Podcasts about quechuan

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Best podcasts about quechuan

Latest podcast episodes about quechuan

The Fundraising Radicals
Fundraising, Storytelling, & Wellbeing in Perú with Alvaro Gonzalez | Ep 9

The Fundraising Radicals

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2024 49:46


Today our exploration of global fundraising continues with Alvaro Gonzalez, who leads the fundraising at Minga Perú. Minga is a Quechuan word that means “collaborative community work” which is at the heart of their work with indigenous communities in the Peruvian Amazon for more than 25 years. Minga Perú started as a radio station which still designs its programming and content in response to the 64,000 letters it has now received from women living in indigenous communities within the Amazon Basin - these conversations are about health, gender equality, human rights, entrepreneurship, climate justice, and much more. Themes that remain central to Minga Perú's work today. I've been working with Alvaro for the past year as we've navigated the challenges and opportunities of connecting donors to the social justice work in these very remote communities - and I have come to love his openness when it comes to discussing the nature of fundraising, what it means to be a fundraiser, what the work of fundraising is, and how exciting, but also how hard fundraising can be. This episode is for those of you who are in the early stages of your fundraising journey, or if you're wrestling with what it means to be and become a fundraiser. I know you're going to enjoy meeting Alvaro and that he will bring clarity to some of your bigger questions in this space. Some key takeaways in this episode were: Alvaro's metaphors of the bridge and nurturing those sparks which describe beautifully what it means to be a fundraiser and the nature of the work. Lots of practical ideas to help us all become better and more authentic fundraisers Importantly, how to ensure that we value our own wellbeing, and build our resilience, in what can often be an unforgiving work. If you have been inspired by Alvaro or any of our other guests, please head to the Fundraising Radicals blog to find out more about global fundraising challenges. You can access it via the website at www.fundraisingradicals.com/blog Resources and links mentioned in this episode: Minga Perúwebsite: https://mingaperu.org/en/home/ Minga Perú on LinkedIn at:: https://www.linkedin.com/company/mingaperu/ I hope you've enjoyed listening to this episode of the Fundraising Radicals podcast and that this conversation has challenged, informed, and maybe even inspired you and your fundraising leadership practice. This podcast has been made possible by the Scaling Up Nutrition Civil Society Network, Care International, the Ashmore Foundation, and our growing community of strategic partners. We're excited to explore and share alternative views and experiences so we can all move beyond the narrow experiences that dominate global fundraising practise today so that we're all better equipped to resource our causes and communities wherever in the world we are. Please do subscribe to the podcast on the platform of your choice. New episodes drop on the 1st & 15th of every month, so make sure to tune in to get more global perspectives on fundraising and leadership in the non-profit sector. More about Fundraising Radicals: If you want to find out all the ways in which we're working to empower, equip and engage fundraisers all over the world: Visit our website https://www.fundraisingradicals.com Read our blog https://www.fundraisingradicals.com/blog Follow Fundraising Radicals on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/fundraisingradicals Follow Craig on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/craigpollardfundraisingradicals And we're always looking for new perspectives. So if you would be willing to share some of your experience of global fundraising within a future episode of the podcast, please do email us. It's hello@fundraisingradicals.com

Instant Trivia
Episode 1101 - An imp of a rhyme - One man's "meat" - It's a special day - Beauty and the greek - Mr. dwayne johnson

Instant Trivia

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2024 7:51


Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 1101, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: An Imp Of A Rhyme 1: To spend time making adjustments to one's appearance. primp. 2: "Snoopy One" was one for Metlife. blimp. 3: 6-letter word meaning to economize. scrimp. 4: Crangon crangon is the scientific name for the common European one. shrimp. 5: To connect 2 wires by squeezing the ends together. crimp. Round 2. Category: One Man'S Meat. With Meat in quotation marks 1: This term for anything essential or basic could also refer to steak and home fries. Meat and potatoes. 2: Bill Murray summer camped it up in this 1979 comedy. Meatballs. 3: (Hi, I'm Earl Brown.) In 1978 two out of three wasn't bad for this singer who I played on VH1 in 2000. Meat Loaf. 4: Slang term for a singles bar, or any place with a similar atmosphere. Meat market. 5: For example: bonbons, chocolate, toffee...anyone hungry yet?. Sweet meats. Round 3. Category: It'S A Special Day 1: Made a U.S. federal holiday in 2021, it's also known as Black Independence Day. Juneteenth. 2: Every March brings a holiday in Iran on the date in 1951 when the country nationalized this industry. the oil industry. 3: This U.S. territory celebrates Flag Day on April 17, the day in 1900 that Old Glory was raised in Fagatogo on Tutuila Island. American Samoa. 4: Jerusalem's November 29 Street is named for the day in 1947 the U.N. voted to partition this British-controlled land. Palestine. 5: If you're in Peru in June, head to Cuzco on the 24th for Inti Raymi, "Sun Festival" in this language. Quechuan. Round 4. Category: Beauty And The Greek 1: Her name comes from the Greek for "gift"; Zeus gift-boxed her for the human race as punishment. Pandora. 2: Cheating Zeus hung his jealous wife Hera by her wrists on this mountain. Mount Olympus. 3: Plato said this Greek love goddess was actually 2 individuals: Urania and Pandemos. Aphrodite. 4: "Mourning becomes" this nymph who became one of the Pleiades. Elektra. 5: Zeus allowed this underworld goddess to spend part of her time in the world above. Persephone. Round 5. Category: Mr. Dwayne Johnson 1: Channeling his Pacific island heritage, Dwayne was the voice of Maui in this animated movie. Moana. 2: In the last 4 films in this speedy franchise, Dwayne has played Luke Hobbs. Fast and Furious. 3: D.J. flew a rescue chopper and saved lives in this "fault"-y disaster film. San Andreas. 4: In "Central Intelligence", Dwayne teamed up to catch a spy with this actor of smaller stature. Kevin Hart. 5: Still billed as "The Rock" in his film debut "The Mummy Returns", Dwayne played this ruler restored to life by ancient magic. the Scorpion King. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/ AI Voices used

Instant Trivia
Episode 1069 - A trip to the islands - The name of the board game - My name is earl warren - Make light work - Inca hoots?

Instant Trivia

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2024 8:24


Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 1069, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: A Trip To The Islands 1: This 2,200-square-mile Canadian island was named for a son of George III. Prince Edward Island. 2: The "Big Island" of the Tierra del Fuego archipelago is shared between Argentina and this country. Chile. 3: The migration of the red crabs is an annual spectacle on this Indian Ocean island named for a holiday. Christmas Island. 4: An island called the Phantom Ship rises from the water inside a volcanic caldera in this Oregon national park. Crater Lake. 5: On this Greek island you can soak up the sun on Elafonisi Beach or tour the ruins of the ancient palace of Knossos. Crete. Round 2. Category: The Name Of The Board Game 1: Rhinoplasty or appendectomy, for example. Operation. 2: The USS Missouri is an Iowa-class one. Battleship. 3: The Sherman Act of 1890 was meant to combat this type of business. Monopoly. 4: Slang for a tornado. Twister. 5: Nixon's spaniel. Checkers. Round 3. Category: My Name Is Earl Warren 1: In Reynolds v. Sims I said that representation in legislatures must be based mostly on population: one man, one this. vote. 2: I am interred at this national cemetery. Arlington. 3: I was a 3-term governor of this state, 1943-1953. California. 4: On June 23, 1969 I swore in this man as Chief Justice of the U.S.. Warren Burger. 5: I ruled that public school segregation was unconstitutional in this landmark 1954 case. Brown v. Board of Education. Round 4. Category: Make Light Work 1: Around noon on some days, Germany gets close to half its power from this source. solar power. 2: The light type of this is a basic tool of cell biology, magnifying specimens hundreds of times. a microscope. 3: Take a mind-expanding journey at the live show called Paramount's Laser Spectacular, with the music of this "Dark Side" band. Pink Floyd. 4: 10 projectors show astronomical wonders in the USA's largest of these facilities, at a Jersey City science center. a planetarium. 5: John Alcott and Emmanuel Lubezki, people in this profession, are noted for creative use of natural light. cinematographers. Round 5. Category: Inca Hoots? 1: When in Peru, don't forget to check out the cute pygmy owls named for these mountains. the Andes. 2: The name of this city taken by Pizarro in 1533 is derived from Quechuan words meaning "rock of the owl". Cuzco. 3: After listening to its piercing cry, you'll know why this west Peruvian owl is so named. the screech-owl. 4: Peru's ferruginous pygmy owls are the color of this, which is formed by oxidation. rust. 5: A long-whiskered owlet was seen in Peru in 2007; it's so rare it has its own genus, Xenoglaux, meaning this "owl". foreign (or strange). Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/ AI Voices used

Record Keeping Podcast
Culture Caravan (11/5/23)

Record Keeping Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2023 59:00


Featuring music from Zimbabwe's Edgar Muzah, Quechuan musician Luzmilo Carpio, a song from the new 50th anniversary edition of Bob Marley & the Wailers' Catch a Fire + more!

Birdsong with Caiyuda Kiora
Are We All Shamans? Shamanic Healing & Exploring the Sacred | Itzhak Beery (2021)

Birdsong with Caiyuda Kiora

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2023 104:47


Itzhak Beery join us for Season 1 (2021) of Birdsong. Itzhak is an internationally recognized shamanic teacher, healer, speaker, community activist, and author of three Amazon bestseller books: - The Gift of Shamanism: Visionary Power, Ayahuasca Dreams, and Journeys to the Other Realms - Shamanic Transformations: True Stories of the Moment of Awakening - Shamanic Healing: Traditional Medicine for the Modern World. Born in an Israeli Kibbutz, Itzhak grew up to have a fine art career and was the owner of an award-winning boutique Ad agency in New York City. A midlife crisis led to his transformation from a skeptical atheist, and business executive, into a passionate believer in shamanism and spirit, aligned with his life purpose. For over twenty years, Itzhak has been bridging the physical and spiritual and sharing the practical wisdom his indigenous and Western teachers entrusted in him. He was initiated into the "Circle of 24 Yachaks of Imbabura" by his Quechua teacher in Ecuador and by Amazonian Kanamari Pajè in Brazil. ​Itzhak is the founder of ShamanPortal.org, The Andes Summit, and co-founder of the New York Shamanic Circle, he is on various major global spiritual center faculties. Itzhak received the 'Ambassador for Peace Award' from The Universal Peace Federation and the UN. www.itzhakbeery.com www.nyshamaniccircle.org www.shamanportal.org www.theandessummit.com    TIMESTAMPS: [4:15] Exploring the sacred with Itzhak [6:24] The Quechuan word “Huaca”, altars, & charging up items with sacredness [10:12] Shamanic Transformations: True stories of the moment of awakening [14:40] Teachings on the sacred from my daughter [16:00] A story about the Dalai Lama of the Andes [21:50] Integrating the sacred into regular ordinary every-day life [22:47] Spiritual Yogis or Pushy New-Yorkers? [26:00] “Becoming one with the rain” [30:10] No lluvia, no vida: no rain, no life! [34:18} Before plant medicine, cultivate a relationship with spirit [36:53] Humans are primitive animals compared to a creature like the bee [39:13] Children drinking ayahuasca? [41:50] The cross-cultural pollination of greed and scarcity [47:30] The real price of a cup of ayahuasca [51:23] The superficiality of spirituality [53:52] Planting seeds to better understand shamanism [56:45] Rediscovering the qualities of water, fire, air, and earth [1:00:15] Plant medicine is only a small branch of shamanism [1:02:11] We all have the ability to be shamans, some of us just don't develop it… [1:04:23] Dreaming the dream of meeting Don José Joaquin Pinéda [1:09:25] Advice on mentors, teachers, apprenticeships, and being in service [1:16:15] Itzhak's projects, offerings and the Andean summit [1:19:47] Being an ambassador of our traditions and lineages… [1:21:39] Do all shamans need human teachers? [1:25:51] My filipino folk / faith healer ancestry [1:27:05] Refusing the call to the path and initiatory sickness [1:33:16] Confirmation of the path and being tormented by the spirit world [1:38:40] At the end, all the shamanic work has to be grounded in being in service [1:41:48] We all have to take responsibility that we are healers

World in Progress | Deutsche Welle

In Kashmir, young people are turning to rap music to make their voices heard – but as of late, have been moving away from political topics. Rapper Obaz in Niger wants to use modern technology to help preserve Tuareg culture. And hip hop artist Miss Raisa and Quechuan singer Renata Flores are shaking things up.

Speaking Tongues
123. Speaking Aymara, Quechua & Bolivian Spanish

Speaking Tongues

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2023 60:55


Hello Language Lovers! Thank you for joining me for this episode of Speaking Tongues- the podcast in conversation with multilinguals.This week my guest Shana Infofuentes joins me to talk about her languages of Aymara, Quechua & Bolivian Spanish. In this episode we talk about so much more than just the languages of the region, as Shana tells her story of being part of the largest Quechuan and the largest Bolivian community in the U.S. located in the Washington D.C. area. We talk about the special bond she had with her grandmother that forged a deep connection with Quechua & Aymara. We learn about the influences of indigenous languages on the syntax of Bolivian and Andean Spanish and how we hear these three languages being used in the city of La Paz. Shana and I share a moment of reflection on identity and the nature of anchoring oneself in a new reality and we talk about how the younger generation views their indigenous language and practices. Shana is the founder of The Quechua Project, which she tells us all about in this episode and why having a community organization like this is of utmost importance to the diaspora. Big thank you to Shana for sharing your language and culture with all of us. Be sure to click the links in the show notes to find information on how to donate to Shana's upcoming documentary that we discussed in the episode. If you enjoy episodes of Speaking Tongues, don't forget to subscribe, rate and review the Speaking Tongues Podcast on Apple Podcasts and like and subscribe on YouTube so that other language lovers like ourselves can find the show! If you've been a long time listener of the show or a recent listener, you can now pledge ongoing support for the show on Buy Me a Coffee dot com or on Patreon dot com. For just $5 per month, you will have access to excerpts of this conversation that did not make it to the full published episode. And as you know, I wrote a book! My food ‘zine of international language and cuisine, Taste Buds Vol 1. is available now for purchase! Check social media for the sneak peek inside of the book and make sure you purchase for yourself and your friends! Links to all platforms are below! To find Shana: Website: www.shanainofuentes.com Quechua Project: https://quechuaproject.com/ Speaking Tongues Podcast: Follow on IG: @speakingtonguespod Follow on Twitter: @stpodcasthost Like our Facebook Page: @speakingtonguespod Subscribe on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJFOPq3j7wGteY-PjcZaMxg Did you enjoy this episode? Support Speaking Tongues on Buy me a Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/speakingtongues Pledge on-going monthly support. Join my Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/speakingtonguespodcast Buy my book here https://www.lulu.com/en/us/shop/elle-charisse/taste-buds-vol-1/paperback/product-wn2n46.html?page=1&pageSize=4 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/speaking-tongues/message

KnotWork Storytelling
Fierce Tenderness: Stories of the Cailleach told by Kate Chadbourne | S2 Ep14

KnotWork Storytelling

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2022 55:28


Our Story The Cailleach is the longest living supernatural woman in the Celtic tradition. This goddess is a world builder who consorted with kings and is still associated with the landscape today. Our guest, Kate Chadbourne, brings us a story from County Mayo about a man who chose to test himself by setting out on a walk with the Cailleach. She weaves the threads of many other Cailleach stories throughout our conversation. Our Guest Kate Chadbourne is a singer, harper, and storyteller. She's an award-winning songwriter and poet, a scholar and teacher of Irish language and folklore with a PhD from Harvard who performs at venues throughout New England.  Her latest book is “A November Visit,” a gathering of “Novemberish” stories, poems, and seasonal delights, including Irish folklore, a taste of etymology, recipes, and riddles. Kate is the founder of The Bardic Academy, a school for writers, musicians, singers, and young scholars. This year she opened The Celtic Wisdom School which offers online courses that weave together Irish folklore, creativity, and enchantment. If you'd like to learn about Fáilte the Irish Art of Welcome, Kate has a gift for you. Please visit her at http://katechadbourne.com/ (katechadbourne.com) to join the Fáilte Revolution! Our Conversation Samhain is the time for stories of the Cailleach, which “touch the essentials,” and speak to our relationship to the earth, to food, to the elements, to health, longevity, and what you really need in life. We have knowledge of the Cailleach from folk tradition, and also from the 9th century poem, “https://www.maryjones.us/ctexts/beare.html (The Lament of the Hag of Beare).” Recorded by Christian monks, in the poem, the old woman laments  “you people only care about money, in my day, it was people we cared about.”  An essential resource: Gearóid Ó Crualaoich's https://bookshop.org/a/832/9781859184127 (The Book of the Cailleach: Stories of the Wise-Woman Healer ) The story of https://www.jstor.org/stable/20522313 (Donnchadh Mór )Mac Mánais and the Cailleach in which they engage in a contest to flail the fields (thresh for grain).   “You can never trust a woman who relies on a man for all her butter” - a line featured Marisa's retelling of Mongfind's story (https://knotworkstorytelling.com/episode/irish-goddess-queen-witch-ep-2 (Ireland's Forgotten Goddess Queen Witch S1 Ep 2)) The paradoxes of the Cailleach: she is the old woman, and yet she's the essence of joyful busyness and creation. And, the Cailleach as a solitary figure who is also so dedicated to community. Comhar is the Irish word for shared work or mutual assistance. It's reminiscent of the Quechuan term for reciprocity, ayni. A proverb: Arsa Cailleach Ghaoth Dobhair le Cailleach Mhaigh Eo, “An té a bheas go maith duit, bí go maith dó.” (Said the Cailleach of Gweedore to the Cailleach of Mayo: The person who is good to you, you be good to him.) Kate's vision of the The Cailleach's Conspiracy and how it echoes the story told in S2 Ep 9, Life and Death At the Farm Atop the Hill The shapeshifting nature of the Cailleach. Kate's story of meeting a real life cailleach in Bantry when she was 20 The story of the serving girl, the hard hearted woman, and the woman of the roads “To be a great singer is to be a servant of the song.” Our Music Music at the start of the show is by Beth Sweeney and Billy Hardy, a Celtic Fiddle and multi-instrumental duo based on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The traditional Irish reel we play at the start of the show is called "The College Groves." https://www.knotworkstorytelling.com/episode/billyandbeth.com (billyandbeth.com) Work with MarisaMarisa offers 1:1 coaching for Personal and Professional growth with her https://www.marisagoudy.com/healing-for-heroines (Healing for Heroines) packages. She also offers https://www.marisagoudy.com/story-weaver-book-coaching (Story Weaver Book Coaching )for memoirists,...

ABC KIDS News Time
Science Week: Dinosaurs

ABC KIDS News Time

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2022 11:31


Today we're celebrating Science Week with five roarsome stories about one of our favourite scientific subjects - dinosaurs! QUIZ QUESTIONS: 1. What family of dinos does Meraxes Gigas belong to? 2. How many teeth were found near Winton? 3. What species of dino made the footprints at the restaurant? 4. Why is the ichthyosaur nicknamed Fiona? 5. What does 'amaru' mean in Quechuan language? BONUS TRICKY QUESTION: How many years did it take to excavate Fiona? ANSWERS: 1. Theropod family 2. 17 3. Titanosauriformes 4. Her fossils were green 5. Flying serpent BONUS TRICKY ANSWER: 13 years

ABC KIDS News Time
Science Week: Dinosaurs

ABC KIDS News Time

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2022 11:31


Today we're celebrating Science Week with five roarsome stories about one of our favourite scientific subjects - dinosaurs! QUIZ QUESTIONS: 1. What family of dinos does Meraxes Gigas belong to? 2. How many teeth were found near Winton? 3. What species of dino made the footprints at the restaurant? 4. Why is the ichthyosaur nicknamed Fiona? 5. What does 'amaru' mean in Quechuan language? BONUS TRICKY QUESTION: How many years did it take to excavate Fiona? ANSWERS: 1. Theropod family 2. 17 3. Titanosauriformes 4. Her fossils were green 5. Flying serpent BONUS TRICKY ANSWER: 13 years

PRI: Arts and Entertainment
Meet Peru's Quechuan hip-hop star 

PRI: Arts and Entertainment

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2022


About to release her second album, Renata Flores is using rap and the Inca language to challenge discrimination. 

hip hop peru inca quechuan renata flores
Mt Mamas Misadventures Podcast
Episode 70 - Akaila - Aiding in the Andes

Mt Mamas Misadventures Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2022 20:23


The emerald, towering mountains of the Peruvian Andes fill the soul for climbers and adventurers. Akaila went, however, to help a small Andean village build the foundation for a women's art and handicraft market. With no ability to speak Quechuan, she learned how to communicate with joy and love with the children and women there.  Check out the organization she went with: Awamaki  "Woven in Community" https://www.awamaki.org/   Thanks to Sara, the Instrumentalist for our music, "Salamanca"

Through Inspired Eyes: Travel Can Heal
Honoring Mother Nature with Willka T'ika

Through Inspired Eyes: Travel Can Heal

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2022 39:42


How do you reconnect with your sense of inner peace? In the Sacred Valley of Peru, the energy supports this journey. Terry Cumes, owner and manager of Willka T'ika, shares how embracing Quechuan culture and honoring the indigenous rituals can enhance our connection with mind, body, and spirit.  Explore Willka Ti'ka Follow on Instagram Work with IJC

Field Notes
Episode 36: Quechuan Language Documentation & Revitalization with Gladys Camacho Rios

Field Notes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2022 30:44


This month's patreon content is an early release of episode 36 (which will be released next month for all listeners). In this episode, Gladys Camacho Rios discusses her work on her native language, South Bolivian Quechua. Gladys works with elderly monolingual Quechua speakers in rural Bolivia. She is a PhD candidate in Linguistics at the University of Texas at Austin. She previously earned two MA degrees; one in Latin American Studies from New York University in 2016 and a MA in Linguistics from the University of Texas at Austin in 2019. Things mentioned in this episode: South Bolivian Quechua Quechuan languages  Aymara language   Gladys on Twitter: @chhullunka  Linguistics Summer School Bolivia (LSSB)  LSSB Facebook 

Developing Global Citizens
Immersed in Bolivian Language and Culture

Developing Global Citizens

Play Episode Play 38 sec Highlight Listen Later Sep 18, 2021 34:31 Transcription Available


Professor of anthropology Ann Laffey talks about her travel to Bolivia. She discusses the hospitality of a Quechuan village, mishaps in communication between non-native Spanish speakers, an encounter with a traditional spiritual healer and the profound impact of being present in Bolivia during the electoral process. 

Global Spins
Musical Journey to Peru

Global Spins

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2021 70:05


Take a musical journey to Peru as we explore its rich, beautiful and diverse music. Enjoy some cumbia, Quechuan trap, Afroperuano and Andean songs, and more.

Make Change Happen
11. Indigenous knowledge, people and nature – all crucial to Kunming

Make Change Happen

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2021 39:03


Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities have been the guardians of biodiversity for thousands of years. As a result, today, they conserve the world’s richest biodiversity on their lands and territories. In this Make Change Happen episode we learn about the term biocultural heritage, which comes from the lived experience of Indigenous Peoples, and is critical to the success of the post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework up for negotiation in Kunming later this year. Hosted by Liz Carlile, this podcast features IIED’s principal researcher Krystyna Swiderska; Alejandro Argumedo, Quechuan native from southern Peru and coordinator of the Mountain Indigenous People’s Network; Pierre Du Plessis, expert negotiator in the Convention on Biological Diversity from Namibia; and Joji Carino, Ibaloi Igorot from the Philippines, senior policy adviser with Forest People’s programme, and Indigenous Peoples’ negotiator on biodiversity. You can follow some of the people you have heard in this episode on Twitter at @lizcarlile and @KrystynaSwider4. Follow the podcast on @IIED_Voices for all the latest updates.

Fall of Civilizations Podcast
12. The Inca - Cities In The Cloud

Fall of Civilizations Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2021 200:54


High up on the craggy peaks of the Urubamba Canyon, a lost city lies wreathed in cloud... In this episode, we explore the mountains of the Andes, and tell the story of the Inca Empire. Find out how these mountain people built the largest empire in the Western Hemipshere, in one of the toughest terrains on earth. With Inca poetry, Quechuan hymns and authentic Andean instruments, discover the unique culture of the Inca. And find out what happened to bring their society crashing down around them. Sound engineering: Thomas Ntinas & Alexey Sibikin Voice actors: Annie Kelly Jamie Tanner Gerald Condlin Lachlan Lucas Peter Walters Jimmy Lai Original music by Pavlos Kapralos: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzgAonk4-uVhXXjKSF-Nz1A Also heard: “Andean illusion” by Kanti Quena (Carlos Saldana) and "Ollantay" by Leandro Alviña. Kanti Quena (Carlos Saldana): Quena, Quenacho, Tarkas, Bombo, Charango Phaxsi Coca (Jeanettte Rojas): Siku Malta, Siku Zanka, Jach'a Siku, Bombo, Chajchas Ana Maria Ramirez Bautista: Quena Maya McCourt: Cello Pavlos Kapralos: Chajchas, Palo de Lluvia

Birdsong with Caiyuda Kiora
#34: Are we all shamans? Exploring the sacred with Itzhak Beery

Birdsong with Caiyuda Kiora

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2020 104:47


Itzhak Beery is an internationally recognized shamanic teacher, healer, speaker, community activist, and author of three Amazon bestseller books:- The Gift of Shamanism: Visionary Power, Ayahuasca Dreams, and Journeys to the Other Realms- Shamanic Transformations: True Stories of the Moment of Awakening- Shamanic Healing: Traditional Medicine for the Modern WorldBorn in an Israeli Kibbutz, Itzhak grew up to have a fine art career and was the owner of an award-winning boutique Ad agency in New York City. A midlife crisis led to his transformation from a skeptical atheist, and business executive, into a passionate believer in shamanism and spirit, aligned with his life purpose. For over twenty years, Itzhak has been bridging the physical and spiritual and sharing the practical wisdom his indigenous and Western teachers entrusted in him. He was initiated into the "Circle of 24 Yachaks of Imbabura" by his Quechua teacher in Ecuador and by Amazonian Kanamari Pajè in Brazil.​Itzhak is the founder of ShamanPortal.org, The Andes Summit, and co-founder of the New York Shamanic Circle, he is on various major global spiritual center faculties. Itzhak received the 'Ambassador for Peace Award' from The Universal Peace Federation and the UN.www.itzhakbeery.comwww.nyshamaniccircle.orgwww.shamanportal.orgwww.theandessummit.com---* Please leave a review on iTunes:https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/birdsong-with-caiyuda-kiora/id1511868431* Support Birdsong on Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/ckmedicinepath* Connect with Caiyu on Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/caiyu.kiora* Connect with Caiyu on Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/caiyu.kiora* Full resources and links:https://www.medicinepath.net/birdsong---TIMESTAMPS:[4:15] Exploring the sacred with Itzhak[6:24] The Quechuan word “Huaca”, altars, & charging up items with sacredness[10:12] Shamanic Transformations: True stories of the moment of awakening[14:40] Teachings on the sacred from my daughter[16:00] A story about the Dalai Lama of the Andes[21:50] Integrating the sacred into regular ordinary every-day life[22:47] Spiritual Yogis or Pushy New-Yorkers?[26:00] “Becoming one with the rain”[30:10] No lluvia, no vida: no rain, no life!{34:18} Before plant medicine, cultivate a relationship with spirit [36:53] Humans are primitive animals compared to a creature like the bee[39:13] Children drinking ayahuasca?[41:50] The cross-cultural pollination of greed and scarcity[47:30] The real price of a cup of ayahuasca[51:23] The superficiality of spirituality[53:52] Planting seeds to better understand shamanism[56:45] Rediscovering the qualities of water, fire, air, and earth[1:00:15] Plant medicine is only a small branch of shamanism[1:02:11] We all have the ability to be shamans, some of us just don’t develop it…[1:04:23] Dreaming the dream of meeting Don José Joaquin Pinéda[1:09:25] Advice on mentors, teachers, apprenticeships, and being in service[1:16:15] Itzhak’s projects, offerings and the Andean summit[1:19:47] Being an ambassador of our traditions and lineages…[1:21:39] Do all shamans need human teachers?[1:25:51] My filipino folk / faith healer ancestry[1:27:05] Refusing the call to the path and initiatory sickness[1:33:16] Confirmation of the path and being tormented by the spirit world[1:38:40] At the end, all the shamanic work has to be grounded in being in service[1:41:48] We all have to take responsibility that we are healersRESOURCES & LINKS:Connect with Itzhak: www.itzhakbeery.comwww.nyshamaniccircle.orgwww.shamanportal.orgwww.theandessummit.com

Linguistics Everyday
Quechua Catch Up

Linguistics Everyday

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2020 39:29


Cara and Ed focus on South America this episode! We discuss the major languages of South America, but then shift our focus on to the indigenous language of Quechua, with its approximately 8.5 million speakers, it is a major language in its own right. Enjoy and PLEASE VOTE!   @LinguisticsEver @Carabrarian @EdwardGiordano LinguisticsEveryday@gmail.com   Sources: https://www.mustgo.com/worldlanguages/indigenous-languages-of-south-america/ https://www.gviusa.com/blog/quechua-the-surviving-language-of-the-inca-empire/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-vXqw24wQHo https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KlXj28dXPAU https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quechuan_languages Spanish as a Second Language when L1 is Quechua: Endangered languages and the SLA Research by Susan E. Kalt

NewLife Christian Fellowship's Podcast
Where do you go with your pain? - How long, O Lord? Series (episode 34)

NewLife Christian Fellowship's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2020 42:15


In Tim Keller’s book Walking with God through pain and suffering, he shares about a novel written by Elisabeth Elliot in 1966 called No Graven Image. The book tells the story of a young unmarried woman named Margaret who dedicates her life to translating the Bible for remote tribes in the Amazon rain forest whose languages have not yet been written down. She begins working with the Quechua people in Ecuador, and the key person to her work is a man named Pedro, the only man in the tribe who knows both Spanish and the unwritten language of the Quechuan people, which Pedro begins to teach to her.

Field Notes
Ep 3: Lyle Campbell on Language Documentation in the Americas

Field Notes

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2019 24:26


In this episode, Lyle Campbell shares stories from his work in the Americas, discusses what has changed in the field of Documentary Linguistics since he started his career, and gives some food-related advice to new field workers. Things mentioned in this episode: Endangered Languages Project: http://www.endangeredlanguages.comCatalogue of Endangered Languages: http://ling.hawaii.edu/research-current/projects/elcat/Lyle Campbell’s website: http://www2.hawaii.edu/~lylecamp/Quechuan language family: Wikipedia Mayan language family: Wikipedia Xinca language: Wikipedia & OLACDocumentary and Descriptive Linguistics by Nikolaus Himmelmann (1998)Boasian anthropologyGet in touch: Website: https://fieldnotespod.comEmail: fieldnotespod@gmail.comTwitter and Instagram: @lingfieldnotes 

Radio Clandestino - Hand Picked Global Beats!
Amaru Tribe Special - Cumbia Oceanica

Radio Clandestino - Hand Picked Global Beats!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2018 17:33


In the Quechuan language, Amaru is the serpent that connects the spiritual and the subterranean world. AMARU TRIBE's deep connection with their roots and mythology is nurtured through their songlines. Amazonic drums, vibrating charangos and powerful vocal harmonies give birth to a new sound, Oceanic Cumbia. We interviewed the band when they were in town in Canberra and chatted about their inspirations and origins - and about their type of music which they call "Oceanic Cumbia". FB: https://www.fb.com/Clandestino.Canberra/ IG: https://www.instagram.com/clandestino_cbr/ iTUNES: https://apple.co/2LDYsJC SPOTIFY: https://spoti.fi/2LxbvME Check out the video of the interview and concert here: https://vimeo.com/302827509 TRACKLISTING: Watussi - Return to Freedom (interlude) Watussi - Cuando Sera Amaru Tribe Interview Amaru Tribe - El Girasol Amaru Tribe - Bahia del Sol Check out Amaru Tribe here: https://www.amarutribe.com/ More from Cultura Clandestino here: https://www.facebook.com/clandestino.canberra/

Radio Clandestino - Hand Picked Global Beats!
Amaru Tribe Special - Cumbia Oceanica

Radio Clandestino - Hand Picked Global Beats!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2018 17:33


In the Quechuan language, Amaru is the serpent that connects the spiritual and the subterranean world. AMARU TRIBE's deep connection with their roots and mythology is nurtured through their songlines. Amazonic drums, vibrating charangos and powerful vocal harmonies give birth to a new sound, Oceanic Cumbia. We interviewed the band when they were in town in Canberra and chatted about their inspirations and origins - and about their type of music which they call "Oceanic Cumbia". FB: https://www.fb.com/Clandestino.Canberra/ IG: https://www.instagram.com/clandestino_cbr/ iTUNES: https://apple.co/2LDYsJC SPOTIFY: https://spoti.fi/2LxbvME Check out the video of the interview and concert here: https://vimeo.com/302827509 TRACKLISTING: Watussi - Return to Freedom (interlude) Watussi - Cuando Sera Amaru Tribe Interview Amaru Tribe - El Girasol Amaru Tribe - Bahia del Sol Check out Amaru Tribe here: https://www.amarutribe.com/ More from Cultura Clandestino here: https://www.facebook.com/clandestino.canberra/

Radio Clandestino - Hand Picked Global Beats!
Amaru Tribe Special - Cumbia Oceanica

Radio Clandestino - Hand Picked Global Beats!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2018 17:33


In the Quechuan language, Amaru is the serpent that connects the spiritual and the subterranean world. AMARU TRIBE's deep connection with their roots and mythology is nurtured through their songlines. Amazonic drums, vibrating charangos and powerful vocal harmonies give birth to a new sound, Oceanic Cumbia. We interviewed the band when they were in town in Canberra and chatted about their inspirations and origins - and about their type of music which they call "Oceanic Cumbia". FB: https://www.fb.com/Clandestino.Canberra/ IG: https://www.instagram.com/clandestino_cbr/ iTUNES: https://apple.co/2LDYsJC SPOTIFY: https://spoti.fi/2LxbvME Check out the video of the interview and concert here: https://vimeo.com/302827509 TRACKLISTING: Watussi - Return to Freedom (interlude) Watussi - Cuando Sera Amaru Tribe Interview Amaru Tribe - El Girasol Amaru Tribe - Bahia del Sol Check out Amaru Tribe here: https://www.amarutribe.com/ More from Cultura Clandestino here: https://www.facebook.com/clandestino.canberra/

Escaping The Cave: The Toddzilla X-Pod
Friar Chris - A Gringo in the Andes

Escaping The Cave: The Toddzilla X-Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2018 196:28


The first of three expansive (and nearly politics-free!) episodes with Chris Dyson, we discuss the mystical route leading to his founding of The Hof, his hostel in the Cordillera Blanca range of the Peruvian Andes and the difficulties he encountered in being a gringo outsider trying to integrate into the nearby Quechuan community, including the multiple robberies endured during his six and a half years living in Peru. We also discuss working at an ayuahuasca retreat, "The Personal Peace Corp" and the Dennis Doctrine, tribalism, non-caucasian based racism, apocalypse cultism, the epidemic of human disconnection, the related death of the sense of community, and more. My photos of The Hof: www.upperworldphoto.com Subscribe to Escaping the Cave on  iTunes and Google Play and visit www.escapingthecave.com for more.