NW Elders ECHO | December 10, 2024
Date of Presentation: December 10, 2024
Type: Past Presentation
Audience: Clinical Community
Program: Elders, Knowledge Holders and Culture Keepers
Keywords: #*wholistic health #AI/AN #aian #ceremony #Coffee #gardening #gathering #indigenous knowledge #indigenous ways #plants #Practicing Relationality #traditions
The Northwest Elders and Knowledge Keepers ECHO session took place on December 10, 2024. In this presentation, Jennifer Martin (Cherokee) discusses “Gardening and Gathering – Practicing Relationality.”
The faculty panel and staff members for this session of the Northwest Elders, Knowledge Holders, and Culture Keepers ECHO includes:
- Jesse Beers – Cultural Stewardship Manager for CTCLUSI
- Katie Hunsberger – Behavioral Health Aide Program Manager for NPAIHB
- Dolores Jimerson – Behavioral Health Education Director for NPAIHB
- Maleah Nore – NW Elders ECHO Faculty
- Jessica Rienstra – ECHO Case Manager for NPAIHB
- Marilyn Scott – Tribal Chair at Upper Skagit Tribe
- David Stephens – ECHO Clinic Director for NPAIHB
- Birdie Wermy – Behavioral Health Program Manager for NPAIHB
- Alison Whitemore – LCSW & RPT (Round Valley Indian Tribes)
- Tanya Firemoon – Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board Contractor
Recording:
Presented by:
Jennifer Martin
Jennifer (Jenny) Martin is an enrolled Citizen of the Cherokee Nation. She was born and raised in western Washington. After graduating from high school, she moved to Bellingham, WA to attend Northwest Indian College (NWIC), a Tribal College on the Lummi Nation Reservation. She completed her degree from NWIC in 2019 with a BS in Native Environmental Science, with a special emphasis in ethnobotany and Indigenous knowledge systems. Jenny wanted to continue her studies, as well as connect more to the Irish side of her heritage so she moved to Ireland and completed an MA in Culture and Colonialism while studying the Irish language (as well as Cherokee (Tsalagi) language online) at the National University of Ireland, Galway. Her thesis focused on traditions of Indigenous intellectualism and Indigenous pedagogies. Understanding how culture, language, and non-human relations influence Indigenous health and sense of self is an ongoing passion for Jenny. She currently works at the Lummi Tribal Health Clinic as the Healing Spirits Gardener through the Diabetes Prevention Program.
Resources Provided:
Date added: December 10, 2024