Wild Church: Solstice & Online Series, "The Land Is Not Our Own"
Events returning to Sinsinawa Mound
Two upcoming events that I’ll be facilitating…
Wild Church: Winter Solstice - Friday, December 20th, 6:30-8pm - Sinsinawa Mound
Fire and song, community and prayer, celebration and the land: this inclusive outdoor evening together at Sinsinawa Mound (585 County Rd. Z, Sinsinawa, WI) at Cavanaugh Park near the outdoor labyrinth (enter through the St. Clara Academy entrance and follow the road to the left). Let’s honor the longest night of the year—the sacred time of winter solstice on sacred land at Sinsinawa Mound. No registration is necessary. Freewill offerings will be accepted.
The Land Is Not Our Own: Seeking Repair Alongside Indigenous Communities - online every Monday during January and February 2025, 5:30-7:30pm CT (starting January 6)
Click here for registration details
Sinsinawa Mound Center announces the launch of an online series “The Land Is Not Our Own: Seeking Repair alongside Indigenous Communities” an eight-week curriculum created by JustFaith and the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery designed to inspire and equip individuals and communities to work alongside Native communities to work toward justice and repair and create a path to spiritual and relational transformation.
Facilitator Eric Anglada, co-founder of St. Isidore Catholic Worker Farm in Wisconsin, will help create a foundation of trust and relationship so that together participants can acknowledge injustice, honor the interconnectedness of all creation, and seek healing, repair, and hope. Participants will celebrate Indigenous artists and activists, engage in a spiritual reorientation toward honoring our sacred connection with one another and all Creation, and learn about practical steps. Before the first session, please acquire a copy of The Land Is Not Empty: Following Jesus in Dismantling the Doctrine of Discovery by Sarah Augustine (Tewa/Pueblo) and Living Nations, Living Words: An Anthology of First Peoples Poetry, edited by Joy Harjo (Muscogee).