SDC of Heart of the Nations
- Feb 10, 2021
- 12 min
189
"We owe the [Indigenous] peoples a debt that is four centuries old. It is their turn to become full partners in developing an even greater Canada. And the reconciliation required may be less a matter of legal texts than of attitudes of the heart."
~Romeo LeBlanc, February 23, 1996
"We all inherited this, nobody today created Residential Schools, nobody today created the Indian Act, nobody today created the 60s Scoop, we all inherited it and we have to acknowledge that people are healing and people are hurting. Let's do something about it."
~ Chief Cadmus Delorme, Cowessess First Nation, 2021
Born and raised in Regina, Saskatchewan, with a Master's Certificate in Public Policy Analysis (Johnson Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy) and a Bachelors's of Adult Education & Training (University of Regina). My concentrations were in Indigenous Studies, Psychology and Community Building. Firmly believing that knowledge is power, I have created an online space to empower the reader with truth and tangible ways to apply it. Only together can we move forward to build a better Canada, one of mutual respect for ALL that live here while understanding and accepting the sovereignty and rights of those that lived here first.
"Racist attitudes toward Indigenous peoples have been institutionally ingrained, but they can be undone. People are not naturally born to be racist-we teach them to be; we model that behaviour for them."
~ Justice Murray Sinclair, TRC, 2014
Building a society that is based on equality for all, requires an ongoing commitment by all participants. What does reconciliation mean to you and what can you do to advance it?
This website was created in Victoria, British Columbia, the land of the Lekwungen-speaking peoples, known today as the Esquimalt and Songhees Nations.
Why am I acknowledging what territory I'm on?
As a settler in Canada, I am respectfully recognizing the original keepers of the land I am presently on
Heart of the Nations acknowledgement is not an empty gesture but rather, one chosen to be given out of honour to the peoples who have inherent rights to this land, not just their 'designated' Reserve lands that currently exist. It is an offer of support to the Indigenous peoples who continue to claim what was originally agreed on all across Canada, a demonstration of allyship
Acknowledging traditional territories shows recognition of and respect for Indigenous peoples, which is key to reconciliation
Find out what traditional territory you are presently enjoying life on and take some time to learn about the peoples that took care of the land you now enjoy.
Indigenous artist & author spaces available
Click the button below to see an example of an artist's space - email if interested
Today we have online access to a fair amount of Indigenous information and more Indigenous issues are being covered in the media. Before 2009 though, online information and media coverage were scarce. I am still ashamed to admit that it was in 2009, in Professor Asikinack's class, that I found out about Canada's shameful history. I was angry, horrified and ashamed, all at once. Needless to say, some of these papers were not written with grace in mind or with respect for Christopher Columbus, the media, the government, or the 'system'. I already toned down the papers once before originally posting them on my University's website in 2010 (their old wiki was taken down in 2015), but I did not want to lose that original feeling of injustice, so I have left them as is. Together as a Nation, we have come a long way since 2009, but there is still much more to learn and DO. I am still learning as I write new education pieces, just with a bit less attitude.