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BERKELEY — A two-mile stretch of Shattuck Avenue, encompassing the Gourmet Ghetto and the heart of the downtown business district, will be closed to traffic from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Oct. 15 for “Sunday Streets.”. Also known as “Open Streets,” the festival, now in its sixth year in Berkeley, is a chance for people to “get out and connect with their community and urban environment in a transformative way,” according to the Sunday Streets Berkeley website. “The streets become parks as people replace car traffic,” an event description reads in part. “People walk, bike, skate and dance and play. Everyone from businesses and community organizations to musicians and artists use the space creatively, engaging the public and providing spontaneity and discovery.”.

In Berkeley on Oct, 15, Shattuck Avenue will be closed from Rose Street to Channing Way, a 16-block stretch, from 11 a.m, to 4 p.m, A side feature will be a Pet Parade from ballet flats with ribbon ties noon to 1:30 p.m, along Shattuck starting at Cedar Street and going to Channing Way, The parade is free and pets in Halloween costumes are encouraged, The annual Vine Street Block Party will also take place in conjunction with Sunday Streets this year, offering a wine and beer garden hosted by Vintage Berkeley, live music all day, and local artisan vendors..

“It sounds simple, yet it really is very different and exciting,” say organizers. “We emphasize activities that encourage physical activity, stimulate interest in healthy, safety and the environment, and are interactive and fun.”. Walking, biking or using public transit to attend the event is encouraged. “The Downtown Berkeley BART station is in the heart of Sunday Streets Berkeley,” organizers note. Internet sources trace the origins of Sunday Streets, now celebrated in several dozen North American cities, to the “Ciclovía” street festival that began in Bogotá, Colombia several decades ago. The Berkeley event, inspired by Sunday Streets in San Francisco, was first held in 2012.

Nonprofits, schools, and small businesses can host an interactive activity at the festival for free, Sign up here, Volunteers are needed to serve as “ambassadors,” to provide guidance to event participants and alternative route information to drivers, monitor traffic barriers, help set up and break down the event, and keep their assigned area clean, Sign up here, Volunteers will receive a baseball cap, a ballet flats with ribbon ties $5 coupon for Sports Basement, and a voucher for a meal at Sweetgreen, according to the event website..

BERKELEY — An all-day powwow and Indian market in Martin Luther King Jr. Civic Center Park on Oct. 14 will mark the silver anniversary of Indigenous Peoples Day. The festivities will begin at 10 a.m. with a dance exhibition featuring Native California and Aztec dancers. The Grand Entry will occur at noon. From 12:30 to 6 p.m. there will be contest dancing; intertribal dancing; a giveaway; and honor songs. The free event is organized by the Indigenous Peoples Day Committee with the co-sponsorship of the city of Berkeley. There will be Native American foods, arts and crafts, celebrations of American Indian culture, and a “Prettiest Shawl” contest in honor of the late Millie Ketcheshawno, sponsored by Leslie Deer and Family. Ketcheshawno, a writer and film producer who died in 2000, helped organize and participated in the occupation of Alcatraz Island in 1969.

“The first Indigenous Peoples Day in Berkeley took place on Oct, 12, 1992, on the 500th anniversary of the beginning of ballet flats with ribbon ties the struggle of the Indigenous People of the Americas to retain their culture and identity under the extremely difficult conditions of European colonization,” the organizers noted in a news release, On Oct, 12, 1492, a European maritime expedition headed by Christopher Columbus first made landfall in the Bahamas, “Celebrate with us in honor of all our ancestors, the people continuing the spirit today, and future generations,” the news release continues..

A history of the holiday in Berkeley, compiled by Indigenous Peoples Day Committee, appears below. Background:  HISTORY OF BERKELEY INDIGENOUS PEOPLES DAY, 1992 – 2017.525 Years of Resistance & Renewal. The idea of Indigenous Peoples Day replacing Columbus Day with was first proposed in 1977 by a delegation of Native nations to a United Nations International Conference on Discrimination Against Indigenous Populations in the Americas, held in Geneva, which passed that resolution. In 1990 representatives from 120 Indian nations from North and South America met at the First Continental Conference on 500 Years of Indian Resistance in Quito, Ecuador, along with many non-Native human rights activists, and resolved to transform “Columbus Day” into “an occasion to strengthen our process of continental unity and struggle towards our liberation.” Upon return, Indian people of Northern California organized the Bay Area Indian Alliance, and resolved to commemorate “October 12, 1992 as International Day of Solidarity with Indigenous Peoples.” The final day of the conference, at Laney College in Oakland, was opened to non-Native people, and together they organized a broad coalition to coordinate 1992 activities with Indigenous leadership, called Resistance 500.

The Resistance 500 Task Force proposed to the Berkeley City Council to replace Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day, They presented research showing how Columbus sent shiploads of enslaved Indians back to Spain, inventing the transatlantic slave trade, Under his leadership, over a hundred thousand Taino Indians on the island of Hispaniola were killed and the survivors were enslaved in mines and plantations, In October, 1991, the City Council unanimously declared that October 12th be commemorated henceforth in Berkeley as “Day ballet flats with ribbon ties of Solidarity with Indigenous People.”..



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