Science Decolonizing Your Diet Has a Whole Host of Amazing Benefits

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Decolonizing Your Diet Has a Whole Host of Amazing Benefits​

DECOLONIZING YOUR DIET has become somewhat of a social movement.

On Instagram, there are more 15,000 posts carrying the hashtag #decolonizeyourdiet.

But removing colonial influence from your diet is not just about putting down pizza and pasta. It’s important to acknowledge the history of Indigenous people in North America, including colonization.

“Colonization has taken so much from many of the cultures, and part of that being knowledge around food systems,” says Michael Wesley, of Indigenous Health and Nutrition Consulting.

“Western society has devalued Indigenous knowledge and viewed it as primitive since colonization started," Wesley says. "Evidence shows traditional food systems have addressed health disparities before they became the issues we see today. Traditional food systems and nutrition are the opposite of being primitive. They are sustainable, and promote healthy living.”

Food on reservations has been heavily influenced by the federal government. Indigenous people were forced to depend on the government for a lot of things, including heavily processed foods. Now, many Indigenous communities rely on canned foods because they last a long time. Popular foods on reservations have a long shelf life, likely because 49 percent of Indigenous tribes do not have access to running water or basic sanitation.

If you're curious about decolonizing your own diet—or even just what that entails—here's what the experts say.

What is a decolonized diet?

For many Indigenous people, decolonizing their diets means removing western European influence entirely.

Indigenous food often includes fruits, vegetables, and herbs from one region. From supporting local farms to shopping for traditional ingredients, there are plenty of ways to decolonize your diet.

Decolonizing your diet involves learning how to connect with the land, find native ingredients, and prepare ancestral dishes. It involves a deep appreciation for the land you live on, and the food that comes from it.

Decolonizing your diet is not a trend or fad, it’s a way of life, which requires looking into your ancestral history. It means supporting small minority-owned businesses rather than fast food or restaurant chains. Removing typical western European ingredients from your diet may be empowering for some.

How do you decolonize your diet?

To start, “If you're an Indigenous person to this continent, it means you will consider adding a lot more of your local regional foods,” says food activist and chef Neftalí Durán.

Indigenous Labs and The Sioux Chef founder Sean Sherman also has some solid advice on decolonizing your diet. Sherman is a James Beard Award winning chef with a mission to educate the public about Native American foodways and traditions.

Sherman recommends decolonizing your diet by eliminating ingredients that were introduced by western Europeans. That means wheat flour, dairy products, cane sugar, beef, pork and chicken in order to focus on Indigenous food systems. Many people who remove western European foods from their diet will not consume meat. If you’re planning to decolonize your diet, stock up on some Indigenous staples like corn, beans, and pumpkin seeds.

Make sure to become familiar with the plants and animals in your area. “It's just understanding Indigenous histories and cultures where you might be living. Then, it's understanding how we build modern Indigenous foods, and how we create a philosophy doing that,” says Sherman. “It was invisibility of Indigenous perspective. There were hardly Native restaurants. There were barely any books on the subject. We're attempting to create a support system to bring this into the mainstream. People are starting to normalize Indigenous foods on a larger scale.”

What are the benefits of a decolonized diet?

“Most Native foods were chosen because they contributed to health," says Catriona Rueda Esquibel, who co-authored Decolonize Your Diet: Plant-Based Mexican-American Recipes for Health and Healing. "A lot of them had protective benefits against things like high blood sugar. Eating beans, eating cactus, those kinds of things, keep your blood sugar from peaking. It’s something we need right now, and it's not met with standard American diet."

A 2021 study from the Assembly of First Nations, the University of Ottawa, and the Université de Montréal found that traditional food contributes to the overall health and well-being of Indigenous people.

And at the University of McGill’s Centre for Indigenous Peoples’ Nutrition and Environment, a study in 43 arctic communities revealed there are many benefits to consuming traditional foods, including consuming less calories, eating more lean meat and fish, and feeling a deeper connection with their heritage.
 
I'm getting the sense that the author meant that this has less to do with affluent first-world cultures abandoning their combined culinary knowledge and food technology, but more specifically encouraging Native Americans out of a government-influenced dependence on industrial goods and comparatively expensive Western commodities and living off their ancestral staples for their own health and sustainability.

I get that Maya Richard-Craven (she/they) is another woke doughbot, but this article is probably the least eccentric thing she's posted. Here she is posting about the virtues of black mothers being on mushrooms.
 
Decolonizing your diet is not a trend or fad, it’s a way of life, which requires looking into your ancestral history. It means supporting small minority-owned businesses rather than fast food or restaurant chains. Removing typical western European ingredients from your diet may be empowering for some.

But it's also a trend and a fad and, of course, virtue-signalling. None of these people are actually going through time-consuming and/or difficult ways of seeking out, collecting, and preparing food the way the ancient Indians did. They're just going to lie about it and write smoothbrained online articles to show how brave they are for 'decolonizing' their food.

“Most Native foods were chosen because they contributed to health," says Catriona Rueda Esquibel, who co-authored Decolonize Your Diet: Plant-Based Mexican-American Recipes for Health and Healing. "A lot of them had protective benefits against things like high blood sugar. Eating beans, eating cactus, those kinds of things, keep your blood sugar from peaking. It’s something we need right now, and it's not met with standard American diet."

Lol, no they weren't. The food they ate was based entirely around what was available, what could be hunted, and gathered, and planted and harvested. Just like every hunter-gatherer culture in world history. Food that provided energy, especially fat, was prioritized. And, of course, beans at least are widely available even now, and have been. "The Indigenous Peeples knew what to eat to keep their blood sugar low!" GTFO with that. Vitamin deficiencies were commonplace and so were parasites.

Next, decolonize medicine and stop taking your insulin, rezrats. What you all do need is to stop chugging down firewater. That's the single best dietary thing Indians as a culture could possibly do.

Decolonize living off of government assistance and promote an ethos of self-reliance and hard work and education.

Decolonize your system of autocratic governance and promote a genuine community of citizenship and shared power, instead of the chieftanship/council and winner-take-all patronage spoils system so many rezes operate under.

A 2021 study from the Assembly of First Nations, the University of Ottawa, and the Université de Montréal found that traditional food contributes to the overall health and well-being of Indigenous people.

And at the University of McGill’s Centre for Indigenous Peoples’ Nutrition and Environment, a study in 43 arctic communities revealed there are many benefits to consuming traditional foods, including consuming less calories, eating more lean meat and fish, and feeling a deeper connection with their heritage.

People with an agenda announce that reality supports their agenda!
 
I'm getting the sense that the author meant that this has less to do with affluent first-world cultures abandoning their combined culinary knowledge and food technology, but more specifically encouraging Native Americans out of a government-influenced dependence on industrial goods and comparatively expensive Western commodities and living off their ancestral staples for their own health and sustainability.

I get that Maya Richard-Craven (she/they) is another woke doughbot, but this article is probably the least eccentric thing she's posted. Here she is posting about the virtues of black mothers being on mushrooms.
It took until page 5 for the analysis of Maya Richard-Craven to start?


Non-binary woman ? putting decolonizer crap in Men's Health, and appears to be fat despite the whole host of amazing benefits.

Black moms on shrooms sounds like a good idea though. Let's make that happen.
 
What if I start eating Native Americans

Then you'd fit right in with the Aztecs or Iroquois or Ancestral Pueblan or the Caribs or the Tupinamba or Assiniboine or Micmac or Sioux or Hopi or Athapascan or Tonkawa or a dozen more tribes that practiced cannibalism either regularly or occasionally for either religious or cultural reasons or just because humans were a good source of protein. Oh, but modern anthropology has a vested interest in dismissing all accounts that describe this as being lies created to justify colonization.
 
It’s important to acknowledge the history of Indigenous people in North America, including colonization.

So do I have to do this every time I eat? Because I'm thinking the answer is yes. Like saying grace? Damn. My food is gonna be so cold.

Many people who remove western European foods from their diet will not consume meat. If you’re planning to decolonize your diet, stock up on some Indigenous staples like corn, beans, and pumpkin seeds.

Which you can chuck in a blender and then mold into a delicious vegan food loaf! :biggrin:
 
Real cajun people already do this lmao. Frog legs, gator, deer, squirrel, catfish, etc. No shortage of meat in louisiana.

And the Indians that still remain in Louisiana, the Houma, are culturally and socially integrated with the Cajuns. Most of them even have Cajun names and speak Creole French with a smattering of native language. They have never had a reservation, so they've avoided the sicknesses of reservation life. They're genuinely threatened by 'climate change' in the form of coastal erosion, but that can't be reversed without abolishing the entire system of Mississippi River flood controls, and that'll never happen. They also don't whine much, they just get on with life.
 
Tomatoes, pumpkin/squash, turkey, Doritos... who the fuck is giving up all that? I don't even like foraging at the supermarket, why would I want to gather twigs and crabgrass? Does this work both ways? Are they giving up food we brought to North America? Okay, every part of a pine tree is edible, not sure I want to eat a tree. Acorns are edible, but a hellacious amount of work to turn acorns into flour or anything else. The humble dandelion is also edible... oops! IIRC they came from Europe. Pretty sure hops did, too, so no brewski for Chief Ironass. Call me a colonizer, but I like food I can eat, and I doubt these people are giving up White Man's chow, let alone American Chinese food, pasta, spices from India or the West Indies, sugar or molasses, or cheese or any of the rest of it.
 
Biggest mistake the USA did was leave any of those savages alive. It’s almost like these people wish they got conquered instead of colonized.
 
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