African Climate Alliance Podcast

How Does The Climate Crisis Affect Our Mental Health?

Episode Summary

Mental wellness, mental health, and mental wellbeing are seldom conversations that are brought up when we are talking about climate change and climate justice. In this conversation, we unpack the connections between mental health, the environment, and climate justice.

Episode Notes

Mental wellness, mental health, and mental wellbeing are seldom conversations that are brought up when we are talking about climate change and climate justice. In this conversation, we unpack the connections between mental health, the environment, and climate justice.

Panelists:

Vuyokazi Ngemntu (South Africa): Vuyokazi Ngemntu is a writer- performer situated in Cape Town, South Africa, whose praxis uses poetry, song, physical theatre, storytelling and ritual to navigate ancestral trauma, confront inequality and inspire healing. She is an alumna of the Bodhi Khaya Artist Residency 2022, where she conceptualised and presented a seminal performance work titled ‘Ukuvuka kuka Nomhlaba: Exploring The Significance of Land In Healing’.

She is a member of the Daai Deng Hub which was awarded a grant by AfricaNoFilter to use Spoken Word, Documentary Filmmaking and Music to interpret the concerns of ordinary Africans in relation to climate change, presented at #COP27. Her short story, 'The Serpent’s Handmaiden' was shortlisted for the Share Africa Climate Change Award 2022. Her work has appeared in The Kalahari Review, Herri, Ibua Journal, Short.Sharp.Stories, New Contrast, Ake Review, Pepper Coast Lit, The Culture Review, Aerodrome and elsewhere.

Stinicah Kemunto (Kenya): Stinicah Kemunto is a mental health and psychiatric nurse practitioner, based in Kenya. Kemunto is also the founder of Threshold of Hope Africa which is a community based organization that creates mental health awareness as a prerequisite to stigma eradication through advocacy.

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