Tumgik
#janie pochel
venusinorbit · 2 years
Link
When the City of Chicago entrusted a 15,625-square-foot vacant lot into the hands of urban Native youth and their head auntie Janie Pochel, she feared that their goal to open the city’s first Indigenous garden might never take root.
The land they steward, still in the city’s custody, on the corner of North Pulaski Road and West Wilson Avenue in the northwestern Chicago neighborhood of Albany Park, was an eyesore before they arrived.
Members of the Chi-Nations Youth Council (CNYC) worked tirelessly to clear the property of debris in the fall of 2018, months before the First Nations Garden’s grand opening by next spring. They believed it was an obligation to pass on tribal and inter-tribal knowledge and traditions to the next generation — and to heal the land that their ancestors thrived on a few centuries ago.
“It’s still a fight,” says Pochel, who is First Nations Oji-Cree and serves as CNYC’s lead advisor. “People tried to take the land from us.”
Eventually, they were able to transform the empty, standard five-city lot into more than just a garden. It’s now a safe space, a new home for Chicago’s urban Native youth who feel lost and alienated.
10 notes · View notes
fatehbaz · 5 years
Text
“Chicago’s First Nations Garden: Photos from the reclamation of Native space in the city” - Some scenes of the Chi-Nations Youth Council and the urban garden, in 2018 and 2019, from visual journalist Pat Nabong.
Tumblr media
Captions from photographer Pat Nabong: ‘Inside the tepee at the First Nations Garden, Adrien Pochel, who is Oji-Cree and interim co-president of the Chi-Nations Youth Council, and Anthony Tamez start a fire so they can boil maple sap from the trees in their Albany Park neighborhood.’
All text from Pat Nabong’s article in Belt Magazine, 24 April 2019:
On a vacant lot in Chicago’s Albany Park neighborhood, Native youth have taken root and are reclaiming their ancestral lands. The Chi-Nations Youth Council, which advocates for Native youth in Chicago, partnered with the American Indian Center to lease a vacant lot from the city, with the intention of creating a First Nations Garden, a dedicated space for Native Americans in the city where they can gather and grow their own food and medicine.
“As urban Natives, you know, a lot of us if we if we don’t live on the reservation, we don’t have the same political power as Natives who do live on reservations, so to have this space, you know, it’s kind of going along those lines [of sovereignty],” said Anthony Tamez, the co-president of Chi-Nations Youth Council, who identifies as Cree, Lakota and Black. “But it’s more just to, you know, have a space where we can come [together] because we’re never alone. … To have this space, an open space to come and be ourselves with each other is something that a lot of Native kids and a lot of Native youth, a lot of Native elders a lot of Native people in general in the city of Chicago is happy about.” [...]
The First Nations Garden, an inter-generational space, means different things to different people, but many see it as a safe space where Native Americans can heal, grow and come together. The images below, which were captured over the span of three months, are a glimpse into what the garden means to different people and the process of reclamation and restoration.
-
Tumblr media
‘Kids hug a tree at a maple tapping event led by Janie Pochel. Pochel taught them how to ask permission and show love to nature, which she said is an integral part of her culture, before tapping the trees.’
-
Tumblr media
‘“In the resolution, we acknowledged the land itself—so the waterways, like Lake Michigan, our Chicago River. But we also acknowledged what kind of ecosystems were here, so the prairie, the savannah, the swamp,” said Tamez. “Often, we acknowledge the people that were here first, but we don’t acknowledge the land, and acknowledging the land is an indigenous protocol that we have done since time immemorial.”’
-
Tumblr media
‘The Chi-Nations Youth Council will continue to clean up the garden and plant seeds throughout the spring. “While this is a space for Native people to use, to heal our traumas, you know, this is a space so we can outreach to the greater Chicago community. Because it’s important that they know what, you know, the land that they’re living on and who are the people that were originally here,” Tamez said.’
-
Tumblr media
‘Nia White, daughter of Marquisha Taylor, plays with Taylor’s hair. Taylor brought her daughter to the garden after reading about the opening event on Facebook. “For me as a mother, stuff like this is really important for me to see her connect with other cultures and also just to have her around it, so that she has an understanding and a lot a lot of people don’t do that with their children,” Taylor said. “I feel like it’s something necessary living in a society like this, and many societies around the world now.”’
-
At the same time, in 2018, the Chi-Nations Youth Council, worked on a resolution acknowledging that Chicago is built on the “ancestral homeland to the Anishinaabek; Niswi-mishkodewin (Council of the Three Fires): Ojibwe, Odawa, and the Potawatomi along with dozens of tribes.” Chicago is home to more than seventy-five thousand “urban Indians,” according to the resolution, with “cultures spanning from more than 150 tribal nations.”
The city council passed the resolution in November  after striking a phrase that described the displacement and genocide of Indigenous peoples, according to alderman Carlos Ramirez-Rosa of the 35th Ward. “We wanted to pass the resolution as quickly as possible before the land acknowledgment ceremony that took place [in the garden], and in order for us to do that, the mayor’s office and the law department requested that we remove references in the ordinance to genocide of Native people,” said alderman Ramirez-Rosa who worked closely with the Chi-Nations Youth Council throughout the process.
-
Tumblr media
‘“This garden, to me, is like a bridge. It’s a bridge for all Native people to come together, to meet in one place, to enjoy the land and, you know, repatriate it—rematriate it, rather,” said Huitzi, who attended the opening of the First Nations Garden. “This is just a haven, a safe place for Natives of two spirit, trans Natives, Black indigenous Natives.”’
-
Tumblr media
‘Tamez and Naomi Harvey-Turner, former co-president of the Chi Nations Youth Council, chat while cooking burgers. For Harvey-Turner, who is Oglala and Sicangu Lakota, the First Nations Garden is a space where Native people can learn from their elders, and a safe place where they can “just be themselves, because they’re going to be facing a lot of traumas out in the world.”’
-
‘Pat Nabong is a Chicago-based visual journalist who is dedicated to challenging stereotypes and bridging gaps through visual storytelling. Through photos and videos, she explores the intersections of culture, identity and social justice issues. She is currently a Gwen Ifill Fellow with the International Women’s Media Foundation.’
87 notes · View notes