The Nature Connection Network/Sacred Activism with Sangoma Oludoye & Amy Hyatt

  • $100

Sacred Activism with Sangoma Oludoye & Amy Hyatt

Sacred Activism is the act of making all things Sacred.

The Sacred filled with Grace and Love can help us in these times.

Some of us have lost sight of the Sacred even as we are having to evolve to be resilient in the face of adversity.

Join your Guides, Sangoma Oludoye and Amy Hyatt, for conversations and adventures into the ways Nature and the Act of making all things Sacred can guide us in these times.

This is a deep reweaving of who we are and what it takes to complete the missions we are on!!!

Sangoma Oludoye

Sacred Activist, is a wife, mother, and grandmother. A traditional Yoruba priestess, Afin chief and member of the Egbe Moremi, National African Women’s Society in the Kingdom of Oyotunji African Village, located in Sheldon SC.. North America’s oldest, authentic African community, Sangoma met Oyotunji’s founder and Father of the Cultural Restoration movement in 1969 at the age of 12. A Sangoma speaks of a tribe of healers and diviners with indigenous gifts of ancestral medicine from South Africa. Sangoma graduated from Clark University, Worcester, Mass in 1977 with a BA in Theatre Arts, After a 20 year career in broadcast journalism , television, radio and cable…life presented the opportunity to explore shamanism, women’s history, movement, pan-Africanism and Wise woman Traditions. Sangoma has taught at numerous summer camps and Earthskills gatherings, including as Director and primary instructor for 180 “at risk” youth between 9-14 in the Camp Champion, summer program in Thomson, Ga. Sangoma has more than 30 years in her priesthood, female rites of passage programs, women’s wisdom councils and weekend empowerment retreats. An artist, facilitator, and cultural preservationist, we are honored to have Sangoma’s leadership.

Amy Hyatt

Amy moved to Vermont in August 2001 to participate in Vermont Wilderness School’s Instructor Apprenticeship Program, get trained and move back to her birth home bioregion of Southwestern Ohio to start a wilderness school there. She quickly fell in love with Vermont, the work of VWS, and the children and families. She has been with us ever since. Amy completed the four-year VWS Apprenticeship Program in 2005, and she has been a lead instructor since 2003. Her specialty is working with children ages 7-11 and adults of all ages in areas of nature awareness, basic survival skills, cultural facilitation, and community building. She completed a Master of Arts in eco-literacy and place-based education from Union Institute and University and a Bachelor’s of Philosophy in Cross-Cultural Communication through the Arts from Miami University.

Contents

Sacred Activism
  • (1h 12m 14s)
  • 262 MB