Canto al Agua, Water Ceremony at XV Vision Council's "Call of the Water," Bacalar, Quintana Roo (Ivan Sawyer photo)
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Esperanza at a Crossroads
Taking Our Hope-Based Journalism to the Next Level in 2018
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This year The Esperanza Project will celebrate
nine years of life - nine years of bringing inspiration and hope to the work of environmental and indigenous rights journalism. We're proud of what we've accomplished, and poised to take our work to the next level.
Please read on to see our highlights and how you can help.
In 2017, we gave voice to so many sources of inspiration. To name just a few:
* After a wave of earthquakes left thousands homeless in Mexico, scores of natural builders, architects and visionaries stepped up to '
bio-reconstruct" a new, resilient society from the rubble;
* The Ngäbe-Buglé people of Panama, and thousands of other Panamanians, flooded out by senseless
hydroelectric dams that destroy river ecosystems - and yet they fight on;
*
Voices from Standing Rock, a six-part series on individuals giving their time, love and labor for the indigenous Water Protectors of North Dakota;
* Preparing the launch of the ambitious new 7-part film series,
Guardians: Tales of Resistance, depicting seven different indigenous cultures throughout the Americas and their fight to save their territories and their cultures. Part One about the Kamentsá from Putumayo, Colombia, is finished; Part Two, about the Guaranís from Chaco, Bolivia, will be finished soon.This series, featuring the protagonists of
Huicholes, The Last Peyote Guardians, in a journey to connect with other indigenous nations in their fight for cultural survival, is the followup to that internationally acclaimed 2014 film by Argentine filmmaker Hernán Vílchez.
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The landscape shifts from awe-inspiring to desolate, and back again, with the inner journey being the most challenging one of all.
Esperanza Project readers will have first access to this work and will have the only access to full, uncut interviews with individuals ranging from ex-guerillas to a survivor of the Bay of Pigs invasion, from shamans and priests to organic farmers and fishermen-turned-activists. Most importantly, they will leave with a better understanding of the world south of the Rio Grande, the other America barely imagined by its neighbors to the north.
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We're excited to announce a new addition to our team: Mexican songwriter and journalist, yoga and permaculture enthusiast and first-rate translator Angélica Almazán Escalante will be joining Tracy as co-editor of The Esperanza Project.
Since 2010 Angélica has traveled through Mexico with her guitar, carrying a message of freedom, love and connection with nature. Since 2014 she has supported us as an occasional contributor and as the tireless translator for
El Proyecto Esperanza, the Spanish side of our website.
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Among our new collaborators we are especially excited to present
Voices of Amerikua, a collaborative project promoting efforts to protect the culture and rights of indigenous peoples and Mother Nature throughout the Americas.
A network of filmmakers, media producers, activists, musicians and indigenous community members themselves, Voices, founded by independent filmmaker, producer and activist Ivan Sawyer, works in partnership with Indigenous leaders, youth and Wisdom Keepers to produce powerful multimedia pieces sharing the stories of those on the front lines, risking everything to protect our environment and their traditional ways of life.
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Big plans are afoot at The Esperanza Project - new collaborators are already at work on stories that you won't find anywhere else about people who are creating the new paradigm. Follow the indigenous healer and presidential candidate María de Jesus Patricio Martinez, now calling the Mexican civil society to join together to heal their land. Learn about the Mayan beekeepers who are fighting Monsanto, the team of visionaries working to save the Lake of Seven Colors, the movement for the Rights of Nature, the Global Ecovillage Network and many more fronts on the re-evolution of a regenerative culture that can sustain life for the Seven Generations and far beyond.
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You may be surprised to know that
The Esperanza Project is
an entirely volunteer enterprise, like many alternative media projects that fill in the blanks where the mainstream media doesn't have the resources or the interest to go. It's been a labor of love for eight years now, and we are excited about taking it to new levels of excellence in 2018. Still, it costs money to produce this work - for web hosting, equipment repairs and replacement, travel, etc. - and
we count on readers like you to pitch in to help us cover those expenses. We are also always on the lookout for folks to join the team - writers, photographers, translators, social media experts, fundraisers, etc.
The Esperanza Project is a 501(c)3 organization, which means that you can make your tax-deductible contribution right here. We will happily acknowledge all our donors on our website and at
The Esperanza Project's Facebook page, with nearly 18,000 followers. And your good karma will follow you throughout the year and beyond!
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The Esperanza Project | www.theesperanzaproject.org|
El Proyecto Esperanza | www.elproyectoesperanza.org
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