Seed Songs for Palestine Fundraiser

When

Sat, 1 March 2025

3:30 - 7pm

Where

Forgan Arts Centre - Forgan Arts Centre 59 Kirk Road Newport-on-Tay DD6 8JB

Further info

Cost: Pay What You Can

Book

Type: Event

About

Join us for an afternoon of screenings and activities focusing on seed sovereignty and solidarity with Palestine’s farmers and growers. This event is a fundraiser. Donations will be given to the Arab Centre for the Protection of Nature’s ‘Reviving Gaza’s Farmland Project’, an agricultural project aiming to combat the impact of famine and blockades on Gazans.

The event will begin with the screening of a programme of films highlighting the intrinsic connections between land, culture, and self-determination. Afterwards, you can get your hands in some soil with practical planting activities, learn more about Forgan Art Centre’s own new seed library, and a make your own DIY zine.

We’ll be fuelled with food by Simply Flo who specialise in Lebanese vegan cuisine that celebrates fresh, wholesome ingredients and bold flavours that reflect the traditions of the Middle East.

Resources will be available for learning more about Palestinian culture and food security. If you can’t attend, please consider donating.

Film Programme

  • Cecilia Vicuña, Semiya (Seed song) (2015, Chile, 8 mins)
  • Alanis Obomsawin, Farming (1975, Canada, 2 mins)
  • Rana Nazzal Hamadeh, We Would Be Freer (2023, Palestine/Canada, 9 mins)
  • Marwa Arsanios, Who is Afraid of Ideology, Part I & II (2017-2019, Lebanon/Iraqi Kurdistan, North and East Syria, 39 mins)
  • Ryley Williams, it’s amazing that you still exist (2021, Canada, 4 mins)
  • Nicolás Grandi and Lata Mani, Nocturne I (2013, India, 5 mins) Total running time: 74 mins

The films in Seed Songs for Palestine engage themes of seed sovereignty and Indigenous resilience, highlighting the intrinsic connections between land, culture, and self-determination. Delving into the symbolic and practical importance of seeds, plant life, and relations with land as forms of resistance and continuity for Indigenous communities, the films interrogate the dynamics of freedom and survival in the face of environmental and colonial oppression, while also offering poignant reflections on both the fragility and resilience of existence. Collectively, they illuminate the vital role of seed sovereignty in asserting Indigenous rights and preserving cultural heritage. This collection of shorts presents a rich tapestry of voices and radical perspectives that have existed from time immemorial, considering the intersections of ecological stewardship and self determination which continue to disperse across fertile lands.

Acknowledgements

The Revive Gaza’s Farmlands Project was initiated by Golo Besmlah in collaboration with Arab Centre for the Protection of Nature. Curated by wave~form~projects and re:assemblage collective.

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