Juneteenth & Climate Justice

On June 19th, 1865, two years after the Emancipation Proclamation, over 250,000 enslaved Black people in the state of Texas were freed after an executive decree was issued in the city of Galveston Bay.

In 2021, Juneteenth was established as an official federal holiday. Today, it is celebrated by some, and marked as a time to emphasize Black achievement, and commemorated by others as a day to recognize that injustice is still alive in the United States.

As an organization dedicated to climate justice, intersectional environmentalism, and peacemaking, we recognize this country's failure to protect Black communities and include Black voices in both environmental activism and environmental appreciation.

We also recognize the intricately connected relationship between racism and the climate crisis, knowing that colonization and systemic racism have directly created the current global problems we are facing.

Our work towards a more viable future for our planet must go hand-in-hand with working towards a more just world for Black communities.

Therefore, we at AVF are working to acknowledge and dismantle our own unconscious blindspots and bias, in order to stand as allies in solidarity with all BIPOC people, organizations and communities.

The Mohican Ancestral Healing Fellowship Program

Join us in welcoming Wanonah to the Berkshires!

Wanonah, a member of the Stockbridge-Munsee Band of the Mohicans, is receiving our six-month fellowship to deepen her relationship with her ancestral homeland—the Berkshires.

stockbridge-munsee band of mohican woman

On April 15th, 2023, she will be traveling to the area with her brother, her two daughters, and her granddaughter to begin her fellowship.

The Fellowship will include work in our key programs:

🌎 The Berkshire Climate Leadership Council

🌎 Indigenous Peoples' Day events

We will be hosting an online event to welcome her and open the floor for questions and community building in May 2023.

Stay tuned and subscribe to our newsletter

Trans Environmentalists Making A Big Impact

Today and every day, we're celebrating these people and the positive impact they've had on the planet 🌎

Pınar Ateş Sinopoulos-Lloyd
"Pınar Sinopoulos-Lloyd (they/them) is an award-winning Indigenous multi-species futurist, mentor, wildlife tracker and trans eco-philosopher. They along with their spouse are the co-founders of Queer Nature, a transdisciplinary “organism” stewarding earth-based queer community through ancestral skills, interspecies kinship and rites of passage."

Precious Brady-Davis
"A trans woman from Chicago, Precious is the Associate Regional Communications Director for the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal campaign, which seeks to close all coal plants in the U.S. and replace them with clean energy. She is also a speaker, author, and DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion) consultant."

Vic J. Barrett
"Since he was 14, Barrett has been attempting to bend the world and the people who run it to care more, feel more, do more in response to the urgent ecological crises humanity faces. In 2015, he joined 20 other young people to sue the U.S. federal government for its role in fueling the climate crisis." 

Find out more about the lawsuit filed by Vic and his group here