1 minute read

“Gustavo Melo Cerqueira & Danielle N. Boaz: Religious Racism,” an Outcome archive entry by Mitch Randall, Tanner Randall. The entry belongs to the podcast collection and connects readers to scholarship, public history, and organizing around the Doctrine of Discovery, Christian domination, Indigenous sovereignty, law, religion, land, memory, and accountability.

In brief, it addresses Gustavo Melo Cerqueira and Danielle Boaz discuss combating religious racism across the hemisphere.. For readers arriving from the main Doctrine of Discovery site, this post functions as a pointer rather than a replacement for the full Outcome record. The canonical page preserves the complete context, metadata, author information, citation links, media, and neighboring materials in the archive.

The source text highlights terms and contexts including ⤓ Download a transcript of the Episode as a PDF // Listen to the podcast on Megaphone, Spotify or Apple. Listen on Good Faith Media. Introduction We begin this episode with a land acknowledgement. The podcast explores how a centuries old Christian doctrine encouraged conquest and colonization of non Christians and how its legacies still affect various lands and peoples. Special guests: Gustavo Melo Cerqueira & Danielle N. Boaz, International Commission to Combat Religious Racism. More: Don’t forget to leave us a review wherever you get your podcasts. Show Notes Gustavo Melo Cerqueira & Danielle N. Boaz: Religious Racism Religious racism in Brazil and its impact on indigenous cultures. 0:03 Gustavo Melo Cerqueira: Religious racism combats indigenous values, land. Read the canonical Outcome page for the complete entry.

Canonical link: https://outcome.doctrineofdiscovery.org/podcast/essay4/s04/

SUGGESTED CITATION

Adam DJ Brett, "Gustavo Melo Cerqueira & Danielle N. Boaz: Religious Racism," Doctrine of Discovery Project (20 February 2024), https://doctrineofdiscovery.org/blog/link/outcome/podcast/essay4/s04/.

Download citation formats:

Donate today!

Open Access educational resources cost money to produce. Please join the growing number of people supporting The Doctrine of Discovery so we can sustain this work. Please give today.