"Where Olive Trees Weep" offers a searing window into the struggles and resilience of the Palestinian people under Israeli occupation. Watch the full trailer now: https://t.co/E024bRkH2P
#GazaCeasefireNow#crisisingaza
Join us for a timely and necessary conversation with Dr. Samah Jabr, Dr. Gabor Maté, and Dr. Jennifer Mullan, facilitated by Dr. Jess Ghannam.
🗓️ June 26, 2026
✨ What Occupation Does to the Soul
Global Reverberations of Palestinian Historical Trauma
https://t.co/qRNqgpfDbK
During our recent Little Singer gathering, Pat McCabe shared a perspective that challenged the line many modern cultures draw between myth and reality.
Join us for a conversation marking the book launch of Radiance and Pain in Resilience, a powerful collection of essays by Palestinian psychiatrist, psychotherapist, and internationally respected mental health advocate Dr. Samah Jabr.
https://t.co/qRNqgpfDbK
In our latest film Little Singer, Clayson Benally speaks about the teachings carried by the Holy Ones and how they were given as ways for people to communicate with the Earth.
https://t.co/RVmOWHRm80
Tiokasin reflects on how colonialism has always depended on separation, separating people from land, from intuition, from relationship, from the living world itself. The newest form of colonization is what we see now with AI
Jeneda reflects on how colonial systems often define wealth only through money, ownership, and accumulation. From that perspective, Indigenous ways of life are labeled as “impoverished.”
https://t.co/RVmOWHRm80
A Diné mother, community member, and great-granddaughter of the medicine man Little Singer, Byrde Nez reflects on how the songs never disappeared. They remain in the wind, in the ceremonies, in the memory of the people and the land itself.
https://t.co/RVmOWHRm80
Jeneda Benally shares a traditional Diné understanding of illness.
An artist, musician, and longtime advocate for Indigenous rights and environmental protection, Jeneda speaks to a worldview where illness is reframed from disease to disharmony.
https://t.co/RVmOWHRm80
Join us on June 4, 2026 4:00 – 5:30pm PST for :
"Tending the Whole:
Moving Personal Healing into Collective Liberation"
A Community Gathering with Nkem Ndefo, Staci K. Haines, and Kai Cheng Thom, facilitated by Rae Abileah
https://t.co/o3DgkoSdWT
Tiokasin Ghosthorse speaks to how we’ve lost touch with something essential.
How our intuitions have been blinded by where we place our attention. So much of our energy, specially with AI, is pulled into the future, into anticipation, into abstraction.
A mother, community member, and great-granddaughter of Little Singer, Byrde Nez speaks from lived experience when she shares:
As Navajo people, you are not born into just parents.
You are born into community.
https://t.co/RVmOWHRm80
Clayson Benally recounts how colonizers would kill elders, women and children with the backs of their guns, conserving bullets, treating human life as expendable and deeming who is worthy (or not) of a bullet.
https://t.co/RVmOWHRm80
Pat McCabe is a Diné mother, grandmother, artist, and ceremonial leader devoted to restoring balance for people and Earth. Her work draws from Indigenous sciences of thriving life, guiding communities back into right relationship.
https://t.co/RVmOWHRm80
A Diné artist, educator, and cultural advocate, Albert Brent Chase has spent his life working across mediums, painting, weaving, teaching, to carry forward Diné identity and knowledge. In the film, he brings this teaching into simple, clear language
https://t.co/RVmOWHRm80
In a grounded reflection, Jaiya John speaks to the importance of honoring our full humanity.
We are not meant to live as fragments.
We are a spectrum
joy and grief,
strength and vulnerability,
rage and tenderness.
All of it belongs.
For the Diné, these are teachings carried in the language itself: spoken, lived, and passed on. Language becomes a way of remembering who you are in relation to everything around you.
https://t.co/RVmOWHRm80
In a quiet, powerful moment from Little Singer, Pat McCabe offers a prayer:
An invocation to the ancestors.
A calling.
She asks that they walk with us.
That they help us see clearly.
That they guide us back to what is real.
To what is loving.
https://t.co/RVmOWHRm80
What Empire Cannot Erase Highlight Moment
Omid Safi speaks to a core teaching in Persian spirituality:
Let your heart be where your feet are
A simple phrase, but not an easy one. It asks us to stay present, to not escape into ideas, or spirituality as a way around what is here