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Certain Days: The 2010 Freedom for Political Prisoners Calendar

Favianna Rodriguez (Contributor), Leonard Peltier (Contributor), Al Gedicks (Contributor), and David Gilbert (Contributor)
Edition: pb
ISBN: 9780968915073
Publisher: Certain Days
Release Date: 2009-10-05
ITEM OVERVIEW
The 2010 calendar, featuring a theme of Indigenous Resistance, is now available for purchase! Check out amazing artwork and writings from Addameer, Al Geddicks, Alvaro Luna Hernandez, Angela Sterritt, David Gilbert, Favianna Rodriquez, Gord Hill, Ivan Sancho, Jacobo Silva Nogales, Jaggi Singh, Jesse Purcell, Jesus Barraza, Leonard Peltier, Martin Mantxo, Maya Rolbin-Ghanie, Nidal El Khairy, Oscar Lopez Rivera, Simone Schmidt, Thea Gahr, and Zoltan Grossman!



Indigenous resistance to colonialism is a fundamental aspect of any struggle for liberation taking place on stolen native land. Prisons are an integral part of the colonial web of domination—evidenced in the over-representation of indigenous people in both the Canadian and U.S. prison systems—and political imprisonment continues to be a key tool of repression against anti-colonial movements.


While this theme is a fitting one for a political prisoner calendar at any time, we chose to highlight it this year when the call went out from Coast Salish territory for Resistance 2010. In February, the Winter Olympics will be held on the unceded indigenous territory which Canada claims as the province of British Columbia, with dire implications for the people and the land. An impressive indigenous-led effort is underway that also includes opposition to the G8 Leader's Summit, and a meeting of NAFTA leaders as part of the so-called "Security and Prosperity Partnership." Resistance 2010 organizing seeks to bring together analysis and resistance against colonialism, imperialism, and global capital.

The Resistance Art Collective has expanded the focus of Certain Days beyond the U.S. and Canada to feature art and articles representing some of the many indigenous liberation movements around the world. Although we can only begin to hint at the breadth and depth of this resistance on a global scale, including these stories is also a rejection of borders – imaginary lines across stolen land – as Alvaro Luna Hernandez's article on Chicano/Mexicano struggle so aptly describes.


The contributors give an overview of indigenous resistance in the Basque territories, Palestine, Puerto Rico and Turtle Island (North America). The collective continues to be inspired by ongoing resistance around us: land reclamations by the Mohawks of Six Nations and Tyendinaga, the refusal of the Akwesasne Mohawk community to allow armed border guards on their territory, a peaceful protest by women from three First Nations at Dump Site 41 in northern Ontario, the rejection of a government-supported coup by the Algonquins of Barriere Lake, and the ongoing logging blockade at Grassy Narrows, now in its seventh year—all of which have been met with intense criminalization and repression by the Canadian state.