VIDEO INTERVIEWS, VOICES OF INDIGENOUS WOMEN: Ofelia Rivas, O'odham Voice Against the Wall, and Michelle Cook, Navajo, live from the Bolivia Climate Conference.
Watch video, recorded live by Earthcycles in Bolivia:http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/6343599
Ofelia Rivas, founder of the O'odham Voice Against the Wall, describes recent beatings of O'odham living in their traditional homelands on the US/Mexico border by the US Border Patrol.With the constant attacks by immigration officials, Ofelia said the O'odham elders ask: 'Will they stop the wind from coming across the border?' Ofelia said the Him'dag, sacred way of life, is disrupted by the border wall and militarization. During the construction of the border vehicle barriers, O'odham ancestors were removed from their burial places by Boeing. She said when the people were reburied, a blessing was said for a cleansing rain which came. O'odham ceremonies and daily lives are disrupted, along with the survival of the plants and animals in the Sonoran Desert by the heavy militarization. Ofelia describes how the US Border Patrol halted and violated the ceremonial deer hunt of the O'odham. Rivas was co-chair of the vital Working Group on Indigenous Peoples in Cochabamba, Bolivia, at the World Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth. Ofelia Rivas was imprisoned in an immigration prison in southern Mexico, on false charges while supporting the Zapatistas, in 2010. She has been handcuffed and thrown up against a patrol car and told to "cooperate," by tribal police in her homeland. She has been held at gunpoint by the US Border Patrol. Ofelia was the recipient of a Borderlinks' Women on the Border Award 2010. Please visit her website, the O'odham Solidarity Project: http://www.solidarity-project.org/
Ofelia Rivas, founder of the O'odham Voice Against the Wall, describes recent beatings of O'odham living in their traditional homelands on the US/Mexico border by the US Border Patrol.With the constant attacks by immigration officials, Ofelia said the O'odham elders ask: 'Will they stop the wind from coming across the border?' Ofelia said the Him'dag, sacred way of life, is disrupted by the border wall and militarization. During the construction of the border vehicle barriers, O'odham ancestors were removed from their burial places by Boeing. She said when the people were reburied, a blessing was said for a cleansing rain which came. O'odham ceremonies and daily lives are disrupted, along with the survival of the plants and animals in the Sonoran Desert by the heavy militarization. Ofelia describes how the US Border Patrol halted and violated the ceremonial deer hunt of the O'odham. Rivas was co-chair of the vital Working Group on Indigenous Peoples in Cochabamba, Bolivia, at the World Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth. Ofelia Rivas was imprisoned in an immigration prison in southern Mexico, on false charges while supporting the Zapatistas, in 2010. She has been handcuffed and thrown up against a patrol car and told to "cooperate," by tribal police in her homeland. She has been held at gunpoint by the US Border Patrol. Ofelia was the recipient of a Borderlinks' Women on the Border Award 2010. Please visit her website, the O'odham Solidarity Project: http://www.solidarity-project.org/
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