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Voices Steve Peraza Voices Steve Peraza

Flowers of Buffalo: In Search of Eden

On Friday, June 23, I joined the Fellows on two tours, one of the People United for Sustainable Housing (PUSH-Buffalo) Green Economic Development Zone and another of an urban farm administered by Massachusetts Avenue Project (MAP). On both tours, I was chasing flowers with my phone โ€“ Iโ€™m obsessed. But I found much more than flower pictures. I found myself on the grassroots, too, a drop of dew shimmering in sight of Eden.

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Voices Steve Peraza Voices Steve Peraza

Flowers of Buffalo: Roses, Peonies, and Blooms

One April morning in 2021, I snapped a cell phone picture of a peony that was growing outside my momโ€™s house in Amherst, New York, a suburb of Buffalo. It was toward the end of the COVID pandemic. The term โ€œnew normalโ€ was all the rage. I didnโ€™t know it, then, but I was searching for love, and I had found it. This morning, the sun was beaming; the flowers were stretching for sunlight; and I was falling head over heels for the flowers of Buffalo.

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Announcements, Voices Taline Norsigian Announcements, Voices Taline Norsigian

Artsakh: The Burdens of Healing (Short Documentary)

Weave News is pleased to present this short documentary by Taline Norsigian, a young artist and filmmaker who has previously worked as an intern with our organization. The film was produced in 2022-2023 as part of an independent study project at St. Lawrence University under the supervision of Dr. John Collins. It was released by Hay Hokee Films in 2023.

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Voices, Analysis Cathy Shrady Voices, Analysis Cathy Shrady

We Are Not Powerless: Advocating For Clean Water and the Rights of Rivers

Recently, wildfire smoke darkened our skies in northern New York, making being outside unpleasant to downright unhealthy. We experienced what itโ€™s like when something fundamental that we take for granted, such as clean air, isnโ€™t available. Here in the North Country, far from big cities, we expect clean air; yet we were powerless to do anything about the air pollution we were suddenly suffering. Clean water is also fundamental to our well-being. We expect our waterways to be clean and healthy, but clean water is under threat from pollution.

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News, Voices Alejandro Beltran Cordero News, Voices Alejandro Beltran Cordero

Cirio Ruiz Gonzalez

To know Cirio Ruiz is to know the history of CORECAFECO. He has been part of this council for approximately 40 years. What is CORECAFECO? It is the Coatepec Regional Coffee Council. It is an organization that strives for dignified and fair treatment for coffee workers accomplished through community organization and clean processes, the production of coffee free of agrochemicals. They fight for fairer prices, valuing human and environmental life, taking care of biodiversity and ensuring that the land and water remain healthy.

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News, Voices Weave News News, Voices Weave News

Resisting โ€œDeath Projectsโ€: An Interview With Carlos Beas Torres

The following is an interview with Carlos Beas Torres, a member of the Uniรณn de Comunidades Indรญgenas de la Zona Nortel del Istmo de Tehuantepec (Union of Indigenous Communities from the North of the Isthmus or UCIZONIT), an organization that has resisted the CIIT since its conception and forms part of the โ€œEl Sur Resisteโ€ (The South Resists) Caravan.

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News, Voices Weave News News, Voices Weave News

Alert: Repression and Eviction of the โ€œEl Sur Resisteโ€ (The South Resists) Caravan in Guichicovi, Oaxaca

Translation of a statement issued on April 28 by the National and International Caravan โ€œEl Sur Resisteโ€ (The South Resists) regarding the repression and eviction of the "Tierra y Libertad" (Land and Liberty) protest camp, which was located in the Mogoรฑe Viejo community, Huichicovi, Oaxaca. Mexico. Read the original Spanish statement.

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Analysis, Voices Elena Shaw Analysis, Voices Elena Shaw

Incendiary Commentary: The Ninots of Las Fallas, Valencia

A fiery tradition in Valencia, Spain, called Las Fallas is held annually from March 1 to 19. Festivities happen throughout the day and night, including firework shows like the grandiose and explosive Nit del Foc on March 18, which uses between two to 4.5 tons of gunpowder, and parades such as La Ofrenda and Mascleta. On March 19, the burning of freestanding doll-like figures called ninots, La Cremร , makes the city a chaotic playground that reflects upon social and political realities of the day.

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News, Voices John Collins News, Voices John Collins

โ€œWeโ€™re trying to move a societyโ€: Speaking Up For the Rights of Rivers in the North Country

โ€œRivers keep us alive and keep so many other living beings alive.โ€ With those words, Blake Lavia, the President of Talking Rivers, welcomed more than 30 North Country community members to a wide-ranging discussion on a revolutionary idea: the Rights of Rivers. Held at Clarkson University on Earth Day (April 22), the event showcased the local and global momentum behind the idea as well as some of the key challenges facing those who would like the Rights of Rivers to become law across the St. Lawrence River / Kaniatarowanรฉnhne and Adirondack Watersheds.

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Analysis, Voices Berenice Gervacio Analysis, Voices Berenice Gervacio

Gentrification and Resistance in Lavapiรฉs

I was excited to learn more about this neighborhood and explore it myself. I come from a multicultural neighborhood in New York City, where my community is home to hundreds of immigrants. I was raised by immigrants myself, so I wondered if Lavapiรฉs would remind me of home. However, the professor explained that there is a major problem occurring in Lavapiรฉs: gentrification.

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News, Voices, Analysis Derek Sherrange News, Voices, Analysis Derek Sherrange

Remember the T in LGBTQIA+: Trans Community Faces Increasing Violence in Coastal Kenya

Recently Kenya has come into the global spotlight following the murder of fashion designer, model, and LGBTQIA+ activist Edwin Chiloba in a suspected hate crime in January 2023. However, there are LGBTQIA+ people in Kenya who rarely make it into the global and even national media spotlight - people like Wayne, a monitor with the Center for Minority Rights, who is working to protect and support LGBTQIA+ people in the coastal region of Kenya.

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Analysis, Voices Elena Shaw Analysis, Voices Elena Shaw

Lavapiรฉs: The Perfect Place for Rebellion

Since January 2022, Spain, like much of Europe, has suffered a prolonged drought exacerbated by climate change. Luckily, activist groups such as Extinction Rebellion are paving the way for a revolution to fight the destruction caused by our inaction against climate change. Recently I came across some of Extinction Rebellionโ€™s powerful visuals while walking through the Lavapiรฉs neighborhood in the Spanish capital, Madrid.

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Voices, Analysis John Collins Voices, Analysis John Collins

Criminalizing Solidarity: The Eternal Fascist Playbook

Hereโ€™s the thing: Fascists hate solidarity. At a minimum, they want you to laugh at people who embrace the solidarity impulse and who act accordingly. At a maximum, they want you to support the criminalization and violent suppression of this impulse. What this means is that acting out of solidarity is a fundamental part of the larger project of fighting fascism - a project whose global urgency is growing by the day.

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Voices Valeria Obregon Voices Valeria Obregon

โ€œWe are Moreโ€: Public Art With a Purpose

โ€œPhingbodhipakkiyaโ€™s art encourages you to stop and reflect. The public nature of her eye-catching work encouraged me, and likely thousands of others walking down the crowded NYC streets, to consider individual and collective attitudes towards specific societal groups. It calls out double standards when it comes to appropriating a culture instead of appreciating it.โ€

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Analysis, Voices Nikita Krakhofer Analysis, Voices Nikita Krakhofer

Why Do People Do Graffiti?

According to Art Journal, โ€œthere are many possible purposes for graffiti: it can be to tell a story, highlight a certain moment in time where things went wrong or right, describe people, politics, culture, art, places and society together; express yourself anonymously, or just be another art form.โ€ However, that is only a partial answer. The actual reason why people do graffiti is much more complex and involves learning a bit of history โ€”making it impossible to summarize in one sentence.

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Analysis, Voices Nikita Krakhofer Analysis, Voices Nikita Krakhofer

Exploring the Underground Graffiti Culture in Madrid

I am fascinated by how graffiti artists like SODA express themselves by using the public space of a city as their canvas. Graffiti is not only an artform, it is also a lifestyle, a culture. Painting at night, breaking into train stations, exploring underground tunnels, running from police (hopefully not) are part of the everyday life of a graffiti artist. They go to great extents and risk their lives, careers, and freedom to realize their work. I have a lot of respect for those who keep this culture alive.

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News, Voices Gaia Guatri News, Voices Gaia Guatri

Day Off in Victoria Park: Blooming Solidarity Within Indonesian Domestic Workers Community

Every Sunday, a warming atmosphere spreads out in Victoria Park, a green spot in the centre of Hong Kong where groups of foreign domestic workers (FDWs) spend their one day off. Since in Hong Kong, domestic workers are forced by law to live in their employersโ€™ houses, they often find themselves trapped in their workplace. For this reason, on Sunday, they gather in Victoria Park to share their skills and celebrate life in all its forms.

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