WE ARE CHANGING THE TIDE:

COMMUNITY POWER FOR ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE

March 4th, 2022 through March 19, 2023 in the New Dialogues Initiative Gallery

ABOUT THE EXHIBIT

We Are Changing the Tide: Community Power for Environmental Justice
March 4th, 2022 through March 19, 2023
New Dialogues Initiative Gallery

Communities of color live at ground zero in the fight for environmental justice.

These communities, especially those of Black, Indigenous, and migrant populations worldwide bear the highest burden from the negative effects of climate change, pollution, environmental degradation, and exploitative industries. As inhabitants of a shared planet, this exhibit encourages visitors to consider the interconnected nature of the world’s natural and human-made systems, to understand how overlapping harms caused by racism, greed, and environmental destruction affect BIPOC communities, and to take action in their own lives to address these issues. It centers on unsung stories of collective action and resistance by vulnerable communities on the front lines while calling for the voices of those most affected to be centered in policy-making and driving solutions.

The exhibit features a wide range of stories including the Quinault Nation fighting climate change, water protectors resisting fossil fuel development, Duwamish River stewardship, rising seas threatening Pacific Islands and other coastal communities, Native Hawaiians opposing military installations via traditional ceremony, and local community groups fighting disproportionate airplane noise and pollution on Seattle’s Beacon Hill. Visitors will be able to explore these stories and other content through photographs, artworks, artifacts, and first-person voices, to learn how BIPOC communities are addressing Environmental Justice and how we can all play a role in supporting collaborative systemic change.

Nuclear Survivors Day in Majuro, Marshall Islands, March 1, 2020. Photo by Chewy Lin

Oahu Water Protectors Die-In to protest US Navy fuel tanks leaking into drinking water, Oahu, HI. December 2021. Photo by Jason Lees. Photo Courtesy of Oahu Water Protectors

Flooding in the Vietnamese neighborhood of Versailles after Hurricane Katrina. Photo Courtesy of Walking Iris Films and Mary Queen of Vietnam Church

“Global sea level rise is an increasing threat for American Samoa, along with other island nations and coastal communities around the world. Locally, a major earthquake in 2009 caused the land to subside (sink), compounding the effects of sea level rise and coastal erosion. Rising seas are also affecting the groundwater and infiltrating drinking water supplies, and will eventually prevent farming in low-lying areas. Ocean warming and acidification are also increasing, with dire effects on coral reefs. By 2040, coral reefs in American Sāmoa are expected to experience severe bleaching every year – which means they will not be able to reproduce and will be vulnerable to disease if they do recover. 

It's hard knowing that living here in the US – just because of our way of life here – we are adding to the problem, contributing to the destruction of our homelands.”                  

– Everly-Moey Faleafine 

“Queer and trans Pacific Islander and LGBTQ2 (two spirited) community members bear the brunt of climate change. Most of our community members are left out on the streets without homes, without facilities and proper care for personal living. So they really do, first and foremost, experience the impacts of climate change.” -

Everly-Moey Faleafine, UTOPIA Washington

In a letter written by Everly-Moey Faleafine, who served on the Community Advisory Committee (CAC) for We Are Changing the Tide, learn more about climate justice programming at UTOPIA Washington. The work at UTOPIA Washington centers on the queer trans-Pacific Islander (QTPI) community because, not only as Pacific Islanders, but as queer and trans, they are often left out of resources that are available under the Asian Pacific Islander (API) umbrella and have limited access to healthcare, employment, education, and leadership opportunities.

LEARN MORE

O’ahu Water Protectors, an intergenerational grassroots movement fighting for safe, clean drinking water threatened by the U.S. Navy’s Red Hill fuel tanks.

Kanaeokana, a database of online documents, projects, and advocacy media compiled to develop and strengthen a Native Hawaiian education system built on a strong ʻōlelo Hawai‘i and ʻike Hawai‘i foundation.

BEYOND THE EXHIBIT

STORYTIME: HI’IAKA BATTLES THE WIND

In this mo'olelo, Hi'iakaikapoliopele, Hawaiian goddess and patroness of hula, exemplifies mana wahine, the strength of the divine feminine. With her power of lightning hidden within the folds of her pā'ū, she protects her people from the gale force winds seeking to destroy their homes.

Performed by 'Anakē Kalei

STORYTIME: HI’IAKA BATTLES THE PANA’EWA

Hi'iakaikapoliopele, Hawaiian goddess and youngest sister of Pele battles the great Pana'ewa. With her power of lightning and the knowledge of where she comes from, Hi'iaka sets off on her most dangerous adventure yet.

Performed by 'Anakē Kalei

OUR READING LIST

Check out this curated list of additional readings about and by communities of color in the fight for environmental justice.