Stories
Ron Campbell
Monday, April 20th, 2009By Ian Band
When the sun sets and hits the trees to the west
Ron Campbell was only two when his life was forever changed by the construction of the Grand Rapids hydroelectric dam near his community of Moose Lake, Manitoba. He is by no means the only one affected by this so-called development; thousands of other lives have been significantly impacted over the years. Yet, his story provides another unique perspective on how conservation, and particularly boreal forest conservation, is critical for the future. In 1962, Ron and his family had no alternative but to relocate their homestead at Moose Creek to higher ground, which is the presently the site of his community of Moose Lake. Their move was a result of the projected floodwaters caused by the Grand Rapids Hydro Dam, “Cedar Lake and Moose Lake became one big reservoir.” Ron witnessed ...Interview with Waubgeshig Rice
Thursday, March 19th, 2009By Billy Granger
To television viewers across the province, the face of Waubgeshig Rice is likely a familiar one. Working as a reporter for the CBC’s News at Six program in Winnipeg, Waubgeshig (or Waub, as he is most often called) graces the TV screen several nights a week bringing Manitobans the stories that matter most to them. But Waub is more than just another face on the TV screen; he is a First Nations man with a lot to say. He is also a living testament to the value of strong, supportive families, hard work, and optimism. Among all the remarkable experiences and good fortune Rice has had in his life, he reflects most positively on growing up in his home community of Wasauksing First Nation in southern Ontario, just a stone’s throw from Parry Sound. “Growing up there was probably my greatest learning experience,” says Rice. Enthusiasm and pride are audible ...JP Gladu
Thursday, January 22nd, 2009By Chanda Hunnie
For the Anishnaabek, knowledge begins with trees. In Midewiwin and Sundance teachings, humankind are represented by trees, with rings of history traced in skin and bone, just as they are in bark and wood. People must ground their roots in the soil of their home, while holding up the sky with their hands. And, just as humankind possesses a sacred spirit, so do trees – and both must be protected, fostered, and nurtured. J.P. Gladu, leader, advocate, and protector of trees, is a modern day ogitchidaa, a warrior. Although only thirty-five years old, he has been surrounded by trees his entire life – having been raised on the land by his father and grandfather who were forest workers from Binwi Neyaashi Anishinaabek First Nation. Now, he has inherited his role as protector of trees with ...Clayton Thomas-Müller
Tuesday, January 6th, 2009Discovering boreal power: Clayton Thomas Thomas-Müller and his experience with indigenous conservation
By Ksenia Prints
While he did not know its English name at the time, Clayton Thomas-Müller discovered his interest in boreal forest conservation as a teenager growing up on the streets of Winnipeg. “For me, the most sacred and beautiful memories came from the time I was able to spend out on my family’s indigenous trap line,” he said. “There’s a profound connection there for me.” Involved in drugs and gang life in the city, Thomas-Müller felt disconnected from the community at his native Pukatawagan reserve and his Cree Nation heritage. The solution came to Thomas-Müller unexpectedly, when his brother decided to go back to his community and raise a family based on traditional indigenous values. Inspired by his brother’s commitment, Thomas-Müller left street life and became involved with the youth justice ...Connecting the Dots with Kevin Brownlee
Monday, December 1st, 2008By Billy Granger
In the opening moments of my conversation with Kevin Brownlee, curator of archaeology at the Manitoba Museum, I detect something in his voice; a certain buoyancy – something suggesting a departure from the cautious optimism I have often heard in the voices of other Aboriginal leaders and community members. In seeking to identify it, I conclude that beneath his articulate words and professional demeanor, he struggles to contain an almost boyish zeal for something he has yet to let me in on. He is excited about something, but… what? As our conversation wears on, I discover a man of deep commitment and fascinating interests, and the mystery of his enthusiasm gradually unravels as he brings me into the world of his life’s work. With a master’s degree focused on experimental archaeology, Brownlee has spent his ...Denise Henning and Rob Penner
Monday, September 8th, 2008Managing the Lungs of the Earth -
University College of the North and its experience with Boreal forest conservation
By Ksenia Prints
With its campuses spread across the Boreal Forest of Manitoba, the University College of the North (UCN) is intent on learning and preserving what is already all around it. “UCN in its mandate is vital to the role of Boreal Forest Conservation,” said Denise K. Henning, Ph.D., UCN’s President & Vice-Chancellor. Henning, a member of the Cherokee\Choctaw First Nations, views the survival of the Boreal Forest as a top priority for the institution. Amidst renovations and expansions in its Thompson and The Pas campuses, UCN has the seemingly difficult job of balancing the needs of development and conservation. But Dr. Henning and Rob Penner, the outgoing Dean of Health and Applied Science, are certain this can be done. Sustainability guides all ...Margaret Dumas
Monday, July 7th, 2008An Interview By Billy Granger
“A lot of bad stuff happened,” says Margaret Dumas, Adult Learning Class Instructor at Fox Lake School, when explaining what it was like when hydro dams were built in the traditional territory of the Fox Lake Cree. Many men working for the dams entered the community, and with that, a time was ushered in when abuses would dissolve relationships and fracture the community. But things are starting to turn around. When Margaret Dumas was working with her husband William at the school in Fox Lake, they came up with an idea to reconnect people in the community with their language, traditions, elders and each other. The idea was to have an annual goose hunt where the community members could be on the land together, practicing traditional ways of life. ...William Dumas
Monday, July 7th, 2008An Interview By Billy Granger
William Dumas remembers a time when he, his wife Margaret, and others were at a ceremony by a beautiful lake. They were having coffee in the morning and enjoying the day. “Listen,” someone in the party insisted, and the group fell silent. There was a pause then a moment of realization. “Birds should have been singing,” Dumas says. “But there was nothing.” Not far from there, they knew logging companies were operating. Even though they could not hear the machines or see the clearcuts from where they were, the effects were obvious. “It’s not just the people who get displaced,” William tells me. “The animals, the fish, even the birds. They all get displaced as they lose the resource area they need to survive.” As further evidence to ...Marla Robson
Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008Sophia Bittern Rabliauskas
Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008Interview By Billy Granger
In 2002, when I was working as the assistant director for the Wilderness Committee’s Manitoba office, the east side of Lake Winnipeg had already been established as an important battleground for competing interests. Industry, government, First Nations, environmentalists, and other non-profits anted in with funded efforts and dedicated personnel to meet with the other players to discuss, weigh, and vie for their various interests, and slog through the process of deciding the fate of one of the largest remaining tracts in intact boreal forest left on Earth. It was to be a protracted and bureaucratic affair that could last decades. Between 2002 and 2004, I had been made increasingly aware of the accomplishments of a small community on the east side of Lake Winnipeg that would eventually garner international attention. Home to roughly ...John Cutfeet
Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008BY JOSEPH QUESNEL
Reprinted with the permission of the Drum Indigenous people in Canada should be able to say no to development activities that occur on their traditional territories, said a Northern Ontario First Nation man who has seen leadership in his community thrown in jail for opposing mining exploration on their lands without consultation. "Our people have a right to be consulted, but not the right to say no," said John Cutfeet, a spokesperson for Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug (KI) First Nation. "How is consultation 'meaningful' if you don't have a choice?" In particular, Cutfeet opposes the limited definition of meaningful consultation with First Nations over development activities, arguing that while it obligates companies to speak to First Nations, it does not provide an ultimate veto to indigenous communities that do not want these activities to proceed in the end. Cutfeet and other First ...Wild Bill: Story of the Birch
Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008By Chanda Hunnie
The Birch was the most honoured tree in the forest. It was the most unique, envied by all others who wished that they too were like the Birch. The flaky, scaly-barked Jack Pine admired the Birch’s powdered silk skin. The dark and textured Black Spruce, and the scar-chiseled Ash with its grizzled exterior, revered the unblemished whiteness of the Birch and correlated this characteristic to purity and perfection. The Balsam Fir, excreting sap-like puss from warty fissures all over its silver body, couldn’t behold the Birch anymore and left for a more suitable place to live. Others followed. Some left because their deformities were amplified by the beauty of the Birch making them more difficult to ignore. The sobs of morose could be heard through the disguise of a nighttime rustling breeze. Others believed that they no ...Sophia Rabliauskas
Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008Boreal Forest Activist Receives Order of Manitoba
By Chris Webb (Reprinted with the permission of the Drum)
In 2004, residents of Poplar River First Nation convinced the Manitoba Government to stop all mining and logging on their traditional land, 600km northeast of Winnipeg, for the next five years. Sophia Rabliauskas is a member of this community and at the forefront of their struggle for full protection. She is now being recognized for her tenacity with one of the province's highest awards, the Order of Manitoba. "It feels great to be recognized," Rabliauskas says. “It’s good because it gives the whole community of Poplar River the support we need and it's also bringing a sense of pride to the community and the people." In 2002, Rabliauskas, along with several other community members developed a comprehensive land protection and management plan for their ...Mary Crate: The Water Caretakers
Monday, June 30th, 2008By Chanda Hunnie
A Dream It came to her in a dream. Every year a dream comes to Mary Crate to let her know where the water walk will be. This year it was to Lake Winnipeg. A Walk A vessel that resembles a teapot is filled with the pure water before Mary dips her own cup into the spring to extract its sweet goodness. As she drinks she can feel the life-filled water flow through every vein in her body. The group of women, some who know each other, and some who do not, lead the way while carefully attentive to the children behind. The day is broken by periods of balmy weather followed by frequent spells of cloud and cold. Last in this snaking formation are the men. They are the warriors and will protect the women during this ...Ron Plain
Saturday, June 28th, 2008Ksenia Prints
If there are two things Ron Plain seems to have in abundance, it is words and motivation. When speaking of his community’s ongoing battle with toxic pollution and the need to protect the environment, he is relentless in his hope for resolution through global youth action. “There are people across the world that see the potential that everything we’ve been taught is important. I look at it as the fundamental things: you need air, you need water, you need sustenance, and you need companionship. If you don’t have these four things, you don’t have a quality of life,” he says. “I can’t save the water, but if everybody does their own thing… When I go see the Creator I can say, at least I did my part.” “[Youth] are the stewards of the land.” Plain hails from the Aamjiwnaang First Nation, ...Garry Raven: Eastside Lake Winnipeg
Friday, June 27th, 2008Elders and Pipe carriers gather to draw awareness on the importance of
Reprinted with the permission of EAST Inc. Written by Björk Bjarnadóttir
Recent attempts to lobby the government of Manitoba to reverse it’s decision on BiPole III lead Eastside Elder and Pipe Carrier, Garry ”Morning Star” Raven, Bald Eagle and Golden Eagle clan, to host a Pipe Carriers Ceremony to bring up awareness on how important the lands on Eastside of Lake Winnipeg are to cultural and spiritual values for First Nations who live in the region and who still continue to practice their traditional ways. The Pipe Carriers Gathering and Ceremony was held at the Circle of Life Thunderbird house, December 8, 2007, all were welcome to attend and listen and understand what the Pipe Carriers had to say about their sacred land. Eleven ...Garry Robson
Friday, June 27th, 2008Written by Anna Pellissier
As an Aboriginal Awareness Consultant, with the Aboriginal Education Directorate, Garry Robson sees firsthand the effects of cultural awareness and environmental training on children and youth. Working out of the Murdo Scribe Centre at 510 Selkirk Ave. in the North End of Winnipeg, Garry travels to schools, teacher's in-services, day care centres, and universities to foster awareness to Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal students about First Peoples culture and heritage.. This awareness building includes the unique relationship of the people with the land and the specific worldview that ensures Mother Earth's care. When it comes to environmental issues, Mr. Robson instils a long-range view in children and youth, "We teach about the seventh generation," says Mr. Robson, “in which every action taken should be measured by how it will affect the next seven generations into the future.” With this worldview ...Garry Raven
Wednesday, June 25th, 2008Chanda Hunnie
Garry Raven of Hollow Water First Nation has spent over seventeen years as a teacher and caretaker of the land. His responsibilities lie here, so naturally he needed to build a learning centre, and started – what may seem an unlikely classroom -- his own outfitting company. People from around the world, including university students and teachers, are just some of the visitors that travel to see him to experience sweat lodges, study sacred medicinal plants, and to learn about northern Aboriginal culture and its connection to the lands and waters of the boreal forest. As a member of the board of directors for Eastside Aboriginal Sustainable Tourism Incorporated (EAST Inc.), Raven finds himself in a suitable position. EAST Inc. is a not-for-profit economic development initiative aimed at supporting sustainable economic opportunities. Created and facilitated by people from the east side region, EAST Inc. has ...Elissa Kixen
Wednesday, June 18th, 2008Written by Sandy Klowak
Elissa Kixen’s spirit name is Black Wolf, though she did not receive it until adulthood. She feels that this name fits her well, though she is still in the process of figuring out what it means for her, as she only received it from an elder this year. The wolf represents a traveling spirit, one that usually travels in packs. Ms. Kixen never goes anywhere without her family, she explains. As wolves are closely tied to different life phases, her spirit name "represents the different paths I've taken in my life," she says, including the reclamation of her culture, an opportunity she didn't have as a child. Travelling frequently in her youth, she was not in touch with her Anishnabe heritage until years later. “All throughout school I was sort of ashamed to identify as an aboriginal person because ...Hebron Sinclair Jr.
Wednesday, June 18th, 2008Written by Chanda Hunnie
In an emotional speech that had the audience close to tears, nineteen year-old Hebron Sinclair Jr. made his point simply and clearly – “Hands up if you know someone who is in jail. Hands up if someone close to you has committed suicide.” A sea of hands rose in the crowd of 300 Aboriginal people gathered for the annual National Day of Action. Hebron Sinclair Jr., a regional leader of the Manitoba First Nations Youth Council (MFNYC), praised the people in attendance asserting, “It tells me you want to see a difference.” First Nation youth leaders in Manitoba are a growing force. Many youth are taking the future of their lives and culture in their hands by seeking to become more involved in shaping it. Of a total of 98,197 First Nations people in Manitoba, 62,846, ...Mary Crate
Monday, May 12th, 2008Written by Chanda Hunnie
The Feather
An eagle feather held loosely in her hand, Mary Crate looks upon it inquisitively, twirling and twisting it into speckled flight. “The eagle is the highest-flying bird, and it is the eagle’s feather that is the symbol of truth and honesty,” she explains.
Mary brought the feather because she wants people to understand that what she is about to share is genuine and true: traditional indigenous wisdom from knowledge keepers like herself. She is concerned for the Earth, our Mother. She can hear our Earth Mother’s voice calling out to us for help, and Mary’s part in healing her is to share the teachings passed down to her.
“I’m an Ojibway Anishinaba woman. I am called Kookum by many young people, which means grandmother in my language. I am also known as Silver Rock woman, or Shoon-ya-asinie-kwa. Each of us
...Melissa Hotain
Wednesday, March 19th, 2008by Chanda Hunnie
Melissa Hotain, from Sioux Valley Dakota Nation, is a mother of twin boys, and grandmother of two. She believes in the importance of revitalizing a spiritual kinship with the natural world. She has dabbled in many employment areas, however, never finding herself fully content, she chose to seek more challenging and meaningful ways to dedicate her time. In 1995 Mrs. Hotain applied to the Centre for Indigenous Environmental Resources (CIER) program and was one of the first to be recruited. She is now the Environmental Policy Analyst for the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs. “It was something that was more grassroots; somewhere I could make an impact. Here I could change attitudes and change my own attitudes too.” As an Environmental Policy Analyst, Mrs. Hotain’s objective is to review the environmental policies that affect First Nations, and determine how they can be improved. She explains, ...Shaunna Morgan: Imagine
Saturday, March 1st, 2008by Bev Geddes
Shaunna Morgan holds a formidable portfolio; trained as a biologist, she completed her Master of Science degree and has worked for over ten years with environmental and ecological issues. Her present position with the Centre for Indigenous Environmental Resources (CIER )has taken her across the country and the world working as a researcher, instructor and workshop facilitator on First Nations issues related to climate change, energy efficiency and renewable energy programs. Yet, in spite of this impressive knowledge base and experience, she is approachable and genuine. And, I discovered as the interview progressed, very pragmatically spiritual. During her interview she told me of an experience she had visiting Weaver Lake, Manitoba. She recounted a feeling of returning to a place she had never been before, of kinship with the land, where things become clear and the soul finds ease. This article attempts to capture some ...Paul Chief
Wednesday, February 27th, 2008A Response to the Wabanong Nakaygum Okimawin (WNO)
Written by Chanda Hunnie
Paul Chief, a member of Brokenhead First Nation, is a committed and active citizen on issues that affect First Nations. The list of the many projects he has been involved with is extensive. He has sat on the board of directors of the Manitoba Model Forest since 1996. He has served on his community’s council for four terms, or eight years. Since 2003, he has been a committee member of the Manitoba chapter of the First Nation Forestry Program. He is also the vice president of First Nation Forestry Limited Partnership. This story focuses on his experience as a participant on the Eastside Land Use Planning Committee, now known as the Wabanong Nakaygum Okimawin (WNO).
The WNO initiative attempts to bring together local communities, First Nations, industry, and environmental organizations to develop strategies for land and resource use on the
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