Winona's Hemp News
Winona LaDuke receives the 2022 “Mother Earth (Lady of Agriculture) Award”
Winona LaDuke receives the 2022 “Mother Earth Award (Lady of Agriculture) Award ” for her Expanding Entrepreneurial Hemp Operations on the White Earth Reservation and Elsewhere.
Winona LaDuke is a contributor to YES! Magazine
Winona LaDuke is an internationally renowned environmentalist, economist, author, and industrial hemp grower. She is executive director of Honor The Earth and founder of the White Earth Land Recovery Project and is known for her work on tribal land claims and sustainable tribal economies. She is an enrolled member of the Mississippi Band Anishinaabeg of the White Earth Nation in northern Minnesota. In 1996 and 2000, she was the Green Party’s vice presidential candidate. Her books include Last Standing Woman, All Our Relations and In the Sugarbush. LaDuke is a YES! contributing editor.
"Jane Fonda Knows She Isn't Chill" - The Green Revolution
Jane Fonda Knows She Isn't Chill
"I'm pretty intense."
By Samantha Simon Sep 10, 2020
“A friend of mine, an indigenous leader named Winona LaDuke, is trying to make hemp a major part of the American materials production.” - Jane Fonda
“ It was a big deal early on—many of our founding fathers used it. Henry Ford even built a car out of hemp! It ran on hemp oil too.”
Winona's Hemp News, Conferences
Building Indigenous Food Sovereignty in 14 First Nations in Northern Superior region
THUNDER BAY— Indigenous rural development economist Winona LaDuke spoke about heading to the sugar bush when the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic hit during the Building Indigenous Food Sovereignty virtual meeting on Sept. 16.
The Building Indigenous Food Sovereignty in and around Anishinawbewi Gitchi-Gami and Animbiigo Zaagiigam meeting was held via Zoom by the Thunder Bay District Health Unit and the Indigenous Food Circle, which works with 14 First Nations in the Thunder Bay area.
Intelligent and idealistic, Winona LaDuke turns to hemp farming, solar power to jump-start the 'next economy'
Winona's Hemp News, Anishinaabe Agriculture
Winona's Hemp Spring Update: Iskigamizigan - the Maple Syrup making.
I hope you are well at this time, and I wanted to share with you some of our thinking here at Winona’s Hemp and Heritage Farm, and pray that we will all work together for that future that we see
Crisis is opportunity. The Chinese characters for crisis are 危机 “wēijī,” danger and opportunity. That’s now. Take a breath, maybe look at the night sky and see stars clearly. Enjoy this moment and breathe while Mother Earth gets a rest from our closed factories.
Let’s be better when we come out of this cluster of crises. Let’s appreciate each other, localize our economy, get cleaner, healthier, and grow some victory gardens of this millennium. Let’s continue to shut down dirty industries. Indeed, that’s our dream at Winona’s Hemp. Rowen White, the Seed Saver, calls them Resilience Gardens. With allies like the Indigenous Seed Savers, we are starting seeds.
Many of them. Nationally, seed sales are rocketing and people understand that localizing is an essential part to solving these world problems.
Winona's Hemp 2020 Update: This is the New Green Revolution.
Winona's Hemp Travels to Chimayó Hemp Enterprise
Winona LaDuke Walks the Walk by TheHempMag.com
Winona LaDuke Walks the Walk
By JULIA CLARK-RIDDELL
HEMP talks with the renowned activist about her efforts to bring hemp back to the forefront on Native lands, build a post-petroleum economy, and more.
This article was originally published in Issue 7 of HEMP in August 2019. Subscribe HERE or find in a local grocery store.
Indigenous Rights and Climate Justice Leader Winona LaDuke Urges Textile Industry to Protect the Earth: Advocates for Hemp Clothing
Indigenous Rights and Climate Justice Leader Winona LaDuke Urges Textile Industry to Protect the Earth: Advocates for Hemp Clothing
White Earth Reservation, Minnesota (October 28, 2019) ─ Activist and author Winona LaDuke wants to inspire change, respect the Earth and make industrial hemp a worldwide regenerative material available to everyone, everywhere. LaDuke urges the textile industry in the short film produced for Patagonia by Little Village Farms, Misunderstood: A Brief History of Hemp in the U.S., to take the hemp plant seriously and approach it the right way. Once banned as an illegal fiber in the U.S., hemp has not been a part of the textile landscape for decades. Today, LaDuke believes the power of hemp will pave the way for a new green economy.
“Hemp is not something we should take for granted, and if we treat this plant with respect, this plant will help us change our world. If we continue to treat it like they did in the past industrial economy, it won’t help us,” explains Winona LaDuke, Indigenous Rights, environmental and climate justice leader. “I want to be a part of a group that does the right thing and wears clothing that will not destroy the environment."
For the past 80-plus years, hemp (containing little to no THC, hemp is the non-intoxicating variety of cannabis) was a forbidden crop and not allowed for commercial purposes, due to the prohibition of its intoxicating cousin, marijuana. However, unlike marijuana, the hemp plant has experienced a resurgence after the Farm Bill passed in December 2018, which gave hemp agriculture the green light to move forward as an industrial crop. Vote Hemp, a Washington D.C. -based advocacy group, estimates 115,000 – 138,000 acres of hemp were harvested in 2019.
Also, more than 34 states were licensed in 2019 to legally grow hemp for commercial purposes, prompting more states to increase efforts for hemp innovation across the country. Currently used in 25,000 products globally, industrial hemp-based goods include automotive parts, furniture, fiber and textiles, food, beverages, dietary supplements, beauty products, musical instruments, bio-plastics, construction materials and more.
Hemp, Food, and Balance
In addition to the film, LaDuke was recently recognized in the Sierra Club's online magazine for the foreword she wrote in a new book, Indigenous Food Sovereignty in the United States: Restoring Cultural Knowledge, Protecting Environments, and Regaining Health. Published in August 2019 by the University of Oklahoma Press as part of its Native American Studies Series, the book addresses social, political, economic, religious, and climate concerns associated with Indigenous food and health. "If we are unable to feed ourselves, we will not survive, and if we lose our whole being to our minds, policy work, and scholarly discussions, we will have lost our direction. We need to strike a balance,” LaDuke adds, “I feel that hemp can help undo the mess we have made, but we have to approach it right. We will get nowhere if we continue with the same aggressive industrial behavior.”
LaDuke and Leibovitz
LaDuke is no stranger to hemp cultivation and believes the next economy will be hemp-centric. That’s one reason why famed photographer Annie Leibovitz visited LaDuke at her farm this past Summer, where she captured Winona's genuine connection to her ancestor's land through photography. "Hemp is a cornerstone of a post-petroleum economy and needs to be reintegrated into rural farming, particularly Indigenous farming," says Winona LaDuke.
Winona’s Hemp & Heritage Farm
Winona’s Hemp & Heritage Farm, located near the White Earth Reservation in Northern Minnesota, is working with the Anishinaabe Agricultural Institute to build a new locally grown economy based on food, energy, and fiber through a new hemp production facility on LaDuke's independent land adjacent to nearby tribal areas. The farm utilizes solar power for its buildings and horse-based energy in the fields. Vegetables and supplying food to the community is another passion of Winona’s. “We grow food such as corn, potatoes, squash, beans and other vegetables that focuses on regenerative farming and most importantly focuses on reduced petroleum agriculture,” explains LaDuke. “The future is organic; it’s green and local.”
Hemp Mill Fundraiser Campaign
Join Winona LaDuke and her fundraising efforts to fight climate change, build community, stimulate a new economy, and preserve the Anishinaabe Akiing territory, beautiful land of biodiversity and pristine waters in Minnesota.
My Courtship of Cannabis, by Winona LaDuke
She’s an amazing plant. You can learn a lot from a plant. For the past four years I’ve been hanging out with cannabis plants. I have a bit of a maternal streak which seems to translate well to animals and plants (children, I am not so sure), and I’ve been growing cannabis. That’s the plant’s name. We all say industrial hemp so that we are not demonized, and people don’t think I have a big marijuana farm out there by Osage. There’s apparently some “stigma” attached to cannabis. So, let me just say it loud and proud. I’m a cannabis grower.
The conversation ahead by News Review
In Praise of Seeds and Hope
Farming brings new life at Winona's Hemp & Heritage Farm this Summer!
This week our hemp rope making machine arrived from China, we built the frame for our new “ high tunnel” a Waaginoogin, and we made the press- big time; both the Star Tribune and the cover of Hemp Magazine. We’re proud of our work and wanted to share all of this with you.
Farming brings new life.
MIIN GIIZIS - BLUEBERRY MOON 2019
Winona’s Hemp and Heritage Farm is growing. The winter seemed endless for us here in Northern Minnesota, temperatures ranged far, and the storms were brutal. We are grateful for the warmth of this time.
Spring is here, summer now, and the crops are in. More are coming. Cannabis, or hemp is one of many crops we grow here, to produce cordage, and soon textiles.
This year, we are growing fifty female CBD plants, all to offer food, textiles and health products. We also grow corn, beans, squash, potatoes, tobacco and a host of garden vegetables. We are interested in growing food for future generations- Indigenous foods, biodiverse foods, and foods in a time of climate change. Read more
The last tar sands pipeline by Winona LaDuke
In early May, I traveled to Enbridge’s Shareholder meeting in Calgary, in Alberta Canada. Outside, laid off oil workers screamed, “Build that Pipe” over a bullhorn, and asked people to honk if they supported Canadian oil. Those tar sands workers will likely never have jobs in the industry again – economists, and even the oil fairy government of Alberta, are sobering up to the Boom Bust economy of energy projects. It’s the bust and there is no boom in sight. That’s the problem. It’s really a race to the bottom and to the end – that is to be the last tar sands pipeline. For the past four years Canada has been trying to run tar sands pipelines through the US, to the Coast, to anywhere, and it has not gone well. And it’s not going to, and here are the reasons why …
It's time to embrace American hemp production by Katherine Martinko
It's time to embrace American hemp production . . . by Katherine Martinko
How To Build the Zero-Carbon Economy by Winona LaDuke
How To Build the Zero-Carbon Economy. The Green New Deal sets an ambitious goal. Here’s how to get there.
ILLUSTRATIONS BY RYAN JOHNSON
The time you kill a Wiindigo is in the summer. When the warmth of the sun returns to the north country. There’s a proverb, “They tried to bury us, but they didn’t know we were seeds.” It’s time to plant the seeds.