Land as Our First Teacher: Exploring Relationships

Land as Our First Teacher: Exploring Relationships between Indigenous Storytelling and Pedagogical Documentation

The Oral Tradition of Ojibwe storytelling maintains a continuous relationship with 40 000 years of Land-based Knowledge of living in harmony and balance with Mother Earth and each other. Since the mid 20th century, storytelling through pedagogical documentation has emerged from Reggio Emilia, Italy as a way to build relationships in early learning. The intention for the day will be to explore the relationships between these different approaches to storytelling as they relate to the Land as our first teacher.

Food for Thought: an Event on Food Sustainability and Innovation

ENSPIRE is back, but with a new look, same feel.

ENSPIRE presents, Food for Thought: An Event on Food Sustainability and Innovation. Are you fascinated by the future of food, technology and sustainability? Immerse yourself in an event that offers insight into this growing industry. The goal of this event is to educate students and like-minded individuals on a series of key topics including food systems, food insecurity, the future of grocery shopping and meat consumption. Learn and network with industry professionals such as restaurateurs, food critics and chefs through a keynote, panel, and facilitated mixer.

The intersection of biotech, agriculture and digital advances are transforming the global food industry. Presenting itself as an attractive market with untapped potential. Take advantage of this opportunity and join us on January 30th at 5pm for a night of interactive and engaging conversation!

Date: January 30th, 2019
Time: 5pm-9pm
Venue: Science Discovery Zone

https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/food-for-thought-an-event-on-food-sustainability-and-innovation-registration-88061027905

Creating Spaces that Resonate — Wolfe Bonham

Have you ever noticed that some garden spaces just feel right, even if they aren’t the nicest looking gardens? While others that are immaculate, well designed, and downright spectacular, just don’t feel right? Wolfe Bonham of Peace, Love, and Landscaping will help us understand why some garden spaces truly resonate with our souls (be it large or very small!), and how to make sure the new ones we create do.

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MEETING DETAILS:
Doors open at 7pm.
Meeting starts at 7:30pm.
Refreshments available.

Attending a one-off meeting, to get a feel for our society and listen to the guest speaker, is completely free. All are welcome!

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MEMBERSHIP:
If you like what you see, or simply wish to support our society, a recognized not-for-profit, membership is only $20 for 12 months. This fee helps us support community gardens and outreach activities around Toronto.

Plus, your membership entitles you to:
• Admittance to 8 insightful horticultural talks and meetings;
• Access to rare and unusual seeds, plants, and plant materials;
• Discounts at participating nurseries when you show your membership card;
• Special invitations and offers available only to members;
• Plus access to a wonderful network of green thumbs, environmental devotees, and general plant and garden enthusiasts!

Members need not have their own garden or extensive knowledge of gardening, just an interest in plants, gardens, and gardening, in both private and public areas of the city. All manner of gardeners are welcome. Our members make gardens on roof-tops, apartment balconies, indoors, under glass and under lights, outdoors, and some only in their minds.

Our hope is to inspire you to grow and to help us carry on the tradition of bringing soul and serenity to Toronto. We believe that some things, like gardens, can cut through all boundaries and open the door to mutual understanding.

We hope you will join us!

www.parkdaletorontohort.com

DesignTO Talks: They Feed Off Buildings

Luisa Rubisch and Rasa Weber of the Berlin-based design and architecture collective They Feed Off Buildings (TFOB) speak about the process of creating ‘Urban Terrazzo’, a composite material that uses architectural debris to pay homage to demolished buildings and their histories.

Following the talk, Maryam Siddiqi, Lifestyle Editor of The Globe and Mail, will interview Rubisch and Weber.

The project ‘Urban Terrazzo‘, which travels through various cities in order to explore the given materials of architectural demolition, illustrates one of TFOB’s experiments in performative design. Whenever an old building has to be demolished or its core removed, an enormous amount of demolition waste is produced. What seems like a pile of rubble, which usually ends up in local landfills, can actually be the beginning of a great new material story…

They Feed off Buildings (TFOB) is a design and architecture collective from Berlin, which specializes in material research and design. The studio unites a team with expertise in design, material research, architecture, film, and photography. Their performative design interventions explore a new perspective on architecture and its materiality. www.theyfeedoffbuildings.com

Luisa Rubisch and Rasa Weber are guests of the Goethe-Institut.

Writer and editor Maryam Siddiqi creates innovative journalism with a lasting impact. As the Lifestyle Editor at The Globe and Mail, she helms Globe Pursuits spanning the best in style, design, travel, food and drink, and health. As a writer, she specializes in lifestyle editorial, primarily travel and design, and her work has appeared in the National Post, Chatelaine, Report on Business, En Route, and Elle Canada.

‘DesignTO Talks: They Feed Off Buildings’ is organized by DesignTO, and co-presented with the Goethe-Institut & the Consulate General of Germany in Toronto and Harbourfront Centre. It is generously supported by Bulthaup Toronto.

Participants
Maryam Siddiqi, They Feed Off Buildings (Luisa Rubisch, Rasa Weber)

Bio-Materials workshop: Mycelium

During this workshop, Tosca Terán introduces participants to the amazing potential of mycelium for collaboration at the intersection of art and science. Participants learn how to transform their kitchens and closets into safe, mini-Mycelium Biolabs, learn how to cultivate mycelium, and leave the workshop with a live Mycelium planter/bowl form, as well as a wide array of possibilities of how they might work with this sustainable bio-material. All materials are provided.

Workshop includes:
1 round planter growth form
1 bag of substrate inoculated with Mycelium
Sculpting mix
Nitrile gloves
Particulate mask
Instructions

This workshop includes everything you need to grow a round planter, as well as hand-sculpt a small form plus, a full bag of substrate inoculated with mycelium! Suggestions on how to grow other forms or grow onto various armatures (3D printed, hand-knit/crocheted, wood structures, etc) will be discussed.

Mycelium can be used in industrial design, art, architecture – the possibilities are seemingly endless!

Mycelium= the mass of interwoven filamentous hyphae that forms especially the vegetative portion of the thallus of a fungus and is often submerged in another body (as of soil or organic matter or the tissues of a host) aka mushroom roots

Artist-instructor Tosca Teran works with Mycelium collaboratively –
creating the Midnight Mushroom Music Podcast.

RCMP OFF Wet’suwet’en Land

On Friday, January 24, join us in visiting the main RCMP office and demand that they stand down and leave unceded Wet’suwet’en territory immediately!

We will rally outside of the RCMP office in response to the Wet’suwet’en nation’s call for solidarity actions from all communities that support them in their struggle against the CGL natural gas pipeline.

Details:

Meet at 12:30pm at Christie Pitts park (south-east corner of park, across from TTC station) where we will have a rented bus to take us all to the regional RCMP office and back.
Have a car? Offer a ride to some friends! You can either meet us at Christie Pitts and caravan, or go directly to the final location which we’ll share closer to the date.

Bring warm clothes, noisemakers, and water bottles! Food and warm drinks will be provided!

Background:

Over the past year RCMP has had a presence on unceded Wet’suwet’en territory in violation of Wet’suwet’en law. Recently, the RCMP have come under additional scrutiny for the “lethal overwatch” of Indigenous land defenders during the January 2019 raid on Wet’suwet’en territory. This rally will pressure the RCMP to withdraw their forces from the site of a check-point set up by the Gidimt’en clan of the Wet’suwet’en nation.

The RCMP were created to control Indigenous peoples using violence to enforce the pass system and most oppressive sections of the Indian Act. As a continuation of this colonial legacy, the RCMP are restricting Wet’suwet’en citizens from accessing their lands. The RCMP are demanding ID from anyone attempting to enter the territory, limiting supplies from entering the territory, and claiming that individuals leaving the territory will be detained. These actions constitue a violation of Wet’suwet’en law as well as a violation of Indigenous rights enshrined in Section 35 of the Canadian Constitution.

The RCMP continue to enforce Canadian law and industry on traditional Wet’suwet’en Territory, under the orders of the BC and Canadian governments, who have no jurisdiction of Wet’suwet’en territory. From a moral standpoint, it is completely unconscionable that Canadian courts sanction the RCMP’s invasion of an Indigenous nation to usher in a pipeline while we all face climate crisis.

We demand that:
– The RCMP stand down and leave Wet’suwet’en territory immediately.
– The remote detachment established by the RCMP be immediately removed.
– No force or lethal weapons be used against Wet’suwet’en people and their supporters.
– The RCMP refrain from blocking access to the territory for Wet’suwet’en people and their guests.
– The Wet’suwet’en be enabled to continue to live on their land free of interference from foreign governments, including Canada.

Reject Teck: An XR Surprise

On January 22, Extinction Rebellion groups across Canada will stand in solidarity with Beaver Hills Warriors and Indigenous Climate Action to demand that our government listen to the front line communities as well as the science and REJECT the Teck Frontier Mine.

About The Mine:

A massive new oil-sands mine project — widely thought to be the largest Alberta will ever build — is awaiting final federal approval from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s cabinet in February.

The Teck Frontier mine (https://thenarwhal.ca/one-of-the-largest-oilsands-mines-ever-proposed-advances-to-public-hearings/ )would cover 24,000 hectares — an area twice the size of the City of Vancouver — and would produce 260,000 barrels of bitumen each day at its peak. The proposal includes plans to produce oil starting in 2026, and to continue on producing right through to the 2060s.

Having been under review for several years, the mine’s fate now rests in the hands of the federal government.

<< WHICH IS WHY WE’RE CALLING ALL TO ACTION >>>
LET US NOT BE COMPLICIT IN OUR GOVERNMENT’S SHORT-SIGHTED, OIL & GAS ALLIANCES!

ALL TORONTO REBELS, FRIENDS & ALLIES meet in front of Bill Morneau’s office, Minister of Finance and a member of Trudeau’s cabinet.

430 Parliament St.
12 NOON – 1pm

Bring a cup and wear your sunday best (while also dressing appropriately for the weather ie: jackets)!

This is a family friendly action, There is no risk of escalation or arrest with this action.

BRING A CUP;
SEE YOU LOOKIN’ SHARP

Pull Together: Toronto vs. Trans Mountain Pipeline Fundraiser

#NoPipelines on stolen land ✊🏽

The Canadian government is doubling down on efforts to build the Trans Mountain Pipeline, which would run from the tar sands to the west coast, through salmon-bearing streams, parks, and Indigenous communities. Three First Nations — səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish) and C’eletkwmx (Coldwater) — are taking the federal government to court over the construction of the pipeline.

We’re holding a fundraiser to support their legal challenge, featuring a rad panel, creative performances, and a silent auction. Come out and show up for Indigenous sovereignty and climate justice! And donate & help us share our fundraising page far and wide! https://tiny.cc/no-pipelines

This is a ticketed event, with tiered tickets at $10, $20 and $40. All proceeds go to the Pull Together campaign (https://pull-together.ca/). Folks who are under-waged or can’t afford the price of tickets will not be turned away!

Event schedule:
7:30pm – Doors open
8:00pm – Panel featuring Khelsilem (activist and artist from Squamish Nation), Hayden King (writer and educator from Beausoleil First Nation), Beze Gray (land defender and water protector from Aamjiwnaang First Nation) + more TBA
9:30pm – Creative performances by Artists for Climate & Migrant Justice and Indigenous Sovereignty + more TBA
10:30pm – Musical performance by LAL
11:30pm-1:30am – after-party featuring DJ Heebiejabi and DJ Ariel
**SILENT AUCTION ONGOING**

Location & access notes:
The Tranzac is located at 292 Brunswick Avenue, between Spadina Station and Bathurst Station. There is a Green P parking lot on the north side of the building, off of Barbara Barett Lane (accessible from Borden Street), and there is an additional Green P one block away, accessible from Lippincott Street. There is a cement ramp leading to a manual double door entrance, and two gender-neutral washrooms on the main floor, with one accessible stall in each. Visit http://www.accessto.ca/home/2016/1/27/tranzac-club for more detailed info, or contact us!

We ask that folks keep the space low-fragrance by refraining from wearing strong scents. There will be volunteers on site who can help navigate access needs, and ASL interpreters for portions of the evening (more info TBA). If you have access needs that we can accommodate beforehand, please message us!

Global Climate Strike for All Animals

Join a coalition of animal liberation groups at the upcoming Global Strike for Climate Justice in Toronto. We are showing up to (1) act in solidarity with the broader climate justice movements, (2) represent the nonhuman animals being mass killed and driven to extinction in climate catastrophes, and (3) demand an end to animal agriculture and industrial fishing and transition to sustainable plant-based food systems.

11:00-11:30: Meet at Fire Fighter Memorial
11:30: Head up to Queen’s Park for the rally
12:00: March together