roles as Inadu/The Hollow in The CW supernatural drama series The Originals (2017) and as August Catawnee in the Netflix science fiction drama series Another Life (2019–2021).
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