Tania Eulalia Martinez-Cruz is engaged at the international level as a consultant for Stockholm International Water Institute-UNDP Water Governance facility. She is a member of the Futuros Indígenas Collective, a network on narratives of resistance that organizes to “reforest minds” and “indigenize hearts”, emphasizing that it is Indigenous Peoples who defend 80% of the biodiversity remaining in the world. They are therefore "living alternatives to the climate crisis." In 2020, in her hometown of Tamazulapam del Espiritu Santo, Tania Eulalia Martinez-Cruz received her "Baston de Mando" (a symbolic wooden stick used as a sign of authority) to do a year of work for the community. Tamazulapam is located in the mountains of the "Sierra Norte" in Oaxaca (Mexico). The Ëyuujk who live here are also known as "the never defeated people" who successfully resisted the colonizers. The attached picture shows the panorama of the "ïpx yuukp" (20 peaks), taken by Eulalia Martinez-Cruz during her ritual walk recommended by the xëëmapy (shaman) of the community to thank Mother Earth.  


For the exhibition XOOK K'IIN perceiving temporalities, open from April 23, Martinez-Cruz, together with other authors, has written the text LOS PUEBLOS INDÍGENAS DEL MUNDO: UNA CLAVE PARA LA CRISIS CLIMÁTICA. El caso del Xook K'iin y la milpa del pueblo maya (Link to the Spanish version)

 

Tania Eulalia Martinez-Cruz website

 

 
The conversation will take place in a small circle in the library of the Spore Initiative. We want to exchange with Tania Eulalia Martinez-Cruz about the importance of Indigenous knowledge for dealing with climate crisis, food sovereignty and access to drinking water.

 

The conversation will take place in English. If needed, there will be a whisper translation into German.   

 

If you are running a bit late and the door is locked, you can call in at: +49 176 87945508.

ïpx yuukp
Photo: Tania Eulalia Martinez-Cruz