
and 7-Day Gathering with Indigenous Voices | June 3-9, 2025
and 7-Day Gathering with Indigenous Voices
June 3-9, 2025








PREMIERE DATE
June 3, 2025
About the film
The Eternal Song is a cinematic journey through timeless lands and their Indigenous cultures. Voices from around the world and across generations call us to witness the deep, ongoing scars left by colonization on lands and people, and the healing that comes through ancestral wisdom. Entrusted with medicine stories, we grapple with colonial legacies, intergenerational trauma, our own fragmentation and the culture of separation.
The film reveals how modernity has severed our connection to nature, each other, and the ancestral realm, while feeding us empty promises of salvation, unlimited consumption, economic growth, and individual happiness. Drawn into the intricate web of kinship and honoring the living presence of Mother Earth, we awaken a remembrance. A sacred dance comes to life and we begin to hear the eternal song of Life itself, calling us back to belonging.
7-Day Gathering with Indigenous Voices
When You Sign Up, You Will Receive
- Free access to The Eternal Song (90-minute feature film)
- Communal online screenings beginning June 3
- Option for 48-hour film rental with a small donation
- Access to the 7-Day Gathering (June 3–9, 2025)
- 5 live sessions per day with Indigenous Elders and wisdom holders
- 48-hour replay access for all sessions

Historical trauma living in lands & bodies

The healing
ground
of grief

Ancestral
wisdom &
medicine

Sacred cycle
of life, death,
& renewal

Kinship &
reciprocity
with all life

Healing Practices
Beyond Western
Therapies

Carrying
the Medicine
Forward

Historical trauma living in lands & bodies

The healing
ground
of grief

Ancestral
wisdom &
medicine

Sacred cycle
of life, death,
& renewal

Kinship &
reciprocity
with all life

Healing Practices
Beyond Western
Therapies

Carrying
the Medicine
Forward

Historical trauma living in lands & bodies

The healing
ground
of grief

Ancestral
wisdom &
medicine

Sacred cycle
of life, death,
& renewal

Kinship &
reciprocity
with all life

Healing Practices
Beyond Western
Therapies

Carrying
the Medicine
Forward
Charlene Eigen-Vasquez
Founder of the Confederation of Ohlone People Ohlone NationCharlene Eigen-Vasquez, J.D., is of Ohlone descent from the village of Chitactac. A mother and grandmother, she pursued law to better serve Indigenous communities. She focuses on land back initiatives, cultural revitalization, and environmental justice, believing they impact health. A trained peacemaker, she uses legal and mediation skills to advocate for Indigenous interests. She formerly led the Healing and Reconciliation Institute and now chairs multiple Ohlone organizations. Charlene is also part of Planet Women’s 100 Women Pathway, supporting diverse women leaders in the environmental movement.
Bayo Akomolafe
Yoruba Philosopher & Writer NigeriaBayo Akomolafe, rooted with the Yoruba people, is a celebrated posthumanist thinker, poet, and author. His books, These Wilds Beyond our Fences and We Will Tell our Own Story, reflect his unique perspectives. Founder of The Emergence Network and host of ‘We Will Dance with Mountains,’ he lectures at Pacifica Graduate Institute and University of Vermont. Akomolafe sits on boards including Science and Nonduality (US). He’s the inaugural Global Senior Fellow at UC Berkeley’s Othering and Belonging Institute and Senior Fellow at The New Institute, Hamburg. Recent honors include the New Thought Leadership Award 2021 and Excellence in Ethnocultural Psychotherapy Award 2022.
Gabor Maté
Renowned speaker, teacher and best-selling addiction author Vancouver, CanadaGabor Maté MD is a specialist on trauma, addiction, stress and childhood development. After 20 years of family practice and palliative care experience, Dr. Maté worked for over a decade in Vancouver’s Downtown East Side with patients challenged by drug addiction and mental illness. For his groundbreaking medical work and writings, he was awarded the Order of Canada, his country’s highest civilian distinction, and the Civic Merit Award from his hometown Vancouver. Gabor also created the Compassionate Inquiry™ psychotherapeutic approach, now studied by thousands of physicians, therapists and counselors in over 80 countries.
Samwel Nangiria
Masai community leader and Director of the Ngorongoro NGO Network Olosho le Maa (Kenya)Samwel Nangiria is a local Masai community leader and the Director of the Ngorongoro NGO Network, which works to protect the land rights of the Masai people, in order to enable their traditional livelihoods and culture. As an Indigenous video practitioner and activist, he uses participatory video to assert Maasai land rights and to decolonise museums.
Iya Affo
Culturalist and Historical Trauma Specialist Diné Bikéyah (Arizona)Iya Affo is a trauma specialist and founder of Healing Historical Trauma, who brings over two decades of experience in mental health, social services, and community advocacy. Iya’s ancestors hail from the Sacred City of 41 Mountains in West Africa, Barbados, Jamaica and the Bahamas. Affo’s work focuses on empowering individuals and communities to break cycles of trauma through culturally-responsive healing practices. Her approach integrates traditional wisdom with modern therapeutic techniques, emphasizing the importance of reconnecting with cultural roots. She is a sought-after speaker and educator with a mission to facilitate re-culturing and the subsequent healing of indigenous people all over the world.
Francis Weller
Psychotherapist, Writer and Soul Activist Southern Pomo, Coastal Miwok (Northern California)Francis Weller, MFT, is a psychotherapist, writer and soul activist. He is a master of synthesizing diverse streams of thought from psychology, anthropology, mythology, alchemy, indigenous cultures and poetic traditions. Author of the bestselling, The Wild Edge of Sorrow: Rituals of Renewal and the Sacred Work of Grief; The Threshold Between Loss and Revelation, (with Rashani Réa) and In the Absence of the Ordinary: Soul Work for Times of Uncertainty, he has introduced the healing work of ritual to thousands of people.
Diane Merle Longboat
Mohawk Elder, Spiritual Leader and EducatorDiane Longboat, a Mohawk from the Turtle Clan, is a spiritual leader, educator, and advocate for Indigenous knowledge and healing. A ceremonial leader and founder of Soul of the Mother, she has dedicated her life to preserving and sharing Indigenous wisdom. Diane has served as a spiritual advisor to governments and institutions, fostering reconciliation and cultural renewal. She is also a respected speaker and educator, working to integrate Indigenous worldviews into health, education, and leadership. Through her teachings, she helps bridge the gap between traditional wisdom and contemporary challenges, guiding communities toward healing and empowerment.
Atarangi Muru
Rongoā Māori Healer, Ahipara Aotearoa (New Zealand)Atarangi was raised in the small coastal village of Ahipara and is affiliated to Ngati Kuri, Te Aupouri, and Te Rarawa tribes. Her drive in the healing work is the growth and support of people using specific tools for self-healing. Atarangi’s passion for the healing arts was ignited by her elders, her many Kuia (Elder women) and Koroua (Elder men), where her training in traditional methods began at an early age. Today she passes these healing arts to her children, grandchildren, and extended family – biological and spiritual.
Eriel Tchekwie Deranger
Indigenous rights and climate activistEriel Tchekwie Deranger, a Dënesųłiné mother from the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation, is the Executive Director and co-founder of Indigenous Climate Action. She advocates for Indigenous rights and climate justice, bridging movements for social change. A key figure in the Indigenous Tar Sands Campaign, she has led divestment efforts, government lobbying, and mass mobilizations against fossil fuels. She serves on multiple boards, including Bioneers and WWF Canada, and is a founding member of the Global Indigenous Youth Caucus. Her writing appears in The Guardian, Yellowhead Institute, and The National Observer, and she’s frequently featured in media and documentaries.
Aviaja Rakel Sanimuinaq
Inuk Shaman Kalaallit Nunaat (Greenland)Aviaja Sanimuinaq is an Inuit woman who comes from a shamanic lineage in Greenland. Aviaja returned to her pre-colonized traditional beliefs after a long journey of intergenerational trauma healing. She holds a deep respect for ancient teachings, connection and healing in a modern world.
Uncle Paul Gordon
Elder, Cultural Custodian Bundjalung & Wiradjuri (Australia)Uncle Paul Gordon is a cultural leader and custodian of Aboriginal Lore throughout Australia and has dedicated his life to teaching and connecting stories. He leads camps and workshops for Indigenous and non-Indigenous people to reconnect to culture. As a traditional knowledge holder and custodian of Aboriginal lore, he continues to share as part of his obligation to thousands of years of Aboriginal culture.
Ikimaliq Pikilak
Cultural mediator and knowledgekeeper Kalaallit Nunaat (Greenland)Ikimaliq Pikilak is an artist, author, filmmaker and traditional practitioner of Tunniit (Inuit Tattoo from Narsaq). A neurodivergent research nerd, she has been researching Inuit culture since 2016. Her passion about the preservation of Inuit culture is exemplified in the disseminating knowledge through her practice, art, children’s books and films.
Mark Kopua
Tohunga, Director at Te Kurahuna LTD, Eastland Aotearoa (New Zealand)Mark was raised in Mangatuna, by his old people and is considered a historian by his East Coast tribes of the North Island in New Zealand; Te Aitanga a Hauiti, Ngāti Ira, and Ngāti Porou. He was the master carver for several meeting houses both on the East Coast as well as in the lower North Island. He and a small group of moko artists are responsible for the reinstatement of moko into New Zealand society. He has trained several moko artists and continues to work as a moko artist and design consultant. Mark is a co-director for Te Kurahuna where he uses his skills as a storyteller and keeper of ancient Māori knowledge and whakapapa.
Tina Ngata
Advocate, Author and Researcher Aotearoa (New Zealand)Tina Ngata is a Ngati Porou mother of two from the East Coast of Te Ika a Maui. Her work involves advocacy for environmental, Indigenous and human rights. This includes local, national and international initiatives that highlight the role of settler colonialism in issues such as climate change and waste pollution, and promote Indigenous conservation as best practice for a globally sustainable future
Chief Na’ Moks
Hereditary Chief of the Tsayu Clan, Wet'suwet'en Territory Unist'ot'en Yin'tah (Canada)John Ridsdale, Hereditary Chief Na’Moks of the Tsayu Clan, Wet’suwet’en Territory is dedicated to the preservation and enhancement of First Nations’ culture, traditions and territories.
Patty Krawec
Anishnaabe-Ukranian Writer and Speaker Anishinaabe/UkrainianPatty Krawec (Anishinaabe/Ukrainian) is a founding director of the Nii’kinaaganaa Foundation and the author of Becoming Kin: An Indigenous Call to Unforgetting the Past and Reimagining Our Future (2022) and Bad Indians Book Club: Reading At The Edge of a Thousand Worlds (2025), both published by Broadleaf Books. Her work centers on how Anishinaabe belonging and thought can inform faith and social justice practices and has also been published in Sojourners, Rampant Magazine, Midnight Sun, Yellowhead Institute, Indiginews, Religion News Service, and Broadview. She posts podcasts and essays with some regularity on her blog. You can find her online at daanis.ca
Judy Atkinson
We Al-li Founder Bundjalung & Wiradjuri (Australia)Emeritus Professor Judy Atkinson, is a proud Jiman, Bundjalung, Anglo-Celtic and German woman. She is the author of Trauma Trails – Recreating Songlines The Transgenerational Effects of Trauma in Indigenous Australia and has won many awards for her contributions to the understanding of trauma-related issues stemming from the violence of colonisation and the healing/recovery of Indigenous peoples. Presently she is the co-founder and patron of We Al-li Trust and continues to work across Australia and in Papua New Guinea.
Joe Williams
Author of "The Enemy Within" and Public Speaker Bundjalung & Wiradjuri (Australia)Joe is a proud Wiradjuri/Wolgalu, First Nations Aboriginal man. He forged a successful professional sporting career as a rugby player and boxer, but after struggling with suicidal ideation and Bipolar disorder, he felt his true purpose was to help other people struggling with mental health. Joe is now an accomplished author and motivational speaker, teaching people tools to improve their well-being and in 2019 was named a dual winner of the Australian Mental Health Prize.
Darcia Narvaez
Expert in Human Development and Moral EvolutionDarcia Narvaez is Professor Emerita of Psychology at the University of Notre Dame. Born in Minnesota, she grew up living around the world as a bilingual/bicultural Puerto Rican-German American but calls Earth her home. Her earlier careers include professional musician, business owner, classroom music teacher, classroom Spanish teacher, and seminarian. She uses an interdisciplinary approach to studying evolved morality, child development and human flourishing. Her most recent books are Restoring the Kinship Worldview, and The Evolved Nest: Nature’s Way of Raising Children and Creating Connected Communities. Her recent short films are Breaking the Cycle, The Evolved Nest, and Reimagining Humanity. She hosts the webpage EvolvedNest.org and serves as president of KindredWorld.org.
Donna Kerridge
Rongoā Māori Healer, Waikato Waikato, Aotearoa (NZ)Donna Kerridge (Ngāti Tahinga, Ngāti Mahuta) is a Rongoā Māori practitioner from Waikato, Aotearoa New Zealand. She is an advocate, healer, and leader, passionate about Indigenous practices that focus on healing and restoring traditional wisdom. One of Donna’s gifts is the ability to bridge Western approaches with Indigenous Māori approaches to bring a collective and harmonious way forward. She is an advisor for the New Zealand Ministry of Health and educates people of all ages in Rongoā. Deeply anchored in mātauranga Māori and in her intuition, Donna is a powerful facilitator, helping groups discover their own wisdom, their indigeneity and learn from each other in service of our Earth and future generations.
Four Arrows
Indigenous Scholar and Activist for Holistic EducationWahinkpe Topa (Four Arrows), aka Donald Trent Jacobs, Ph.D., Ed.D., is a renowned scholar and Oglala Pipe Carrier whose main focus is on the intersection of non-binary worldview reflection, Indigeneity, counter-hegemonic education, environmental ethics, animism, and global interconnectedness. Four Arrows has contributed to the discourse on how our pre-colonial worldview and traditional Indigenous knowledge can be integrated into contemporary educational systems to create a more holistic and culturally sensitive approach. He lives with his artist wife by the Pacific seas of Mexico and Canada.

Tiokasin Ghosthorse
International speaker on Peace, Indigenous and Mother Earth perspective
Tiokasin Ghosthorse
International speaker on Peace, Indigenous and Mother Earth perspective Lakota NationTiokasin Ghosthorse, a member of the Cheyenne River Lakota Nation, is a lifelong Indigenous activist and advocate. He is the Founder, Host, and Executive Producer of First Voices Radio, which has aired for 30 years in New York City and Seattle/Olympia, Washington. In 2016, he was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by the International Institute of Peace Studies and Global Philosophy. He has also been nominated for the Indigenous Music Awards, the National Native American Hall of Fame, and the Americans for the Arts Johnson Fellowship. Tiokasin describes himself as a “perfectly flawed human being.”
Patricia June Vickers
Indigenous Trauma Therapist and Artist Ts'msyen, Heiltsuk nations & UK (Canada)Patricia June Vickers is an artist, writer, teacher, and psychotherapist dedicated to grounding mental health in ancestral Indigenous knowledge. With roots in the Heiltsuk, Tsimshian, and Haida Nations, she integrates trauma healing, soul work, and expressive arts. She is a mother of four and grandmother of ten.
Linda Thai
Mental Health Clinician, Storyteller, and EducatorLinda Thai, LMSW ERYT-200 is a trauma therapist and educator who specializes in brain and body-based modalities for addressing complex developmental trauma. Linda has worked with thousands of people from all over the world to promote mindfulness, recover from trauma, and tend to grief as a means of self care. Linda’s work centers on healing with a special focus on the experiences of adult children of refugees and immigrants. Her teaching is infused with empathy, storytelling, humor, research, practical tools, applied knowledge, and experiential wisdom. She has assisted internationally renowned psychiatrist and trauma expert, Dr. Bessel van der Kolk, with his private small group psychotherapy workshops aimed at healing attachment trauma. She has a Master of Social Work with an emphasis on the neurobiology of attachment and trauma.
Jungwon Kim
Writer and Cultural WorkerJungwon Kim is an award-winning writer and cultural worker. She is also a communications leader, organizational strategy consultant, and journalist who has dedicated her professional life to human rights and environmental advocacy. As Head of Creative & Editorial at the Rainforest Alliance, she directed a multimedia team of writers, videographers, and graphic designers. Earlier in her career, she served as the editor of Amnesty International USA’s human rights quarterly that featured the work of award-winning journalists and documentary photographers (circulation 300,000). She began her storytelling career as a newspaper reporter, magazine editor, and on-air correspondent for nationally syndicated public radio programs.
Dohee Lee
Transformative Artist Bridging Tradition & InnovationDohee Lee (Artistic Director) weaves her multiple virtuosities in drumming, dancing, and singing into immersive ritualized theatrical creations. Born on Jeju Island, Korea, she trained at the master-level in music and dance styles rooted in Korean shamanism. In 1998, Dohee moved to Oakland, Calif., to create a new art form. Since then, she has become an award-winning traditional and contemporary arts performer, collaborating with Kronos Quartet, Anna Halprin, inkBoat, Degenerate Art Ensemble and many others.
Dohee’s work ranges from solo performances to full-scale theater productions. Dohee utilizes cutting-edge wearable wireless controller technology to seamlessly integrate acoustic and electronic sounds, video projections, dance, vocals and rhythm. She emphasizes the mythical, experimental, ritualistic, historical and healing aspects of performance and installation, catalyzing new relationships between identity, nature, spirituality, and the political.
Diana Kopua
Māori psychiatrist, Director at Te Kurahuna LTD, Eastland Eastland, Aotearoa (NZ)Dr. Diana is the Director at Te Kurahuna LTD and is of Ngāti Porou descent raised in Porirua under the umbrella of Ngāti Toa. Diana began her journey in the health industry, training first as a nurse and then as a psychiatrist and is a Fellow of the Royal Australia New Zealand College of Psychiatry. Mahi a Atua became the philosophy behind Diana’s ground-breaking work. She and her husband, Mark Kopua, continue to grow a collective of Mataora (change agents who are trained in Mahi a Atua) to indigenise their respective communities.
Daniel Foor
Ritualist and EducatorDaniel is a doctor of psychology, experienced ritualist, and the author of Ancestral Medicine: Rituals for Personal and Family Healing. He is a practicing Muslim and initiate in the Òrìṣà tradition of Yoruba-speaking West Africa who has also learned from Mahayan Buddhism and the older ways of his English and German ancestors. Daniel was a U.S. Fulbright scholar in Cairo, Egypt as a student of Arabic language, and he is passionate about generational healing and training leaders and change makers in the intersections of cultural healing, animist ethics, and applied ritual arts. He lives with his wife and daughters near his adoptive home of Granada, Spain in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada Mountains.
Susan Raffo
Writer, cultural worker and bodyworkerSusan Raffo (she/her) is a writer, cultural worker, and bodyworker based in Minneapolis. Her work explores the connections between community care, healing justice, and abolition, focusing on the impact of generational trauma and oppressive systems. She is a core member of the Healing Histories Project and REP, a Black-led crisis support network. Raffo is the author of Liberated to the Bone and other works. In 2024, she completed a yearlong walk from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Find her writing and work at www.susanraffo.com.
Lyla June
Indigenous Musician, Scholar and Community organizer Diné Bikéyah (New Mexico)Dr. Lyla June Johnston (aka Lyla June) is an Indigenous musician, scholar, and community organizer of Diné (Navajo), Tsétsêhéstâhese (Cheyenne) and European lineages.
Her messages focus on Indigenous rights, supporting youth, traditional land stewardship practices and healing inter-generational and inter-cultural trauma.
She blends her study of Human Ecology at Stanford, graduate work in Indigenous Pedagogy, and the traditional worldview she grew up with to inform her music, perspectives and solutions. Her doctoral research focused on the ways in which pre-colonial Indigenous Nations shaped large regions of Turtle Island (aka the Americas) to produce abundant food systems for humans and non-humans.

Pat McCabe
Diné mother, grandmother, activist, artist, ceremonial leader, and international speaker.
Pat McCabe
Diné mother, grandmother, activist, artist, ceremonial leader, and international speaker. Diné Bikéyah (New Mexico)Pat McCabe (Weyakpa Najin Win, Woman Stands Shining) is a Diné (Navajo) mother, grandmother, activist, artist, writer, ceremonial leader, and international speaker. She is a voice for global peace, and her paintings are created as tools for individual, earth and global healing. She draws upon the Indigenous sciences of Thriving Life to reframe questions about sustainability and balance, and she is devoted to supporting the next generations, Women’s Nation and Men’s Nation, in being functional members of the “Hoop of Life” and upholding the honor of being human.
Uncle Willy
Healer, Storyteller Mokupuni Hawai'iKnown as “Uncle Willy”, an esteemed healer and storyteller who is highly knowledgeable in the wisdom of “Old Hawaii.” His mom was an practitioner of Lāʻau lapaʻau (herbal medicine). His dad was a “ha” healer (using words to heal). Uncle Willy grew up immersed in the traditional ways of healing.
Nipun Mehta
Founder of ServiceSpaceNipun Mehta is a designer of social movements that are rooted in small acts of service and powered by micro moments of inner transformation.
As the founder of ServiceSpace, his work has uniquely catalyzed “many to many” networks of community builders grounded in their localities and rooted in practices of cultivating deeper connection–with oneself, each other and our systems. He was honored as an “unsung hero of compassion” by the Dalai Lama, not long before former U.S. President Obama appointed him to a council for addressing poverty and inequality in the US.
Casey Camp-Horinek
Activist, Environmentalist, Actress and AuthorCasey Camp-Horinek, a Councilwoman and Hereditary Drumkeeper of the Ponca Nation of Oklahoma, is a dedicated advocate for Indigenous and environmental rights. A longtime activist, speaker, and author, she has been at the forefront of the global Rights of Nature movement, working to protect the Earth and Indigenous sovereignty. She played a key role in the Ponca Nation’s adoption of the Rights of Nature Statute and a moratorium on fracking. As a board member of WECAN, Movement Rights, and Earthworks, she continues to champion Indigenous-led solutions to climate change, reminding us that “we ARE nature protecting itself.
Osprey Orielle Lake
Environmental Leader, Author and Founder of WECANOsprey Orielle Lake is the founder and executive director of the Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN), a global initiative dedicated to climate justice, women’s leadership, and Indigenous rights. A passionate advocate for the Rights of Nature, she works to elevate frontline women’s voices in environmental policymaking. Osprey is also an author and public speaker, addressing the intersections of social justice, ecological sustainability, and systemic change. Through WECAN, she collaborates with grassroots movements, policymakers, and global leaders to drive solutions rooted in equity and resilience, ensuring that communities and the planet are protected for future generations.
Awhitia Mihaere
Master Practitioner Rongoā Māori, Tāmaki Makaurau Aotearoa (New Zealand)Awhitia (Ngāti Kahungunu) is an Indigenous Master Practitioner of Rongoā Māori and a traditional birther. Born in Tokoroa she was guided into te ao Mārama by her grandmother. Today she is a mother, grandmother, healer, Tohunga Ruahine of Haputanga’ Rongoā, Kaiako of Rongoā, and a facilitator of Ho’oponopono. Awhitia has traveled internationally and brought Rongoā Maori into many places to uplift, energize, and heal. She is supported by Mana whenua Ngati Paoa , Ngai Tai, Marutuahu,and Ngati Whaatua ki Kaipara.
Ruby Gibson
International Healer, Speaker and EducatorA mixed blood woman, Dr. Ruby is the Executive Director of Freedom Lodge, and an international healer, speaker and educator. She has spent her life developing and training others in Somatic Archaeology©, a transgenerational approach to wellness and reclaiming memory. Dr. Gibson is also the developer of Generational Brainspotting™, My Body, My Breath™ and the Historical Trauma Master Class for Native Americans. She is honored to witness the amazing capacity that each person has to reconcile suffering.
Byrde Nez
Diné Trauma Trainer & Community Helper Diné Bikéyah (Arizona)Byrde Nez is a Diné mother and great-grandaughter to Little Singer. She was raised in the small community of Birdsprings, where she continues to provide service in various capacities from coaching to faith-based volunteer. Byrde is working on her doctorate in Counseling Psychology from Grand Canyon University, with the intent to serve in the educational system upon completion of her dissertation.
Dr. Omavi Bailey
President of PROMETRA USA and Integrative PhysicianDr. Omavi Bailey, President of PROMETRA USA, bridges African traditional healing and Western medicine to address global health challenges. A board-certified physician and somnologist, his journey began under Ugandan traditional healers and led to global collaborations. He advocates for integrative, ancestral-rooted approaches to healing individuals and restoring collective well-being.
Dr. Sekagya Yahaya Hills
Traditional Healer and Dental SurgeonDr. Sekagya Yahaya Hills is a traditional healer, dental surgeon, and passionate advocate for integrative medicine in Uganda. With qualifications spanning dentistry (BDS), public health (MPH), law, and project management, he uniquely bridges traditional and modern healthcare systems. As Director of PROMETRA Uganda and founder of the Dr. Sekagya Institute of Traditional Medicine, he promotes holistic healthcare rooted in ancestral wisdom. Dr. Sekagya has served on several boards, including Uganda’s National Drug Authority, and actively contributes to international forums on Indigenous health. His life’s mission is advancing the integration and recognition of traditional medicine to improve health outcomes globally.
Tāngaroa Ngaropo-Tāwio
Cultural Leader and Maori ScholarTāngaroa Ngaropo-Tāwio is a Māori scholar, spiritual practitioner, and cultural leader dedicated to reviving ancestral knowledge. Rooted in Te Rarawa, Ngāpuhi, and Te Uri o Te Aho Ariki, he leads the reactivation of the ancient Nukutawhiti Whare Wānanga, upholding sacred teachings, spiritual sovereignty, and the living wisdom of his ancestors.
Thomas Hübl
Teacher, Author and Collective Trauma ExpertThomas Hübl, PhD, is a teacher, author, and facilitator known for integrating mysticism and science to address collective and intergenerational trauma. He leads global programs on healing and cultural transformation and is a visiting scholar at Harvard’s Wyss Institute, working at the intersection of wisdom traditions and systemic change.
Euphrasia Nyaki
Healer and EducatorEuphrasia (Efu) Nyaki, born on Mount Kilimanjaro’s slopes, is a healer, educator, and Somatic Experiencing® Legacy Faculty member. With roots in science and ancestral wisdom, she has spent decades offering trauma healing, bodywork, and herbal medicine training across Brazil and the world, fostering community resilience and transgenerational healing.
Sarah Bradley
Co-Founder and Director of Public Engagement, Land Justice FuturesSarah Bradley is a popular educator, community organizer, and Co-Founder of Land Justice Futures. She designs programs and builds strategic movement partnerships rooted in justice and liberation. A co-founder of Nuns & Nones and Open Master’s, Sarah lives on Tewa lands in New Mexico, joyfully tending community, learning, and land.
Jarmbi Miles
Fire Tender, We Al-li group fascilitator Bundjalung & Wiradjuri (Australia)Jarmbi is a regional custodian of the Northern Rivers on the east coast of Australia. Deeply committed to community activism and connection to wisdom, he works with both Indigenous and non-indigenous communities, focusing on the intersecting issues of sovereignty, environment, human rights, and trauma healing.
Kristen Burge
Co-Founder of ACW Foundation and Certified IFS PractitionerKristen Burge, JD, MA, CM/F, is Co-Founder of the ACW Foundation and a Certified Internal Family Systems (IFS) Practitioner. With a background in law, mediation, and trauma-informed healing, Kristen serves Indigenous communities and promotes collaborative approaches to conflict resolution, weaving somatic practices and cultural integration into her work for collective wellness.
(Chief Oluwo) Obafemi Fayemi
Renowned Babalawo and Founder of O.I.D.S.I.Chief Oluwo Obafemi Fayemi Epega is a renowned Babalawo, author, and founder of O.I.D.S.I. Dedicated to restoring African divine sciences, Baba Femi has facilitated global workshops, overseen hundreds of ceremonies, and mentors initiates worldwide. He honors his lineage as a native Houstonian, descendant of slaves, priest, teacher, and healer.
Brenna Cussen-Anglada
Co-Founder of Saint Isidore Catholic Worker FarmBrenna is a founding member of Saint Isidore Catholic Worker Farm, an intentional community rooted in prayer, hospitality, and nonviolent action. She co-founded Catholic Truth and Healing and works with the Honor Native Land Fund, supporting research, transparency, and land return as essential steps toward racial and ecological healing.
Rune Hjarnø Rasmussen
Founder of Nordic AnimismRune Hjarnø Rasmussen, PhD, is a historian of religion and founder of Nordic Animism. Bridging Indigenous perspectives and European heritage, he reimagines old Nordic traditions to inspire sustainable, nature-connected ways of living in response to climate and cultural breakdown.
James McGuire
Collections Coordinator, Saahlinda Naay Haida Gwaii MuseumJim McGuire is a well established Haida artist with a career that spans several decades. He is well known for his precise and creative jewelry carving. He is a member of the Stastas Eagle Clan and was born and raised on Haida Gwaii. Here he was surrounded by artists, including his uncle Edmund Caulder from whom he learned wood and argillite carving. In 1976 he moved to Vancouver where he worked with prominent Haida artist Gerry Marks. From Marks McGuire learned how to temper and how to make tools from tempered steel.
Kylie Marjambi
Fire Tender, We Al-li group fascilitatorKylie Marjambi walks as a living example and interpreter of the ancient way in the context of the next seven generations. She focuses on returning to new old ways of being and seeing through ancient wisdom, connection, and grounding ceremony. Through her work, she honors the old ones and our habitat, Planet Earth.
Jose Barreiro
Author and ActivistJose Barreiro (Hatuey) is a Taino elder, author, and longtime journalist dedicated to Indigenous advocacy. A former director at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian, he led landmark exhibitions on Caribbean and Andean cultures and continues advising Indigenous initiatives across the Americas.
Katsi Cook
Indigenous Midwife, Environmental Health Advocate and Cultural LeaderKatsi Cook is a Mohawk midwife, environmental health advocate, and cultural leader from Akwesasne. She integrates ancestral knowledge with community-based research to support Indigenous women’s health, land stewardship, and cultural revitalization. Her work centers on the belief that women are the first environment, nurturing life and interconnection.
Loretta Afraid of Bear
Lakota Faith KeeperDr. Loretta Afraid of Bear Cook is a Lakota elder, ceremonial leader, and cultural knowledge keeper. A first-language speaker and faith-keeper of the Sundance pipe, she teaches traditional lifeways, advocates for food sovereignty, and upholds the sacred legacy of her ancestors through ceremony, land stewardship, and intergenerational healing.
Baratunde Thurston
StorytellerBaratunde Thurston is an Emmy-nominated storyteller, host of America Outdoors and How To Citizen, and author of the best-selling memoir How To Be Black. Blending humor, insight, and compassion, he explores the intersection of technology, nature, and society to inspire more connected, conscious ways of living and leading.
Zaya Ralitza Benazzo is a producer and film director born and raised in Sofia, Bulgaria. She is the co-founder of the nonprofit organization SAND. She has produced and directed several award-winning documentaries including Where Olive Trees Weep, The Wisdom of Trauma, The Art of Life and other upcoming films within The Eternal Song film series.
The Eternal Song

Maurizio Benazzo grew up in Genova, Italy. At an early age he began actively traveling the spiritual path, exploring the practices of Zen Buddhism, Transcendental Meditation, Yogic philosophy, Catholicism and Philosophy. He has experience in all aspects of film production both in front of and behind the camera, including acting, directing, cinematography, and distribution.
The Eternal Song

Alnoor’s work lives at the intersection of political organizing, systems thinking, structural change, and storytelling. He co-founded and led The Rules, a global network challenging the root causes of inequality, poverty, and climate change. Formed in 2012, TR was a time-bound experiment in reimagining organizational design.

Lynn Murphy is a strategic advisor for foundations and NGOs working in the geopolitical South. She was a senior fellow and program officer at the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation where she focused on international education and global development. She resigned as a "conscientious objector” to neocolonial philanthropy.

Sarah Nahar (she) is a nonviolent action trainer and interspiritual theologian. An emerging expert of Excreta Infrastructure Technologies, her doctoral work centers on ecological regeneration, community cultivation, and discard studies. Previously, Sarah was a 2019 Rotary Peace Fellow and worked at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Center in Atlanta, Georgia.

Mays Imad, PhD, is a neuroscientist, educator, and advocate whose interdisciplinary work bridges neuroscience, philosophy, and education. Fascinated by consciousness and the brain's profound complexity, Mays explores both quantifiable physical laws and metaphysical dimensions of human experience.

Yemi Penn is a globally recognized thought leader, researcher, and speaker dedicated to transforming cultural trauma and societal divisions. Combining her background as an engineer and entrepreneur, Yemi challenges traditional narratives on resilience, power, and systemic change.

Ariel Clark (she/they) is an Odawa Anishinaabekwe attorney and advocate weaving Indigenous law, land stewardship, and cultural renewal. A citizen of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians, she supports grassroots projects like Roots To Sky Sanctuary and Life Comes From It, centering sacred relationships with land and community.

Cassandra Ferrera is Program Director at the Center for Ethical Land Transition. With a background in activist real estate, she is dedicated to supporting cooperative living, decommodifying land, and fostering reparative justice. Guided by a deep commitment to cultural reunion, Cassandra works to transform real estate practice in service to Land.

Rachael Knight is an attorney and expert in community land rights, natural resource governance, and legal empowerment. A Senior Associate at IIED, she co-founded Namati and created its Community Land Protection Program, advancing global models for participatory land stewardship, cultural revitalization, and community-led conservation.

Amelia Rose Barlow is an Impact Strategist and entrepreneur dedicated to environmental and social transformation. Through her consultancy and leadership roles—including with the Climate Emergency Fund, The Fountain’s Sacred Territories Initiative, and We The Data—she advances cross-sector strategies that foster collaboration, sustainability, and systemic change across global communities.
















Kinship,
Community,
and Belonging
The Vision
The film exposes the ongoing efforts to erase indigenous cultures and the resulting cycles of intergenerational trauma. It contrasts the Western framework of human dominance over Earth, and God’s rule over humans, with indigenous, earth-based, animist spirituality. Moving visually in a nonlinear, lyrical way, it looks beyond binaries to uncover resilience emerging from trauma and traces the roots of healing in the recovery of culture, land, and ceremonies. Sowing wisdom through the stories it tells, it pits the madness of colonialism against the resilience of indigenous spirit.




SAND is a nonprofit organization under section 501.c.3 of the US tax code. Its headquarters are on Coastal Miwok and Southern Pomo Land in Sebastopol, CA. We thank the past, current, and future Indigenous stewards of this territory.

















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