The event corresponds to the 25th edition of the "Evidence of Black Cultures" program, entitled "Food Cultures and Biodiversity," presented by Shell and organized by the Museum of Tomorrow. The conversation brought together three leaders: Ana Santos, urban farmer and founder of the Integration Center in Serra da Misericórdia, in the Penha Complex, Rio de Janeiro; Nitynawã Pataxó, Pataxó indigenous leader from the Jaqueira Village, in Porto Seguro, Bahia; and Dalila Kalunga, singer, artisan, agro-extractive worker, and cultural leader of the Kalunga quilombola community, in Cavalcante, Goiás. The debate addressed the act of eating as a cultural, political, and resistance practice, highlighting the relationship between food, ancestral memory, territory, biodiversity, and sustainability. The guests discussed the importance of preserving traditional knowledge, the impacts of environmental racism and nutritional deprivation, the need for the demarcation of indigenous and quilombola lands, the strengthening of family farming and programs such as the National School Feeding Program (PNAE), as well as the defense of food sovereignty. The program also celebrated the International Day for Biological Diversity and was aligned with the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).