Unblocked

Unblocked: An Indigenous Podcast

"Unblocked," produced by Florida International University’s Mellon-funded ‘Commons for Justice’ project, explores disaster exposures, vulnerabilities, and resilience in and around South Florida from Indigenous perspectives. How do Indigenous South Floridians envision a world that is liberated from these constraints and grounded in communal values of caretaking the earth? Each episode highlights an “unblocked” aspect of an Indigenous praxis, helping us imagine a new world that addresses race, risk, and resilience in South Florida. Disclaimer: This podcast does not reflect FIU policy.

Episodes

  1. 04/01/2025

    (3/3) Unblocked Food Sovereignty: Indigenous Community Gardens for Healing the Risks of Laboring in Rising Heat **SPANISH**

    For this podcast, we visited a community garden at Misión Peniel, a Presbyterian mission in solidarity with farmworkers. We met with a group of Indigenous, farmworking women from across Latin America who are part of a dynamic community garden. We had the opportunity to meet Lupita Vazquez Reyes, the Garden Outreach Coordinator. Lupita is the daughter of farmworkers and activists. She was born and raised in Immokalee but left to serve in the Army. She returned to Immokalee and began volunteering with Misión Peniel, shortly thereafter, was hired to work at Cultivate Abundance.  These three episodes are hosted by Nicaraguan-born photojournalist Lisette Morales, who is based in South Florida and focuses on visual narratives highlighting Latin American communities. In particular, she has a strong connection to a group of farmworkers based in Immokalee. She possesses a unique ability to capture migrant stories, particularly as an Indigenous woman herself. She recognizes the significance of their narratives and employs a gifted visual translation method to convey the vibrant knowledge-making about resilience, community building, and ecological healing to an audience that may require cultural interpretation to fully comprehend these concepts. Listen to these women navigate stories of community building, seed exchange, and indigenous medicinal knowledge as a means of combating the adverse effects of labor in the rising heat of South Florida. They also explore the concept of food sovereignty through the cultivation of their own foods. The podcast is structured into three parts: Part I: Introduction to the community garden Part II: Climate change and its impacts on labor in the heat in Immokalee; Indigenous medicine as a means of healing and protection; finding resilience in food deserts; and the role of community gardens in empowering women through aspects of the violence and isolation associated with forced migration. Part III: Diversity within the community garden; Indigenous languages and excerpts from the life stories of the women. Producer: Mitzi Uehara Carter Podcast host and organizer: Lisette Morales Podcast co-host: Lupita Vazquez Reyes Audio and post-production editing: Sebastian Rocha Alvarez Associate producer and audio editor: Diane Benitez Disclaimer: This podcast does not reflect FIU policy.

    40 min
  2. 21/12/2024

    (2/3) Unblocked Food Sovereignty: Indigenous Community Gardens for Healing the Risks of Laboring in Rising Heat **SPANISH**

    This episode was recorded in Spanish. English captions are available on our Youtube Channel! Please visit https://www.youtube.com/@UnblockedIndigenousPodcast for the English translation. For this podcast, we visited a community garden at Misión Peniel, a Presbyterian mission in solidarity with farmworkers. We met with a group of Indigenous, farm working women from across Latin America who are part of a dynamic community garden. We had the opportunity to meet Lupita Vazquez Reyes, the Garden Outreach Coordinator. Lupita is the daughter of farmworkers and activists. She was born and raised in Immokalee but left to serve in the Army. She returned to Immokalee and began volunteering with Misión Peniel, shortly thereafter, was hired to work at Cultivate Abundance.  These three episodes are hosted by Nicaraguan-born photojournalist Lisette Morales, who is based in South Florida and focuses on visual narratives highlighting Latin American communities. In particular, she has a strong connection to a group of farmworkers based in Immokalee. She possesses a unique ability to capture migrant stories, particularly as an Indigenous woman herself. She recognizes the significance of their narratives and employs a gifted visual translation method to convey the vibrant knowledge-making about resilience, community building, and ecological healing to an audience that may require cultural interpretation to fully comprehend these concepts. Listen to these women navigate stories of community building, seed exchange, and indigenous medicinal knowledge as a means of combating the adverse effects of labor in the rising heat of South Florida. They also explore the concept of food sovereignty through the cultivation of their own foods. Part I: Introduction to the community garden Part II: Climate change and its impacts on labor in the heat in Immokalee; Indigenous medicine as a means of healing and protection; finding resilience in food deserts; and the role of community gardens in empowering women through aspects of the violence and isolation associated with forced migration. Part III: Diversity within the community garden; Indigenous languages and excerpts from the life stories of the women. Producer: Mitzi Uehara Carter Podcast host and organizer: Lisette Morales Podcast co-host: Lupita Vazquez Reyes Audio and post-production editing: Sebastian Rocha Alvarez Associate producer and audio editor: Diane Benitez Disclaimer: This podcast does not reflect FIU policy.

    42 min
  3. 20/12/2024

    (1/3) Unblocked Food Sovereignty : Indigenous Community Gardens for Healing the Risks of Laboring in Rising Heat **SPANISH**

    This episode was recorded in Spanish. English captions are available on our Youtube Channel! Please visit https://www.youtube.com/@UnblockedIndigenousPodcast for the English translation. For this podcast, we visited a community garden at Misión Peniel, a Presbyterian mission in solidarity with farmworkers. We met with a group of Indigenous, farm working women from across Latin America who are part of a dynamic community garden. We had the opportunity to meet Lupita Vazquez Reyes, the Garden Outreach Coordinator. Lupita is the daughter of farmworkers and activists. She was born and raised in Immokalee but left to serve in the Army. She returned to Immokalee and began volunteering with Misión Peniel, shortly thereafter, was hired to work at Cultivate Abundance.  These three episodes are hosted by Nicaraguan-born photojournalist Lisette Morales, who is based in South Florida and focuses on visual narratives highlighting Latin American communities. In particular, she has a strong connection to a group of farmworkers based in Immokalee. She possesses a unique ability to capture migrant stories, particularly as an Indigenous woman herself. She recognizes the significance of their narratives and employs a gifted visual translation method to convey the vibrant knowledge-making about resilience, community building, and ecological healing to an audience that may require cultural interpretation to fully comprehend these concepts. Listen to these women navigate stories of community building, seed exchange, and indigenous medicinal knowledge as a means of combating the adverse effects of labor in the rising heat of South Florida. They also explore the concept of food sovereignty through the cultivation of their own foods. Part I: Introduction to the community garden Part II: Climate change and its impacts on labor in the heat in Immokalee; Indigenous medicine as a means of healing and protection; finding resilience in food deserts; and the role of community gardens in empowering women through aspects of the violence and isolation associated with forced migration. Part III: Diversity within the community garden; Indigenous languages and excerpts from the life stories of the women. Producer: Mitzi Uehara Carter Podcast host and organizer: Lisette Morales Podcast co-host: Lupita Vazquez Reyes Audio and post-production editing: Sebastian Rocha Alvarez Associate producer and audio editor: Diane Benitez Disclaimer: This podcast does not reflect FIU policy.

    37 min
  4. 13/12/2024

    Unblocked Healing: Sharing Stories about Encroachment

    This episode features a conversation between Arassari Pataxó, an indigenous leader and spokesperson for the Pataxó People from the Barra Velha Territory in Bahia, Brazil, and Betty Osceola, a leader and spokesperson for the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida (Panther Clan). Betty Osceola is also an internationally recognized environmental advocate, educator, and defender of the Florida Everglades. Both leaders emphasize the importance of indigenous frameworks of healing rather than restoration in addressing the threat of encroachment and environmental damage in their homelands. They argue that Indigenous concepts of resiliency must be taken seriously when designing solutions. In this episode, Dr. Simone Athayde graciously volunteered to serve as translator. She is a former Associate Professor of Environmental Anthropology at FIU and has conducted extensive research in the Amazon on indigenous issues. She is currently a researcher with The World Resources Institute.  **Special Acknowledgments and Thanks**Inma Cortes, Beatriz P. de Carvalho, and Estela Nickerson are greatly appreciated for their efforts in facilitating Arassari Pataxo’s visit to Florida International University. Producer: Mitzi Uehara Carter Audio Engineer: Gabriel E. Marchisio Jr. Audio and Post-Production Editing: Sebastian Rocha Alvarez Associate Producer and Audio Editor: Diane Benitez  Disclaimer: This podcast does not reflect FIU policy.

    19 min

About

"Unblocked," produced by Florida International University’s Mellon-funded ‘Commons for Justice’ project, explores disaster exposures, vulnerabilities, and resilience in and around South Florida from Indigenous perspectives. How do Indigenous South Floridians envision a world that is liberated from these constraints and grounded in communal values of caretaking the earth? Each episode highlights an “unblocked” aspect of an Indigenous praxis, helping us imagine a new world that addresses race, risk, and resilience in South Florida. Disclaimer: This podcast does not reflect FIU policy.