Independent Guåhan Teach-Ins for November
Independent Guåhan to hold Teach-Ins in
November, to provide updates on Catalonia and a panel on inter-generational
activism
Each
month Independent Guåhan (IG) holds a Teach-In at the University of Guam aimed
at informing the island community about pertinent issues related to Guåhan’s
political status and decolonization. This month IG will be holding two
Teach-Ins, the first on November 9th focusing on recent updates on
the movement for independence and Catalonia, and the second on November 16th,
which will focus on inter-generational Chamorro activism. Both Teach-Ins will
take place from 6:00 PM – 7:30 PM at UOG Humanities and Social Sciences
Building (HSS) Room 106. They are free and open to the public.
The
November 9th Teach-In is titled “Som Una Nacio, Nosaltres Decidim:
Updates on Catalan Independence.” Long-standing desires amongst the people of
Catalonia, Spain for greater autonomy has taken concrete form in recent months.
Following violent crackdowns over a referendum on Catalonia’s independence,
where the overwhelming majority of voters elected to seek independence, the
state declared itself independent last month. This has led to tension and
Spain’s dissolution of the Catalan government. This Teach-In will focus on what
lessons Guåhan in its own quest for decolonization might learn from recent
events on the Iberian Peninsula.
The
November 16th Teach-In is titled “Families for Justice: Generations
of Chamorro Activists Tell Their Stories,” and co-sponsored by the group
Prutehi Litekyan/Save Ritidian. Plans by the US military to place a firing
range in the culturally and environmentally significant Litekyan area of Northern
Guåhan has helped create a new wave of local community organizing. The
emergence of the Prutehi Litekyan/Save Ritidian is closely tied to the work of
Chamorro families who have taken up issues of land rights, demilitarization and
decolonization and passed this obligation on from one generation to the next.
This Teach-In will feature a panel of activists from three different families,
the Garrido, Artero and Flores clans, each of which has spent generations
protesting, pushing for land return or calling for Guåhan’s decolonization.
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