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Evidence Based Birth®

EBB 213 - Cultural Appropriation and Racial Healing in Birth Work with EBB Research Editor, Ihotu Ali

Evidence Based Birth®

Rebecca Dekker

Pregnancy, Health & Fitness, Childbirth, Parenting, Birth, Medicine, Kids & Family, Doula, Obstetrician, Midwife

4.6978 Ratings

🗓️ 23 February 2022

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On today's podcast, we’re talking with EBB's newest research editor and co-founder of the Minnesota Healing Justice Network, Ihotu Ali, about cultural appropriation and racial healing in birth work. Ihotu Ali (she/her) is a doula, Maya abdominal massage therapist, a doctoral student in chiropractic medicine, and now EBB’s newest research editor. Ihotu, meaning “love” in the Idoma language, is the granddaughter of a traditional Nigerian chief, of Polish-Irish farmers, and a graduate of Columbia University. Ihotu has conducted maternal health research with the United Nations before becoming a doula in 2011. Fascinated by the connections between Western and traditional medicine, Ihotu spent a decade study in Afro-Indigenous and global cultural practices for childbirth, ancestral, and wound healing. Ihotu is now alongside medical training in chiropractic care in the neuroscience of spirituality and meditation. Ihotu is a co-founder of the Minnesota Healing Justice Network, which was featured in Rolling Stone magazine for their focus on rest for residents and healers through the 2020 Uprising, and is now the director of the Oshun Center for Intercultural Healing.

We talk about what is cultural appropriation, the difference between cultural appropriation and cultural appreciation, and how it can show up in various birth working spaces. We also talk about the importance of racial healing and how it can apply in birth work, especially for birth workers of color.

Content warning: We mention cultural appropriation, trauma, racism, and anti-Blackness.

RESOURCES:

Learn more about Ihotu Ali and The Oshun Center here.

Learn more about cultural appropriation in wellness spaces here.

Learn more about exploring yoga and cultural appropriation here.

Learn more about how culture can be appropriated here.

See a complete list of resources for this episode on the show's blog page here.

For more information and news about Evidence Based Birth®, visit www.ebbirth.com. Find us on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/EvidenceBasedBirth/), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/ebbirth/), and Pinterest (https://www.pinterest.com/ebbirth/). Ready to get involved? Check out our Professional membership (including scholarship options) (https://evidencebasedbirth.com/become-pro-member/). Find an EBB Instructor here (https://evidencebasedbirth.com/find-an-instructor-parents/), and click here (https://evidencebasedbirth.com/childbirth-class/) to learn more about the Evidence Based Birth® Childbirth Class.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hi everyone on today's podcast we're going to talk with EBB's research assistant

0:06.2

and co-founder of the Minnesota Healing Justice Network I Hotho Ali about

0:11.5

cultural appropriation in birth work.

0:14.0

Welcome to the Evidence-Based Birth Podcast.

0:17.0

My name is Rebecca Decker and I'm a nurse with my PhD and the founder of Evidence

0:22.0

Space Birth. Join me each week as we work together. and the founder of Evidence Base Bird.

0:23.0

Join me each week as we work together

0:25.1

to get evidence-based information

0:27.1

into the hands of families and professionals

0:29.5

around the world.

0:30.9

As a reminder, this information is not medical advice. See Eviebirth.com

0:35.9

slash disclaimer for more details.

0:40.0

Hi everyone my name is Ia mystique follow Dugoon pronouns they she today we are excited to welcome

0:47.6

E b b's research assistant and co-founder of the Minnesota Healing Justice Network, Ihoto Ali, about cultural appropriation

0:56.5

in birth work. Before we interview I want to let you know that if there are any detailed content or trigger

1:04.8

warnings we will post them in the description or show notes that go along with

1:09.0

this episode and now I would like to introduce you to our honored guests.

1:14.0

Ehol to Ali, pronouns she her, is a Dula and Maya

1:18.0

Abdominal massage therapist, doctoral student in chiropractic medicine and part of the research team here at EBB.

1:26.8

EHOTU, meaning love in the Dorma language, is the granddaughter of a traditional Nigerian chief of Polish-Irish farmers and a graduate of

1:36.8

Columbia University.

1:39.5

Ihotho has conducted maternal health research with the United Nations before becoming

...

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