SII-AM HAMILTON on Respect-Based Futures [ENCORE] /279

Kalilah Rampanen, Ta’Kaiya Blaney, and Sii-am Hamilton via @siiamhamilton; Salish Thunderbird by Ocean Hyland; Photo collage by Miriam.

This week we are rebroadcasting our interview with Sii-am Hamilton, originally aired in November of 2020. “It is in direct favor of all people living on this land to abolish those systems because if they can turn on one group, they can turn on all groups. And it's really important to find new and imaginative, futuristic ways for us to protect ourselves and grow and build capacity within our communities so that we can find a better way forward.” - Sii-am Hamilton on Respect-Based Futures [Encore] /279

In this powerful conversation with land defender Sii-am Hamilton, we are invited to discuss futuristic ways forward in recognition that Indigenous communities have been practicing creative resistance against colonialism and capitalism for hundreds of years. We begin by discussing what is currently transpiring on Wet’suwet’en territories and how colonial governments are using the current pandemic (and will use future crises) to roll back regulatory measures and push development full force. Sii-am offers a holistic reflection on frontline land defense and the extent to which violence is afflicted upon land defenders, and resource extraction participants, by transnational corporations, while also reorienting us to the reality that just, dignified, and brilliant futures already exist but are not given attention, curiosity, or love because they do not serve corporate profit.

Showing up, even imperfectly, is still showing up. It means that you’ve activated something in your body, something in your mind, something in your spirit that has told you it’s time.
— Sii-am Hamilton / Episode 279

Photo of Sii-am Hamilton

Sii-am Hamilton is a Sto:lo and Nuučaan̓uł land defender and traditional knowledge holder born in occupied Hupacasath territory, Port Alberni, British Columbia to mother Kwitsel Tatel and father Ron Hamilton. Their experience stems from time on the land, feast culture, and living traditional law and protocol. They are a qualified hand poke tattoo artist as well as a song holder. Sii-am has been raised in political organization, land title, and grassroots activism since childhood, and now specializes in publicity/media promotion of environmental and land sovereignty movements. Sii-am does Indigenous youth solidarity organizing across Turtle Island with a focus on raising awareness of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Woman, Girls, and 2Spirit people. They have plans to continue their learning through academic study with an end goal of disseminating all forms of settler colonialism in exchange for the survival of Black, Brown, and Indigenous people around the world.

This powerful episode also explores what it means for settlers to ally with Indigenous sovereignty, youth leadership, the media’s role in profit protection, and the overwhelming necessity of abolishing colonial governments in order to secure some semblance of a future under climate change.

♫The music featured in this episode is "Una" and "Don't Make Me Blue" by Elisapie.


Take Action

If you learned from Sii-am in this conversation, you can support them via PayPal– siiamhamilton@gmail.com


References & Recommendations

Indigenous Youth for Wet’suwet’en

Tiny House Warriors

Fact check: are B.C.’s LNG ambitions compatible with its climate goals?

B.C. eyes emissions trading to offset effects of LNG development, government documents show

Indigenous Blockades Don’t Just Decry Destruction—They Affirm Life

Indigenous youth are rising up in solidarity with Wet’suwet’en


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