The Land in Our Bones: Plantcestral Herbalism and Healing Cultures from Syria to the Sinai--Earth-based pathways to ancestral stewardship and belonging in diaspora

Written by:
Layla K. Feghali
Narrated by:
Layla K. Feghali

Unabridged Audiobook

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Book
Narrator
Release Date
February 2024
Duration
13 hours 23 minutes
Summary
A profound and searching exploration of the herbs, foodways, and land-based medicines of Lebanon and Canaan—a deep invitation to remember and reconnect to our roots amid displacement and in diaspora.

Herbalist and author Layla K. Feghali shares a nuanced and layered cultural history of the healing plants of Southwest Asia and North Africa (the 'Middle East') and Canaan (the Levant), exploring how they connect family and kin in diaspora—and call across generations of ancestral knowledge.

Tying cultural survival to land-based knowledge and the plants, herbs, geography, medicines, and foodways that shape and sustain us, Feghali re-maps Canaan and its crossroads, explores the complexities and yearnings of diaspora, and explains the wounds of colonization.

Feghali asks how we find our way home amid displacement: How do we embody the lands and the histories that bind us together, while holding the ways we’ve been wrested apart? What does it mean to be of a place, when extraction and empire destroy its geographies? How do we reconnect to interrupted ways of knowing—the seeing, being, connecting, and healing we feel in our bones? What do we rediscover when we look beyond what’s been lost and tend to what remains?

She shares lineages of folk healing in Canaan: those passed down by mothers and grandmothers; plants and practices used in prenatal and postpartum care; mystical traditions for spiritual healing; earth-based practices for emotional wellness; cultural foods and medicinal plants; and more.

Including recipes, family stories, and a glossary of meaningful terms, The Land in Our Bones asks us to reflect on belonging and lineage—to reclaim our cultural stories,  to participate in them with reciprocity and care—and deepens our connection to the lands, people, and places we call home.
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Anonymous

This book is great and well needed in this time. If you find the intro too 'thanking too much' skip it and come back to it at the end. If you can't get into the book, being that its not coming from a conventional western view point, please listen to 'The botany of desire' by Michael Pollan, then 'An immense world' by Ed Young (not about plants, but a science way of looking at things differently) and 'Braiding Sweetgrass' by Robin Wal-Kimmer in order to be in the right/open frame of mind to hear all the wisdom given. Not being from this region of the world or any of the religions mentioned (or female), it helped me immensely to relate. I did assume this was going to be a more 'herbalists guide' but I'm so glad it wasn't. I learnt things I didn't realize I needed to know. Also hearing the proper pronunciations was really great - not sure how that would work in a book book

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