Events

Courage to Heal

Co-creators together, we will gather to design practices of courage 

To heal ourselves, our relatives, our communities

and our Mother Earth home 


A Workshop Day at Canticle Farm- an urban garden and community in Oakland, CA

1972  36th Ave, Oakland, CA, 94601

Saturday, April 26, 10 am to 4 pm PDT

Gift offering to Canticle Farm 

Bring a box lunch and one food to share

Sponsored by Reclaiming our Original Motherline of Love


RSVP here


Who are we really; what are we made of? How do the current political activities unveil our country’s shadow of tyranny and touch our own intimate vulnerabilities? Be encouraged. We will also be unveiling and working with the deep forces within our own essence to bring balm, relief, hope, and remedy! We are fully capable to face and embrace what is before us!  Let the stardust from which we arise empower us in ways we have not yet known. This time is calling us.


We will spend a day in Canticle Farm’s peaceful refuge and tangible care.  We will explore what we are seeing now in our world and what we are facing in ourselves. We will allow emergent healing practices to come from our own intimate insights and lived experience. As a devoted and impassioned community, we will talk together, have private time in the gardens, small group discussion and ceremony.


And we will be held in the loving presence of our collective spiritual force guided by Grandmother Ejna Fleury, a Lakota Elder.  She lives at Canticle Farm and is co-founder of Reclaiming our Original Motherline of Love with her friend, Molly. Their friendship is an expression of the nuance and complexity of relationships that may hold potential for moving toward wholeness and healing and health for our fractured society.


Kunsi/Abuela Ejna Jean Fleury  My mission and purpose is in sacred service to humankind in “a re-consecration of our place in the holiness of existence,” as Martin Shaw so succinctly and eloquently states. This would include humanity’s collective recognition that we have always been holy and to live in that accord with humankind, beloved Earth, and the Cosmos. Grandmother Ejna, an enrolled member of the Crow Creek Sioux Nation,  serves as a spiritual activist and counselor, meditation and consciousness facilitator and healer, mystic, visionary, and ceremonialist. She is co-convener of Reclaiming our Original Motherline of Love with Molly.

.Molly McGettigan Arthur is a native San Franciscan. She is an Associate with the Society of the Sacred Heart and is a great, great granddaughter of General Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo, “Californio Patron”, and General Patrick Edward Connor, “Father of Mining” of Utah. She works on projects of reparation with Indigenous people because of her ancestors’ perpetrations of genocide and enslavement and her Catholic legacy of conquest and spiritual violence; she calls this Decolonizing our Hearts. She curates EcoBirth-Women for Earth and Birth and Women’s Collective Matrix. She is co-convener of Reclaiming our Original Motherline of Love with Ejna.

“In vulnerable questing, dialogue & inquiry, to touch and be touched by our Souls!
To delve into the depths of psyche, radical inspiration, brilliance of genius; our heart songs of love, and transcendent Love in service to ourselves and our progeny.  We gather ‘to save our very souls!’ 

We surrender to the innocence of NOT KNOWING!  No one human has ‘the answer’ to stem or turn the tide of our acceleration of self-extinction.  But collectively!  

Let’s pool our shared devotion, reverence, inspiration, and sense of mission.”

-Abuela Ejna Fleury


Upon suffering, beyond suffering, the Red Nation shall rise again, and it shall be a blessing for a sick world. A world filled with broken promises, selfishness and separation. A world longing for a light again. I see a time of Seven Generations when all the colors of mankind will gather under the Sacred Tree of Life and the Whole Earth will become one circle again."

Attributed to~ Tȟašúŋke Witkó - Crazy Horse

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PAST EVENTS

Book Study participant page with session videos, resources and articles

Sponsoring a free book study of Hilary Giovale’s new book

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Reading Hilary’s book is a refreshing deep dive into this challenging and wondrous path of healing and repair for white-identified folks... What is beautiful about Hilary’s book is her transparency in writing about the challenges of being on this path — the embodied aspects of the emotional, psychological, spiritual, physical, and cognitive aspects of unlearning whiteness.” Leny Mendoza Strobel

“For Hilary Giovale these have included learning, “wit(h)nessing” and then truth-telling about racial and colonial violence; building a ceremonial relationship with the natural world; reclaiming European ancestral songs and languages; feeding and forgiving the ancestors; and giving generously of her love, labor and money in the spirit of gratitude and repair.” Morgan Curtis

Online four sessions Thursdays 4-5:30 pm PST,
February 20, March 6, March 20, April 3, 2025

Dr. Leny Mendoza Strobel will join us February 20, Morgan Curtis will join us March 6, Hilary Giovale will join us March 20 and Grandmother Ejna Fleury will join us April 3.

We will hear personal insights from our speakers on the provocative themes of this ground-breaking book. We will have the opportunity to question the speakers and discuss our reactions in small groups and to share with the full group.

BUY YOUR BOOK NOW!: Becoming a Good Relative: Calling White Settlers Toward Truth, Healing, and Repair

CLICK HERE - FREE REGISTRATION PAGE 

FREE registration and opportunity to donate to speakers' recommended organizations

 

Hilary Giovale is a mother, writer, and community organizer who holds a Master’s Degree in Good and Sustainable Communities. 

Descended from the Celtic,Germanic,Nordic, and Indigenous peoples of Ancient Europe, she is a ninth-generation American settler.  For most of her life these origins were obscured by whiteness.After learning more about her ancestors’ history, Hilary began emerging from a fog of amnesia, denial, and fragmentation. For the first time, she could see a painful reality: her family’s occupation of this land has harmed Indigenous and African peoples, cultures, lands, and lifeways.  With this realization, her life changed. All the income I receive from book sales is being returned to the Decolonizing Wealth Project and Jubilee Justice.

Conversation with Oglála Lakȟóta Elder Basil Brave Heart: Part 1 - Bioneers

Resilience.org excerpt from Hilary's book, Feb 27,2025

Hilary's Guide to making a personal reparations plan 2025


“. . . Becoming a Good Relative is an ethnoautobiographical account of a life that has been transformed by immersion in the Indigenous worldview. What is beautiful about Hilary’s book is her transparency in writing about the challenges of being on this path — the embodied aspects of the emotional, psychological, spiritual, physical, and cognitive aspects of unlearning whiteness. I am moved by her careful annotations, respectful acknowledgment, and referencing all the people, non-human beings, texts, places, and events that led to transformative moments along the way.May this book encourage you to discover the well-spring of deep healing that connects you to the River of Joy…where the Shadows no longer cast us asleep into Forgetting. May the act of Re-membering all the disconnected parts of ourselves bind us to a vision of our Indigenous Future together.”

Dr. Leny Mendoza Strobel is Kapampangan from the Philippines and has lived on Wappo, Coast Miwok, and Southern Pomo lands for four decades. She is Professor Emerita of American Multicultural Studies at Sonoma State University. She is the author of books and other publications on the process of decolonization and indigenization. She is a Founding Elder at the Center for Babaylan Studies. Find her at lenystrobel.com


“Audre Lorde said the master’s tools will never dismantle the master’s house. Becoming a Good Relative is an invitation for those of us born and raised in the master’s house to walk out the door, take a long, slow breath, humbly listen to the people and lands outside, and let our hearts break open with their stories of what we and our ancestors have done. As we unravel the untruths we’ve been taught about our nation’s history, we will find tools of liberation we never could have imagined from inside…Her story is an invitation to join her. She’s holding the door open for all of us.”

Morgan Curtis Guided by the call to transmute the legacy of her colonizing and enslaving ancestors, Morgan Curtis is a facilitator, writer, money coach, organizer and mother. She supports her fellow people with wealth and class privilege to move towards redistribution, atonement, and repair of ancestral harms. Her own commitments include redistributing 100% of the $600k she inherited and 50% of her income to primarily Black- and Indigenous-led social movements and land projects. Her story and work have been covered by The Guardian, The Financial Times, and El País, and she’s been a podcast guest on For The Wild and NPR’s This is Uncomfortable, amongst others. Morgan is a member-leader with Resource Generation, and calls Canticle Farm, a multi-racial, cross-class intentional community, home. She has a Masters from Harvard Divinity School, where she studied the spiritual dimension of the reparations work required of white descendants of colonizers and enslavers. Her chapbook Decolonial Dames of America was published in 2023, and other recent writing has appeared in Faith & Leadership and The Harvard Crimson.

Morgan's Writings 


Indigenous and Irish Catholic Grandmothers and friends

Kunsi/Abuela Ejna Jean Fleury My mission and purpose is in sacred service to humankind in “…a re-consecration of our place in the holiness of existence,” as Martin Shaw so succinctly and eloquently states. This would include humanity’s collective recognition that we have always been holy and to live in that accord with humankind, beloved Earth, and the Cosmos.

Molly McGettigan Arthur Molly is a native San Franciscan. She is a lay sister associate with the Society of the Sacred Heart and is a great, great granddaughter of General Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo, “Californio Patron”, and General Patrick Edward Connor, “Father of Mining” of Utah. She works on projects of reparation with Indigenous people because of her brutal colonist/conqueror ancestral lineage and violent Catholic spiritual legacy; she calls this Decolonizing our Hearts. She curates Waking Up to Our Own History and EcoBirth-Women for Earth & Birth and Women's Collective Matrix

Email Molly Arthur Molly6@pacbell.net with any question

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Being Outdoors: Sensing the Sacred

An Online Experiential Program of Cultivating 
Awareness of Belonging Wherever You Are

April - December, 2025

Being Outdoors: There’s much more than 
enjoying nice scenery available to you …

Realizing of a new way of being with yourself, 
each other and the world of which we are part;

Engaging your senses and your heart as 
pathways to awe and wonder;

Sensing profound belonging as part 
of the global and cosmic ecosystem;

Cultivating a relationship of reverence 
and reciprocity with the living Earth, 
the Universe and all beings

Being part of a community of discovery -- 
finding a new way of being alive and aware 
of the mysteries and miracles of what’s 
beyond the walls of our structures, hearts, and minds.

You ARE Invited to cross the threshold
to a new way of being in relationship 
with the living Earth and ever-evolving universe.