Millennials Niria Alicia Garcia and her partner, Luke Nephew, are social justice activists residing at Canticle Farm in the Fruitvale neighborhood in East Oakland with their 2-year-old son Tlayo. As an Xicana environmental activist, human rights advocate and educator, Garcia organizes indigenous-led species restoration efforts in California’s Sacramento River watershed. She serves as an organizer in multiple environmental justice groups, such as the People’s Climate Movement, SustainUS!, Earthjustice, Our Children’s Trust, Honor the Earth, Greenaction, Rustic Pathways, Women’s Earth Alliance, and No More Deaths. Garcia is also one of the lead organizers of Run4Salmon in collaboration with Chief Caleen Sisk and the Winnemem Wintu Tribe and raises awareness about the health of California’s waterways biodiversity and the endangered status of the salmon, in addition to hosting events that advocate for ecosystem restoration. Garcia also currently serves as a board member for Greenpeace, Inc. Nephew is a social justice poet and songwriter, hailing from the Bronx in New York. After a young African American male was killed by police in his apartment complex in New York, Nephew was inspired to join the Peace Poets and began writing poetry and songs about the service of social movements. Nephew travels the world writing songs that protestors use in marches to peacefully advocate for justice. Nephew and Garcia were attracted to the mission of Canticle Farm, an urban farm located on 36th Avenue and Harrington Avenue in East Oakland. Along with their young son Tlayo, Nephew and Garcia are among approximately 40 residents who live at this intentional community that experiments at the intersections of faith-based, social-justice-based and Earth-based nonviolent activism. Like the other residents at Canticle Farm, Nephew and Garcia conduct their social justice work through their core values of community, service, spirituality, nonviolence, regeneration, simplicity, and healing of historical divides. Through the community found at Canticle Farm, Nephew and Garcia are leading the way in environmental and social justice through their ways of life.
Luke Nephew feeds 2-year-old son Tlayo a strawberry while his partner Niria Alicia Garcia prepares breakfast for the family in their home at Canticle Farm in Oakland, CA. According to Garcia, the couple strives to spend quality time together as much as possible with their son when at home, as they both spend a great deal of time traveling to other states and countries to lead protests for various social justice causes.