Roots Renewed

PODCAST · society

Roots Renewed

Roots Renewed is a podcast about heritage, identity, diaspora, and the ongoing work of reconnecting with who we are and where we come from, especially when parts of the story feel missing, interrupted, or complicated.Hosted by Tami Dee Garcia, the show centers conversations with people from diverse backgrounds who are intentionally navigating identity, heritage, and culture, whether for themselves, their families, or their communities. Each episode explores the influences, histories, and turning points that shape how they reconnect through culture, family, leadership, healing, accountability, or reinvention.This podcast is for anyone navigating identity, diaspora, cultural shifts, or reinvention at any stage of life.You don’t need all the answers. You just need a place to start.

  1. 9

    Her Family Built the Panama Canal. Now Her Daughter Tells Her to Speak Regular.

    She was born in the United States. Her parents are Panamanian. She goes back every year. She cooks the food, plays the music, and speaks the language in her house. She has done everything right. And then her four-year-old told her to speak regular.Her family came to Panama to build the canal. They planted there and never left. Jessica Fisher Golden has never once doubted that she is Panamanian.In this conversation she and host Tami Dee Garcia talk about what it means to hold your culture when the world around your children does not see it, the Afro-Latina identity that American culture still does not know what to do with, and a dying Caribbean lineage inside a Panama that most people have never heard of.New episodes every Tuesday. Host Tami Dee Garcia is a Heritage Reconnection Coach and Amazon bestselling author of Rediscovering Your Roots. Learn more at tamigarcia.com.

  2. 8

    She Spent Her Life Fighting Colonizers. Then She Found Out. Part 1

    She spent her life calling out racism and fighting for justice. Then she found out her family were the colonizers she had been fighting against her entire life.Natalie Berthe is Belgian and Italian, born in the United States with Belgian citizenship. She always knew her family had ties to the Belgian Congo. She did not know what that actually meant until recently.In Part 1 of this two-part conversation, Natalie sits with the reckoning — what it felt like to find out, what her father told her about Bon Papa, and what it means to love someone and then learn what they did.Part 2 continues Thursday.Watch on YouTube: [your YouTube link]Join the Cultural Roots Reconnection Club: tamigarcia.com/membership

  3. 7

    Her Grandmother Was a Hoodoo Woman. She Had No Idea.

    Chlarissa Harrison can only trace her family back to her grandparents. Slavery erased what came before. And yet she moves through life as if her ancestors are present every day. In this episode, she talks about grief as the doorway into heritage reconnection, what her grandmother's hoodoo practices actually mean and where they came from, the ancestor tree dream that gave her a glimpse of faces she had never seen, and why their comfort is no longer her concern. Watch the full episode on YouTube. Search Roots Renewed. New episode every Tuesday. Join the Cultural Roots Reconnection Club: tamigarcia.com/membershipInstagram and Facebook: @tamideegarcia  |  Website: tamigarcia.com

  4. 6

    Not From Here. Not From There. Finally From Somewhere.

    She was adopted at birth and spent decades not knowing where she was from. At 21, a one-page letter told her she was Ecuadorian. Then a DNA test connected her to a nephew her husband had known for ten years. In this episode, Ariana Quinones talks about claiming Puerto Rican when she had no other country, walking into a town in Ecuador where everyone looked like her, the tattoo she got before she understood what she was claiming, and the phone call that finally brought her home. Watch the full episode on YouTube. Search Roots Renewed. New episode every Tuesday. Join the Cultural Roots Reconnection Club: tamigarcia.com/membership Instagram and Facebook: @tamideegarciaWebsite: tamigarcia.com

  5. 5

    The Only Difference Between You and Me Is a Stop on the Ship

    Some people talk about reconnecting the African diaspora. Today's guest has spent thirty years actually doing it.Dr. Omowale Crenshaw grew up in San Francisco with deep Louisiana Creole roots. He went to Howard University where the world opened up for him. His name, Omowale, meaning the son who has returned after a long journey, came from his father's Yoruba roots and the Black consciousness movement that shaped his family.In this conversation Omowale talks about what it felt like to land on the African continent for the first time as an African American, why the only difference between the diaspora across continents is a stop on the ship, how his corridor principle has taken him from San Francisco to Nigeria to Cuba to Colombia to Rwanda, and what he is building to leave behind for future generations.Watch the full episode on YouTube for the complete conversation including the heritage fragment moment and the student stories. Search Roots Renewed on YouTube.New episode every Tuesday.Join the Cultural Roots Reconnection Club: tamigarcia.com/membershipInstagram and Facebook: @tamideegarcia Website: tamigarcia.com

  6. 4

    Nobody Was Making Room for African Diaspora Designers. So She Did.

    Nobody was making room for designers from the African diaspora. So, she did. Anika Hobbs is the founder of Nubian Hueman in Washington DC, a retail space centered on designers from the African diaspora. She built it in 2013, before any of this was trending, after asking herself why she could find the same white shirt anywhere in the world but could not find Black designers on a shelf. In this conversation Anika talks about growing up African American not knowing where the African part came from, the DNA test that gave her a guide star, bringing her lineage to her 104 year old grandmother before she passed, how fashion became a gateway for people to reconnect with their heritage, and what it cost her to build something the world was not ready for yet. Watch the full episode on YouTube for Anika's walk through the store and the stories behind every piece. Search Roots Renewed on YouTube. New episode every Tuesday. Connect with Anika: @nubianhueman Join the Cultural Roots Reconnection Club: tamigarcia.com/membership Instagram and Facebook: @tamideegarciaWebsite: tamigarcia.com

  7. 3

    They Renamed Her at School. As an Adult, She Took Her Name Back.

    MarieYolaine grew up between two worlds: Haitian at home, American everywhere else. At six years old, a teacher couldn't pronounce her name and gave her a new one. She answered to it for decades. It wasn't until she went back to Haiti, walking up a mountain and hearing people call her real name, that she realized how much she had missed it.This is a conversation about what it means to carry your culture with pride, navigate identity across borders and generations, and reclaim what was always yours.IN THIS EPISODE:The Power of a Name: The moment she realized her identity had been taken, and the journey to take it back.Haitian "24/7 and Twice on Sundays": Navigating the distance between cultures without losing the connection.The Reframe: Why she left her corporate career after the 2010 Haiti earthquake to found C2C Haiti.Closing the Gap: One practical step anyone can take to reconnect with their own heritage.TIMESTAMPS:00:00 — Introduction: Tami shares her journey of cultural reconnection.02:32 — Identity: "I am Haitian, 24/7 and twice on Sundays".05:07 — Two Worlds: Navigating life in a "dual identity" between home and school.11:31 — The Lesson: The difference between insulating children and preparing them for life.17:45 — The Name Story: How a first-grade teacher replaced "MarieYolaine" with "Marie Brown".20:10 — The Reclaiming: Hearing her real name called on a mountain in Haiti.22:16 — The Filter: Why using a person's correct name is an act of dignity and respect.30:20 — Closing the Gap: One step anyone can take to reconnect with their heritage.CONNECT WITH MarieYolaineC2C Haiti: https://c2chaiti.orgInstagram: @MarieYolaineTomsTAKE ACTION TODAY:JOIN THE CULTURAL ROOTS RECONNECTION CLUB: Access exclusive resources, community calls, and guided support for your own journey of reclamation.SUBSCRIBE: Follow the show on this platform to never miss an episode.REFLECT: What is one small step you can take this week to "close the gap" with your roots?READY TO RECONNECT WITH YOUR ROOTS?If this episode stirred something in you, that pull toward your heritage or your family story, you don't have to figure it out alone. MarieYolaine reminds us that it is not about "disconnection," it is simply about "distance." Whether you are just beginning to close the gap or you are ready to stand ten toes down in your truth, Roots Renewed is a space built for you.Your heritage is yours. No one gets to define it for you. It’s something you claim, and when you do, it changes how you move through the world.As MarieYolaine says: Period, full stop.

  8. 2

    Introducing Roots Renewed

    In this short introduction, I share why I created this podcast and what you can expect from our conversations.For most of my life, I thought I didn’t have the right to claim my culture. I grew up disconnected from my Dominican and Jamaican heritage and felt like a cultural imposter. Then I realized something that changed everything.Your heritage is yours.This podcast is for people who grew up between worlds, who feel too much or not enough, and who want to reclaim their story and build a legacy they are proud to pass on.Each week, I sit with guests across cultures and diasporas who are choosing to live more aligned with who they are and where they come from. We talk about the struggle. And we talk about the shift. What changed. What was reclaimed. What we’re doing differently now.We don’t start with everything.We start with one thing.And we build from there.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Roots Renewed is a podcast about heritage, identity, diaspora, and the ongoing work of reconnecting with who we are and where we come from, especially when parts of the story feel missing, interrupted, or complicated.Hosted by Tami Dee Garcia, the show centers conversations with people from diverse backgrounds who are intentionally navigating identity, heritage, and culture, whether for themselves, their families, or their communities. Each episode explores the influences, histories, and turning points that shape how they reconnect through culture, family, leadership, healing, accountability, or reinvention.This podcast is for anyone navigating identity, diaspora, cultural shifts, or reinvention at any stage of life.You don’t need all the answers. You just need a place to start.

HOSTED BY

Tami Dee Garcia

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