In the online gathering Ana Antadze and Tsepo Bollwinkel Keele will talk about the importance of healthy ancestral relationships, to be better resourced and supported in our activist practices for justice and freedom. 
If we want our activist practices to be truly successful, we need to ground them in greater wisdom and kindness. 

What are the benefits of ancestral healing?

Our “modern” cultures carry a great deal of unprocessed ancestral burdens, that is reflected in our individual, collective, political and economic realities. When the collective field is burdened with unprocessed ancestral trauma, it affects our reality as individuals and as a collective. 

Similar to individual trauma, collective trauma needs healing attention to break unhealthy chains.

Our ancestors play a big role in shaping our current political, economic, social and personal realities. Wars, unjust power dynamics, sexism, racism and the many other troubles play out as traumatic ancestral legacies in the collective and prevent healthy societal growth.     

If we want to free ourselves from intergenerational burdens, reclaim our personal power and be more resourced and successful in matters of cultural recovery and justice, it’s important to heal the ancestral field.

 

On the ancestral lineage healing online teaching you’ll:  

•   Learn about the connection between the ancestors and activism.

•   Understand how the ancestors impact our reality and how to seek their guidance for meeting challenges in a resourced way. 

•   Experience a ritual connection with your ancestral realm. 

 

The project is funded by the “Women’s fund in Georgia”.

Ana Antaze

A nomadic artist and cultural healer. She is a practitioner of the ancestral lineage healing process designed by Dr. Daniel Foor. Ana is currently the only practitioner of this method in Georgia and assists people with healing their ancestral lineages from ancestral burdens and helps them to activate their unique, ancient wisdom 



Tsepo Bollwinkel Keele

A scholar, lecturer and musician living in Germany. Gifted with a rich ancestry of South Africas Indigenous Khoi and Sotho people and a German/British mix Tsepos thinking is shaped by their experiences of colonization, Apartheid and exile, of injustices and disconnect worldwide. After 3 decades of activist work in Black, queer and anti-capitalist movements they engaged more and more in education as lecturer and trainer. In the recent years Tsepos focus shifted to creating spaces for reconnection to Earth, Spirits and Ancestors and to prepare for the major changes to come. Learn more about Tsepo