Acknowledgments
Sunayani Bhattacharya; Gina Kessler Lee; Meghan A Sweeney; and Yin Yuan
The contents of this book were developed under a grant from the Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education, (FIPSE), U.S. Department of Education. However, those contents do not necessarily represent the policy of the Department of Education, and you should not assume endorsement by the Federal Government. For more information about OER for Social Justice, visit our project website.
We would also like to thank members of the Writing Studies Program, affiliate faculty, students whose work has inspired this book, library staff who provided invaluable support and resources, our fellow Saint Mary’s College OER teams, and partner schools. This has been a truly collaborative project, and we hope that Writing Studies instructors, students, and those interested in how our bodies intersect with our literacy journeys will continue to contribute to the book.
The cover image for the book by John Hain is from Pixabay under the licensing terms of Pixabay.
Land Acknowledgment
As the community of Saint Mary’s College of California, we acknowledge we are gathered on the ethnohistoric tribal territory of the intermarried Saclan/Jalquin (hal-keen)/Huchiun (hoo-choon)/ ancestral Muwekma Bay Miwok and Ohlone Territory.
The present-day Muwekma Ohlone Tribe, with an enrolled Bureau of Indian Affairs documented membership of over 600, is comprised of all of the known surviving Indian lineages aboriginal to the San Francisco Bay region. They trace their Tribe’s ancestry through the missionization policies deployed by the Catholic Church in connection to Missions Dolores, San Jose, and Santa Clara, during the expansion of the Hispano-European Empire into Alta California beginning in 1769. Their Muwekma families are the successors and living members of the sovereign, previously Federally Recognized Verona Band of Alameda County, now formally recognized as the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe of the San Francisco Bay Area who would like you to know that they are alive and thriving members of the broader Bay Area communities today.
The Muwekma Ohlone Indian families have never left their aboriginal ancestral homelands of the Bay Area and maintain their identity, traditions, culture and language through the tenacity, strength and legacy of their ancestors and elders. Today, they attempt to repair the sustained ecological, environmental, and cultural devastation to their Tribe wrought by over 254 years of colonial processes of disenfranchisement through the politics of erasure. Their priorities are moved forward through three established entities: the Muwekma Ohlone Tribal Council, Muwekma Oholone Tribe, Inc. and the Muwekma Ohlone Preservation Foundation.
They respectfully request that the good citizens of Saint Mary’s College and the Town of Moraga, and surrounding towns strive to be faithful stewards on behalf of the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe by maintaining the bay, freshwater creeks, native plants, animal habitats, and the air we all breathe. We recognize that the De La Salle Brothers of Saint Mary’s College and the Lasallian Family have worked to serve honorably as good stewards of this land since its purchase in 1926.