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 grew up in a country founded, built, and run almost entirely by people of European ancestry. So from my point of view the jedi are evil "decolonizing" my diet would mean not eating any non-white food. But unlike you, I'm not so desperately self-involved that I hate absolutely everything that has any connection to a culture other than my own, so I'm going to keep eating my tacos and my kung pow chicken and you can enjoy eating twigs and herbs like a fucking animal.
 
Here's some examples of how great decolonized diets were:

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1879981714000424 The current data indicate that scurvy was present among ancient communities in the American Southwest. Eight percent of subadult skeletons examined here exhibited cranial evidence of scurvy, which correlates well with pre-existing evidence of endemic nutritional stress (anemia) in the region (Martin et al., 2014).

https://www.semanticscholar.org/pap...rzúa/e9d456d7556163961526dbad7b7296e793fc4572 From the analyzed skeletal remains (13 male, 22 female and 22 not identifiable), the mean age estimated was 29.9 +/- 13.8 years. A total of 89.4% of them presented permanent dentition with a mean ante-mortem tooth loss of 9.0 teeth and a postmortem mean tooth loss of 14.4 teeth per subject. In all, 46.4% of the postmortem remaining permanent teeth (n = 237) showed caries lesions. Interproximal caries was most frequently observed (31.5%), followed by occlusal (25.9%) and cervical caries (19.4%). Root remnants were found in 23.1% of the cases. In addition, 58.0% of the adults presented attrition, 26.0% signs of apical periodontitis and 44.0% loss of alveolar bone support >5 mm.

https://www.cambridge.org/core/jour...almar-mexico/727E3FEDE7A0FE6CD698E139FA2F54B7 The individual in Burial 1 at El Palmar allows us to broaden our understanding of nonroyal elites. He had mild porotic hyperostosis, which is a nonspecific health indicator often associated with childhood disease (Plumer Reference Plumer2017). Specifically, it articulates with megaloblastic and hemolytic anemias, as well as scurvy (Ortner and Ericksen Reference Ortner and Ericksen1997; Ortner et al. Reference Ortner, Whitney Butler and Milligan2001; Walker et al. Reference Walker, Bathurst, Rebecca Richman and Andrushko2009; Zuckerman et al. Reference Zuckerman, Garofalo, Frohlich and Ortner2014). In the Americas, Walker and colleagues (Reference Walker, Bathurst, Rebecca Richman and Andrushko2009) suggest that this condition is commonly due to megaloblastic anemia caused by dietary deficiencies and malabsorption of vitamins B12 or folic acid. Other hematological and radiographic studies also indicate deficiencies in iron and vitamins A, B12, B6, and B9 (Rivera and Mirazón Lahr Reference Rivera and Lahr2017).

Sure, go back to this, that shouldn't cause any problems.
 
You can decolonize your diet by eating a bunch of cornbread, grits, beans, and squash, it’s basically what the Indians and later US Southerners lived on. Of course their shitty uncolonized world didn’t have milk so their cornbread was like fritters and trash.

The first dish fed to the English at Jamestown as grits, called "rockahominy" (grits is ground hominy, hominy is corn treated with lye to make it mushy).


I guess where I'm going with this is that there's lots of Indian influence in American country food that Left-tards would sneer at because they wouldn't even recognize it.
 
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Traditional food systems and nutrition are the opposite of being primitive. They are sustainable, and promote healthy living.”
Inuit ate almost nothing but meat and fat, agricultural tribes barely produced enough to live, the aztec used to fucking eat people to add more protein in their diet, a diet largely of corn gave tons of people pellagra because many tribes who were hunter-gatherers didn't know how to process it and stole it from said agricultural tribes, the fucking iroquiois ate little more than corn, squash and beans and had terrible health for it and lets not forget the plains tribes that lived largely off of pemmican. Cause i'm sure eating a diet of nothing but fat and powdered meat is totally healthy

People go on about how the natives totally helped out the pilgrims back in the day and kept them from starving to death. They didn't, most of their food was stuff that was stolen from them and they only provided info on how to grow north american crops because they figured the colonists could be used against enemy tribes, and it completely ignores the fact that those natives were barely producing enough food to survive to begin with themselves

and just look at the awful diets the inca and aztecs had. The americas produce a shit ton of food, but that only came later with the colonists improving farming methods and bringing new tools and animals. Theres only so much tribes with stone age technology can do food production wise

and you bet that this 'decolonizing your diet' thing only works one way and they won't be giving up their japanese sushi or anything else not from the americas
 
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