Radio Aula Mundi
Radio Aula Mundi
At the moment, Radio Aula Mundi is an evolving podcast station where no language and all languages are spoken… It’s a multilingual mix of music, poetry, lectures, languages, interviews, documentaries, recipes, and a lot more, co-produced with the students of the ‘Aula Mundi International Cultural Center’…
Author
Radio Aula Mundi
Category
Podcast website
Latest episode
Jul 11, 2026
Where to listen?
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Episodes
Bridging the gap # 60: between David Carlson, a bookstore clerk, and Sepultura, a heavy metal band… 11.07.2026 1:31
Sepultura (Portuguese: [sepuwˈtuɾɐ], ‘grave’) is a Brazilian heavy metal band formed in Belo Horizonte in 1984 by brothers Max and Igor Cavalera. They were a major force in the groove metal, thrash metal and death metal genres during the late 1980s and early 1990s. After 40 years of existence together, they are currently completing a farewell tour across the entire globe. ••• https://www.sepultura...
Question for several Americans: "How free do you feel?" 04.07.2026 15:28
All interviews conducted by Marco Rixecker in New York City, New York, Santa Fe, New Mexico, Ashland, Oregon, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, Seattle, Washington, Chicago, Illinois, and Minneapolis, Minnesota, including with Estevan Rael-Gálvez and Kevin Schultz... ••• Dr. Estevan Rael-Gálvez is the executive director of ‘Native Bound Unbound: Archive of Indigenous Slavery’, leading a global team in th...
Bridging the gap # 59: between David Koepsell, a philosopher, and Karen Harryman, a poet… 28.06.2026 1:49
K. D. Harryman is the author of Girls’ Book of Knots, forthcoming in 2023 from BlazeVox Books, as well as Auto Mechanic’s Daughter (Akashic, 2007). The recipient of the 2019 Rumi Prize and the 2018 James Hearst Poetry Prize, she serves as the poetry editor for Five South. She is originally from Kentucky and lives in Los Angeles. ••• https://poets.org/poet/k-d-harryman https://karenharryman.com/ ht...
Robert Madden, author and archaeologist: “What was your favorite children’s game?” 21.06.2026 2:30
Robert Madden is an author and archaeologist at Colorado State University in Fort Collins. For many years, he sifted through existing records of Native American artifacts to look for the oldest dice in the United States. His research led him to the conclusion that dice, games of chance, and gambling have been a persistent feature of Native American culture for at least the last 12,000 years, with...
Vi Waghiyi: “What kind of a grandmother are you?” 14.06.2026 4:35
Viola ‘Vi’ Waghiyi is a Sivuqaq Yupik, Native Village of Savoonga Tribal Citizen, mother, and grandmother. Since 2002, she has worked with Alska Community Action on Toxics (‘ACAT’) and serves as Environmental Health and Justice Director. She is a nationally recognized environmental justice leader and is frequently invited to speak locally, nationally, and internationally. Vi serves as a leader of...
Todd Kessler: “How do you deal with the blue note?” 07.06.2026 2:03
Todd Kessler is a singer-songwriter and recording artist in the Chicago area. Born and raised in the Chicago suburbs, Todd Kessler was always singing. He began playing the trumpet at 9 years old, but by 12, he’d fallen in love with the guitar and began writing his own songs. ••• https://toddkesslermusic.com/ https://www.hemifran.com/artist/Todd%20Kessler/ ••• Interview conducted by Marco Rixecker...
Question for: Joanna Hopson: “What has been your most recent athletic performance?” 31.05.2026 3:42
Joanna Hopson is an Iñupiaq Arctic games coach and athlete who competed in the annual Arctic Winter Games, held this year in Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada. In addition to common winter events like curling and figure skating, the games include traditional indigenous competitions including single foot kick, knuckle hop, and stick pull. https://www.facebook.com/share/1D4gJBdzsi/ ••• Interview conducted b...
Michael Yellow Bird: “Where do you draw the line between science and spirituality?” 24.05.2026 4:09
Michael Yellow Bird is a Professor at the Faculty of Social Work at the University of Manitoba, Canada. He is an enrolled member of the Mandan Hidatsa Arikara Nation in North Dakota, USA. His research interests focus on the effects of colonization and methods of decolonization, decolonizing social work, ancestral health, healthy indigenous aging, and shifting behavior, thoughts, beliefs, and ways...
Devon Mihesuah reads an excerpt from ‘Blood Relay’, one of her most recent novels… 17.05.2026 3:51
Devon Mihesuah is a historian and writer and a previous editor of the American Indian Quarterly. She is the Cora Lee Beers Price Professor in the Hall Center for the Humanities at the University of Kansas. She is an enrolled citizen of the Choctaw Nation, and a Chickasaw, Norwegian, French, German, and Irish descendant. Mihesuah is the second Native woman to receive a named/distinguished professor...
Kiliii Yüyan: “Please, close your eyes, and take a picture of what you see…” 10.05.2026 4:26
National Geographic Photographer Kiliii Yüyan is a visual storyteller, and Nat Geo Explorer, whose work has brought him to some of the world’s harshest environments. Chinese-American and Nanai/Hèzhé (indigenous East Asian), he has traveled across the polar regions working with indigenous cultures, wildlife, and underwater environments. Kiliii was a traditional dsai (kayak) builder until he became...
Chad L Yellowjohn, an indigenous artist, discusses two of his paintings… 03.05.2026 6:09
Chad ‘Little Coyote’ Yellowjohn comes from a Shoshone-Bannock/Spokane ancestral line. Chad was raised in Ione, Washington, and, at a young age, was mute, speaking only gibberish. Over the years, his imagination began to extensively blossom on paper, thus gaining a heavy interest in free hand illustration. Currently he is motivated to discover the means to promote optimistic activism or ‘protecting...
Chris Neville, Chicago musician: “How much Chicago would listeners recognize in your music?” 26.04.2026 1:01
Chris Neville is a lifelong musician and composer, playing across many genres and styles. He is the long time musical director of Chicago phenomenon Tributosaurus, and is a current member of several bands including The Meadowlark Lemons. The Meadowlark Lemons are a gritty funk, soul and jazz ensemble etched out of the streets and sounds of Chicago, Illinois. The quintet is made up of highly skille...
Michael Gebert, food writer, critic, and author: “Why bother?” 19.04.2026 6:15
Michael Gebert is a James Beard Award-winning freelance copywriter based in Chicago. His most recent publication, ‘The Chicago Way: An Oral History of Chicago Dining’, explores how Chicago evolved into a world-class dining destination, featuring stories from renowned chefs and food professionals. ••• https://www.michaelgebert.com/food/index.html https://www.amazon.com/Chicago-Way-Oral-History-Dini...
Joey Clift, an indigenous comedy writer, discusses his cultural roots… 12.04.2026 2:46
Joey Clift is a Los Angeles-based comedian, TV writer, director, Emmy-nominated producer, and enrolled member of the Cowlitz Indian Tribe. Joey’s work has been featured in The Washington Post, CNN, Pitchfork, NPR, Dead Meat, and Comedy Central. As a television writer Joey has written for shows such as the 7x Emmy-nominated Spirit Rangers on Netflix, Molly of Denali and Alma’s Way on PBS, New Loone...
Dominic A. Pacyga, historian: “When you are writing a story, what are you thinking?” 05.04.2026 2:34
Dominic A. Pacyga is professor emeritus of history in the Department of Humanities, History, and Social Sciences at Columbia College Chicago. He is the author of several books, including American Warsaw: The Rise, Fall, and Rebirth of Polish Chicago, and, most recently, Clout City. ••• https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/author/P/D/au5845156.html ••• Interview conducted by Marco Rixecker https://...
Hannah Frank: "Why bother?" 29.03.2026 2:00
Hannah Frank is a Chicago-based singer-songwriter, musician, and performer whose style blends blues, traditional folk, roots, spoken word, jazz, and rock. ••• https://hannahfrankmusic.com/ https://BloomSchoolofJazz.com ••• Interview conducted by Marco Rixecker https://www.amazon.com/author/marcorixecker ••• Radio Aula Mundi, January 2026 https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL0J-iNFOJ5e7pEH8ldsVqlM27...
Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve: “Please tell us something we might not know about your ancestors…” 22.03.2026 5:38
Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve (born February 21, 1933) is a Native American author. She has written children’s books with the intention of dispelling stereotypes and negative images of Native Americans. A member of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe in South Dakota, Virginia was a teacher/counselor in Pierre, White, the Flandreau Indian School, and the Rapid City School District. She also served as an adjunct...
Bridging the gap # 58: between Karen Harryman, a poet, and Hannah Frank, a Chicago-based musician… 15.03.2026 1:01
Hannah Frank is a Chicago-based singer-songwriter, musician, and performer whose style blends blues, traditional folk, roots, spoken word, jazz, and rock. ••• https://hannahfrankmusic.com/ https://BloomSchoolofJazz.com ••• K. D. Harryman is the author of Girls’ Book of Knots, forthcoming in 2023 from BlazeVox Books, as well as Auto Mechanic’s Daughter (Akashic, 2007). The recipient of the 2019 Rum...
Bridging The Gap # 57: between Sondra Segundo, Haida, and Esther Belin, Navajo... 08.03.2026 2:32
Sondra Segundo is a multidisciplinary artist and Haida language activist. She is a regalia maker, traditional and contemporary artist, author and illustrator of children's books, singer-songwriter, and keeper of ancestral songs. Sondra is the lead female vocalist of the Seattle-based tribal funk band, Khu’éex’, and sings/tells stories in the Tlingit and Haida languages. She also produces music...
Bridging The Gap # 56: between Daniel H. Wilson and Preston Singletary... 01.03.2026 2:13
Bridging The Gap # 56: between Daniel H. Wilson, a Cherokee author, and Preston Singletary, a Tlingit artist... ••• Daniel H. Wilson is a Cherokee citizen and the multiple New York Times bestselling author of techno-thrillers such as ‘Robopocalypse’, ‘The Clockwork Dynasty’, and ‘The Andromeda Evolution’ (an authorized sequel to the Crichton classic). He earned a PhD in Robotics from Carnegie Mell...
Bridging The Gap # 55: between Sunburnt Stone, a Navajo rock band, and Karen Harryman, a poet... 22.02.2026 2:41
Sunburnt Stone is a band based in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Their music combines various influences and genres between country, blues, rock, and Americana. All the band members, Andrew Wilson, Daryl Young, and Nichole Tsosie, are Diné, members of the Navajo Nation. Their songs generally reflect experiences in life, sunset skies, and the pains of broken glass weathering through the souls of each and...
Bridging The Gap # 54: Felicia Pichette answers a question coming from Nicaela León... 15.02.2026 3:41
Felicia Pichette is an indigenous language student and teacher at the Spokane Language House in the state of Washington, in the United States. Its mission is to create a new generation of fluent speakers of Np’oq͗ ínišcn, the Spokane language, which is a dialect of Salish. In turn, the Salish language is highly endangered and at risk of disappearing. Only a few years ago, there were just two Eld...
Bridging The Gap # 53: Terry White answers a question coming from Carol C... 08.02.2026 1:01
Terry White’s career as a musician started in Oak Park, Illinois, just outside of Chicago, where he began teaching himself guitar as a teenager. After graduating from highschool, he started a band, Modern Day Saints, and they moved to Los Angeles, where they enjoyed a rabid LA following as regulars on the legendary Sunset Strip. In 1994, White moved back to Chicago, started a solo career, but also...
Question for 4 Americans: "What are your two most opposite influences?" 01.02.2026 4:48
All interviews conducted by Marco Rixecker in Seattle, Washington, Chicago, Illinois, New York City, New York, and Ashland, Oregon. https://www.amazon.com/author/marcorixecker ••• Radio Aula Mundi, January 2026 https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL0J-iNFOJ5e7zRG5Kyjop3CXRv_rirs6l&si=eXGfpK912Jxvomjh ••• At the moment, Radio Aula Mundi is an evolving podcast station where no language and all lan...
Roberta Noell Tom: "Why bother?" 25.01.2026 2:09
Roberta Noell Tom is a Diné (Navajo) artist and children’s book author. She is Áshįįhí born for Nát’oh Dine’é Táchii’nii, and a U.S. Navy veteran and aerospace professional. ‘Bebe Bear and Her Dream Adventures at Masani’s’ is written and illustrated by Roberta Noell Tom. It is her debut children’s book about a Diné girl who dreams of becoming an astronaut, engineer, and more. It encourages childre...
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