Lenore Three Stars is a member of the board for Circlewood—the larger creation care community to which the Earthkeepers belongs. In many ways, Lenore has had a shaping influence on the priorities and values of this podcast. In particular, as a member of the Lakota people, she has helped us to understand and embrace elements of an indigenous world view. In this episode we discuss a kinship model of creation care, as a corrective to a dominant Western worldview that views people as separate from, and dominant over, creation.
Notes:
Lenore Three Stars
https://www.circlewood.online/people
North American Institute of Indigenous Theological Studies
https://www.naiits.com/
Richard Twiss. One Church, ManyTribes
https://bookshop.org/books/one-church-many-tribes/9780800797256
Wendell Berry: "There are no unsacred places, only sacred and desecrated places."Given https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/146152.Given
 Standing Rock Water Protectors
https://psmag.com/magazine/standing-rock-still-rising
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dakota_Access_Pipeline_protests
Albert White Hat
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_White_Hat
Dr. Randy Woodley. Shalom and the Community of Creation https://bookshop.org/books/shalom-and-the-community-of-creation-an-indigenous-vision/9780802866783
Key words: Native American, First Nations, creation care, ecology, environment, Lakota, environmental justice, kinship, dualism, indigenous world view, Richard Twiss, Randy Woodley, Standing Rock
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