Abolition, Liberation, Solidarity: A Here4TheKids Production

Here4TheKids

NYT bestselling author, activist, and co-founder of Here4TheKids Saira Rao hosts engaging conversations with other activists and deep thinkers about abolition and confronting global systems of oppression. theconnections.substack.com

  1. 01/16/2025

    24. Filmmaker Sonali Gulati Breaks Down Propaganda

    Sonali Gulati is a Brown, caste-privileged, agnostic, queer, cis-woman, documentary filmmaker, activist, educator and first-generation Indian immigrant to Turtle Island. She is a Guggenheim fellow who has been making award-winning documentary and experimental films for over two decades that have screened at over 500 film festivals, and public & cable television worldwide. Gulati was born and raised in New Delhi by a single mother who believed that good girls studied hard, kept long hair, and found nice Indian husbands through penpalship. Sonali studied hard, got admission at Mount Holyoke College, majored in Critical Social Thought, graduated in 3 years, shaved her head, and came out as lesbian. You can follow her on Instagram @sonalifilm. Sonali and Saira discuss the role of Hollywood and Bollywood in creating and distributing propaganda worldwide, plus the connections between so many tragedies in our world and the rich and powerful. In this episode, Saira also announces that this podcast will be pausing new episodes after the decision by producer Heath Racela to step back from his role. Heath has been producing podcasts and sharing his writing for more than five years and he has decided he needs some space to process grief at the state of our world. You can read more about Heath’s decision to take an extended break on his recent Substack post. Get full access to The Connections at theconnections.substack.com/subscribe

    49 min
  2. 09/05/2024

    19. Dr. Mohamed Abdou Connects 1492 to the Gaza Solidarity Encampments

    Today, Saira welcomes author and academic Dr. Mohamed Abdou to the podcast. Abdou describes himself as an interdisciplinary scholar of Indigenous, Black, critical race, and Islamic studies, as well as anti-racism, feminism, gender, sexuality, women, decolonial and post-colonial studies with extensive fieldwork experience in the Middle East-North Africa and Turtle Island. He most recently was a professor at Columbia University and was an outspoken advocate for the students participating in the Gaza Solidarity Encampment this past spring. He was called out in front of Congress during testimony by then-university president Minouche Shafik, becoming the target of harassment. He was fired from Columbia and lost his American work visa, causing him to flee the U.S. Abdou recently filed a wrongful termination suit against Columbia University. From the press release dated August 26th: “Author and scholar Dr. Mohamed Abdou filed a wrongful termination suit against Columbia University yesterday evening, citing prejudice surrounding his anti-colonial academic discourse and vocal support of Palestine. The public awareness campaign, WeAreMohamed, launched today to share Abdou’s story and spotlight the institutional repression and slander faced by those who publicly challenge the United States government’s unconditional support of Israel, and settler-colonialism in Israel and the U.S.” Dr. Abdou is the author of the book Islam and Anarchism: Relationships and Resonances. You can connect to his work and social handles through his website. Get full access to The Connections at theconnections.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 1m
4.6
out of 5
44 Ratings

About

NYT bestselling author, activist, and co-founder of Here4TheKids Saira Rao hosts engaging conversations with other activists and deep thinkers about abolition and confronting global systems of oppression. theconnections.substack.com