The blog space for the Program of Aboriginal Studies (University of Ottawa) course EAS 3102, entitled "Sacred Relations: a Vision of Indigenous Peoples"
Monday, February 28, 2011
The World Social Forum, Egypt, and Transformation
Commentary No. 299, Feb. 15, 2011
The World Social Forum (WSF) is alive and well. It just met in Dakar, Senegal from Feb. 6-11. By unforeseen coincidence, this was the week of the Egyptian people’s successful dethroning of Hosni Mubarak, which finally succeeded just as the WSF was in its closing session. The WSF spent the week cheering the Egyptians on – and discussing the meaning of the Tunisian/Egyptian revolutions for their program of transformation, for achieving another world that is possible – possible, not certain.
Somewhere between 60,000 and 100,000 people attended the Forum, which is in itself a remarkable number. To hold such an event, the WSF requires strong local social movements (which exist in Senegal) and a government that at least tolerates the holding of the Forum. The Senegalese government of Abdoulaye Wade was ready to “tolerate” the holding of the WSF, although already a few months ago it reneged on its promised financial assistance by three-quarters.
But then came the Tunisian and Egyptian uprisings, and the government got cold feet. What if the presence of the WSF inspired a similar uprising in Senegal? The government couldn’t cancel the affair, not with Lula of Brazil, Morales of Bolivia, and numerous African presidents coming. So it did the next best thing. It tried to sabotage the Forum. It did this by firing the Rector of the principal university where the Forum was being held, four days before the opening, and installing a new Rector, who promptly reversed the decision of the previous Rector to suspend classes during the WSF so that meeting rooms be available.
The result was organizational chaos for at least the first two days. In the end, the new Rector permitted the use of 40 of the more than 170 rooms needed. The organizers imaginatively set up tents across the campus, and the meeting proceeded despite the sabotage.
Was the Senegalese government right to be so frightened of the WSF? The WSF itself debated how relevant it was to popular uprisings in the Arab world and elsewhere, undertaken by people who had probably never heard of the WSF? The answer given by those in attendance reflected the long-standing division in its ranks. There were those who felt that ten years of WSF meetings had contributed significantly to the undermining of the legitimacy of neoliberal globalization, and that the message had seeped down everywhere. And there were those who felt that the uprisings showed that transformational politics lay elsewhere than in the WSF.
I myself found two striking things about the Dakar meeting. The first was that hardly anyone even mentioned the World Economic Forum at Davos. When the WSF was founded in 2001, it was founded as the anti-Davos. By 2011, Davos seemed so unimportant politically to those present that it was simply ignored.
The second was the degree to which everyone present noted the interconnection of all issues under discussion. In 2001, the WSF was primarily concerned with the negative economic consequences of neoliberalism. But at each meeting thereafter the WSF added other concerns – gender, environment (and particularly climate change), racism, health, the rights of indigenous peoples, labor struggles, human rights, access to water, food and energy availability. And suddenly at Dakar, no matter what was the theme of the session, its connections with the other concerns came to the fore. This it seems to me has been the great achievement of the WSF – to embrace more and more concerns and get everyone to see their intimate interconnections.
There was nonetheless one underlying complaint among those in attendance. People said correctly we all know what we’re against, but we should be laying out more clearly what it is we are for. This is what we can contribute to the Egyptian revolution and to the others that are going to come everywhere.
The problem is that there remains one unresolved difference among those who want another world. There are those who believe that what the world needs is more development, more modernization, and thereby the possibility of more equal distribution of resources. And there are those who believe that development and modernization are the civilizational curse of capitalism and that we need to rethink the basic cultural premises of a future world, which they call civilizational change.
Those who call for civilizational change do it under various umbrellas. There are the indigenous movements of the Americas (and elsewhere) who say they want a world based on what the Latin Americans call “buen vivir” – essentially a world based on good values, one that requires the slowing down of unlimited economic growth which, they say, the planet is too small to sustain.
If the indigenous movements center their demands around autonomy in order to control land rights in their communities, there are urban movements in other parts of the world who emphasize the ways in which unlimited growth is leading to climate disaster and new pandemics. And there are feminist movements who are underlining the link between the demands for unlimited growth and the maintenance of patriarchy.
This debate about a “civilizational crisis” has great implications for the kind of political action one endorses and the kind of role left parties seeking state power would play in the world transformation under discussion. It will not be easily resolved. But it is the crucial debate of the coming decade. If the left cannot resolve its differences on this key issue, then the collapse of the capitalist world-economy could well lead to a triumph of the world right and the construction of a new world-system worse even than the existing one.
For the moment, all eyes are on the Arab world and the degree to which the heroic efforts of the Egyptian people will transform politics throughout the Arab world. But the tinder for such uprisings exists everywhere, even in the wealthier regions of the world. As of the moment, we are justified in being semi-optimistic.
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
There you go!
There You Go
View more documents from SurvivalInternational
Monday, February 21, 2011
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Mid-term EAS3102
Thanks for your support. Hearing your perspective on the world is really helping me develop my own understanding of myself and my relationship to the things around me. I am looking forward to writing the midterm tomorrow, which is an unusual feeling!
A.
Student in course EAS3102-2011
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N.E.: The bold is mine
A.
Student in course EAS3102-2011
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N.E.: The bold is mine
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Monday, February 14, 2011
Crucial indigenous responsibilities
By Marcelo Saavedra-Vargas
The following notes were prepared as the basis for the opening address at the teach-in Lessons from Bolivia: Building a Global Movement for Climate Justice in Toronto on Saturday, November 13.
WE ARE PACHA MAMA
We must recognize the fact that we are all expressions of Mother Earth, of Pacha Mama. We must acknowledge and honour this fact. This is not a metaphor or a poetic exercise.I am going to put it in the way traditional Mik’maq Elder Stephen Augustin explained it to me, very elegantly and sincerely: “we peel off Mother Earth,” he told me.
We belong to the mysterious circle of life and we have our place on the circle where we establish horizontal and sacred relations with others – even though the current system tries to make us forget this.

In indigenous legends, myths, ceremonies, prophecies throughout the planet, we find this same ontological notion of all being part of a continuous process of creation and recreation. In fact, our Others, the animal nation, the plants nation, the tree nation , have convened that we humans be the guardians of the sacredness of these set of relationships. We are the guardians of maintaining the equilibrium so that life will happen on our planet.
We live on a very particular planet; it is both our home and the source of our existences. Some say, this is a Rare Earth, because of all the particular incidents that had to happen for our planet, and our existences, to form. Things like being at the precise distance from our sun, not too close so our atmosphere would not evaporate because of the heat nor too far so our water wouldn’t freeze everywhere. Our sun is just the proper size and our planet just the just size to be orbiting its sun at the proper speed. We are even so lucky that in the formation of our planet, a twin planet to ours, Theia, collided with our vessel so our core could be enriched with iron and create not only the proper gravitational force to hold our atmosphere but also form a magnetic shield that protects us from celestial harmful rays. The debris from this collision, as if we were not lucky enough, provided for our moon to form like a stabilizer body that regulates our seasons and our path as we revolve around our sun, and our solar system revolves around the center of our galaxy. On top of things, we also have Jupiter, a true guardian, whose massive gravitational pull, keeps many potentially lethal bodies from hitting our home. One of these bodies hit our vessel 65 million years ago. That incident wiped out a species that had roamed the planet for about 150 million years, the dinosaurs. It opened the way to a new dominant kind of beings, the mammals, and among them, our own species. We are truly lucky for having such a resilient mother, such a loving Mother.
We find references to these facts in a number of myths, legends and prophecies of our indigenous peoples.
DEFENDING THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION IN BOLIVIA
The Cultural Revolution in Bolivia opens up crucial spaces for debate, for empowering the visions of indigenous peoples, for re-establishing forgotten equilibriums. As indigenous peoples, we are truly defenders of this process because it is a set of possibilities for us to give to humanity the richness of our cultures, indigenous cultures. The cultural revolution taking place in my home country, Bolivia, is not only inspiring for indigenous peoples across the planet but a powerful example of the way history is shaped by people who are in close contact with their inner selves, their true selves.
And it is as the product of that process of change, of cultural revolutionary change, that the Cochabamba Accord came into being. This accord demands and challenges the international system of nation states to acknowledge the rights of Mother Earth, without compromising the rights previously established universally. Acknowledging these rights signifies recognizing we are all part of the sacred and mysterious circle of life and that, for the time being, we are using modern instruments to protect the only support system we will ever have, our planet, our Mother Earth, our Pacha Mama. Is this a figment of indigenous imagination? Is this an Indian nonsensical hallucination?
WHO IS INDIGENOUS?
Well, let me first discuss who is indigenous.Am I talking here only about those who have a different culture as compared to Western and modern cultures? Am I talking about those who have arranged their societies following a close understanding of Mother Nature’s cycles, like the Aymara, Guarani, Hopi, Haudenosuane, Anishinaabe, the San? Am I excluding those that are living other ways of arranging their societies, following other principles, like the Western modern human being?
In my belief, we are all indigenous to this planet. So far I have not met anyone who was born outside this planet, whether be in a space station, or the moon, or Mars. We are all indigenous to planet Earth. Furthermore, we are all a physical expression of the elements that Mother Earth generously provides for us, way beyond the arbitrary “free-market” price system.
If you would manage to chemically and physically analyze yourself, very closely, you would find that your organism is but a complex set of relations of the four sacred elements: water, air, fire and earth. It is not a romantic or poetic endeavour. We are not trying to be fashionable or politically-correct back-to-the-landers in the year 2010! We just want to acknowledge who we were, we are and we will always be dirt, sky, water and photosynthesis. We are still homo sapiens, we still need land, crops, animals, weather, oceans, atmosphere, and so on.
In that sense, we are still the same naked bipedal upright folk that started wandering about 200,000 year ago, as our foremothers and forefathers. Really, we never left the land, we never abandoned the planet. None of us. Yet, we are forgetting these sacred relations. We have been living through a process of inversion that is bringing our species to the verge of extinction.
Some people argue that our planet is in peril of a catastrophe, that she is going to perish. Pacha Mama is very resilient, she is a survivor. She’s gone through five massive extinctions and it took her just some millions of years to regain life everywhere on her territory. In fact it is a result of these massive extinction episodes that we came to be a dominant species on the planet. What a great responsibility we bear towards ourselves, our future generations and all other beings on our planet!
FEAR & ARROGANCE
The imposition of an arbitrary system, that of capitalism, colonialism/imperialism, and most of all, patriarchy has resulted in a peculiar process of inversion and the pervasive feeling of fear and arrogance on the part of this particular civilization project.Modern society is living in a state of low-level, subtle, toxic, all-pervading fear. This fear gets readily transformed into arrogance and a false sense of superiority over all things around us, especially what we term the wildlife. We assume this wildlife (the natural world) to be out there, where, in reality, it is in us, here in our hearts. We are the territory, we are the geography. It is not that the territory can belong to us. No, we belong to it; we are part of Mother Earth.
HUMILITY
Let’s be humble, truly humble.It only took our universe 13.75 billion years to get to the point of you being here. Sitting here and now was preceded by a wild sequence of events, going against all probabilities, with the result that you, that beautiful you, are here, now, with us, as we dream together.
Just imagine the probabilities of you coming to life... 1,050,000,000 (more than one billion) spermatozoids at the time of your conception and only 1 – that is 0.000000017% – probability (for scientific and all other practical purposes, that is zero), that that one would be the exact one to give birth to the specific you. Isn’t that magic? According to the law of probabilities, you were not meant to be here, yet, here you are, wholesome, total, and committed to change our planet! If that is not magic, then what is it? And that one, you, inhabiting this incredibly beautiful planet, our mother, revolving around an unimportant star that is itself revolving around the center of another unimportant galaxy, the Milky Way – just a speck in the grand order of things. Yet, I see you, I feel the strong spirits you embody. We all resonate with each other.
We need to stop living in arrogance, having the false presumption that we are the summit of the evolutionary journey of all species. Acknowledging and, furthermore, honouring the rights of our planet, is an act of humility and courage. It means that we would not have fear in our hearts, but rather, with love, humility and courage we can acknowledge our belonging to this planet, to this land, to this territory.
When Europeans settlers came to the Abya-Yala (otherwise known as the Americas), our ancestors received them with open arms. They taught them how to hunt, how to use plants and vegetables; they shared their stories, legends and ceremonies with them. Our ancestors showed them how harmoniously and freely Anishinaabe, Aymara, Mohawk, Wendat, or Mississauga people could live with Mother Earth, on Turtle Island, in the Abya-Yala. The prophecy of the re-encounter of the Eagle and the Condor (and other prophecies of our indigenous peoples, like the Anishinaabe prophecy of the Seven Fires or the Mayan calendars) announced a time in which we, meaning human beings, would have to choose which way we should be heading. Clearly, the Western, capitalist, colonial and patriarchal way has failed. We need to renew our initial covenant with our Mother, our land. We need to choose responsibly. We need urgently to be responsible. Responsible is being able to respond, have response ability. That is why we are here.
OUR RESPONSIBILITIES.
But what kind of responsibility? The responsibility to be truly free in an indigenous sense. You are free only if you can take on your responsibility, if you can be true to your responsibilities, honour your obligations towards the small circle you belong to and to the extended circle your community is part of. At the end, it is also a matter of honouring those that came before you (your ancestors) and those that are still in the spirit realm waiting to become human beings through you, your next generations up to the seventh skin. That is the sacredness of your circle. You also have to be in terms with your inner self, your most precious and sacred circle, being true to your nature in this cosmic journey we call life.A SENSE OF BELONGING
Anthropologist Margaret Mead argued that during 99% of our journey as a species we lived under the invisible and unspoken covenant with Mother Earth by which we were going to respect and honour it. In all the myths of indigenous peoples, we see that other beings on this planet, animals, forests, rivers, lakes, plants, got together in a circle and decided to give us the responsibility of being the beholders of intelligence, guardians of time, and keepers of fire. That was the grand plan, that was the guardianship we are beholders of, as designated by the other beings on this planet.This has being betrayed, especially for the past 200 years and even more so since privatization took a grip on everything that is part of this planet: especially the Commons.

Painting by Savin Thanda, one of my students in the Program of Aboriginal Studies at the University of Ottawa, March 2010For far too long, things have been inverted. We are living a particular time of anomaly. This came as a warning from several indigenous Elders when they noticed small changes in their surroundings. As I have already affirmed, indigenous peoples are their territories; we cannot put them apart as peoples on one side and the territories on the other. John Amagoalik, an Inuk Elder, stated that “we don’t look at land as something to be owned, something to be given away or sold. It’s a heritage. It’s something inside you”. We are the geographies; we have keen chorographic knowledge and wisdom of which we are, that is, our lands and territories. Chorography is like geography; it studies the Earth, its lands, rivers, inhabitants and so on, but on a specific level, locally. For instance Anishinaabe people have unparalleled chorographic knowledge of the land where we are having this meeting right now, because they are that territory. This transient, episodic and anomalous time has made us believe that we can own the land, the territory, where for most of our existence, the opposite has been true. We belong to the land, to our true Mother, to our Pacha Mama.
It is our obligation to restore this sacred and vital relationship to its proper form.
* * *
I am deeply honoured to have shared this time with you and having been able to reflect your feelings and been in spiritual communion with you.
Thank you
Gracias
Meegweetch
Paschi
Jallalla!
Message from Elder Bob Lovelace regarding greed taking a toll at Beaver Pond
It is hard to see the clear-cutting of the Beaver Pond Forest in Ottawa. It is hard because so many good people have tried their best to prevent it. It is hard because this forest has a spirit. The Life in the Forest called out to those good people to help save the trees, the forest life, and the ancestral connection that it has with the Algonquin people.
But it is being clear-cut. Men, for wages, are felling the trees with dispassionate machines, piling the trees for processing, insuring that every last morsel is committed to profit. And then the ground itself will be pushed into piles, scraped into roads, excavated for foundations and sewers. This old growth forest, the archeological story it holds and the serenity it offered will be gone soon. But we have not lost this struggle.
We have not lost the struggle. The struggle to save the Beaver Pond Forest has united heroic people who understand their common concerns for mother earth. This struggle has educated us to the complexities of the battle to save the earth and as we learn we become stronger. Now is the time to renew and extend our efforts to change the culture of greed and exploitation to a culture of mutual respect for human needs and non-interference with the replenishing mechanisms and cycles of the earth.
Those who opposed us in this struggle did so out of greed, arrogance and political cowardice. Too many times, single-minded developers have taken our common heritage and turned it into market commodities, killed the natural spirit of the land, and created landscapes of self-interest, conspicuous consumption and unsustainable depreciation. Too many times, politicians promise to extend the power of the people but simply acquiesce to the power of money. Throughout this battle the real heroic people have stood together against this kind of tyranny and they will continue to work together to create change and real democracy. It is time to take back the commons from those who have corrupted both our lands and governance.
As we watch the destruction of this beautiful Forest we owe it to each other to continue to fight for every piece of mother earth. Refuse to surrender another inch.
Restore the land, its natural functions and the creatures that abide by its natural laws. Restore your own relationship with the land in how you live, where you live, what you eat, how you use energy and in your relationships with one another. And when we struggle together in the face of greed, arrogance and cowardice: heal yourself from the harm, heal others in a good way and pick yourself up and struggle again. “We shall overcome”.
Robert Lovelace
February 13, 2011
Queen’s Park
Toronto, Ontario
Evo Morales: 10 Commandments To Save the Planet
October 20, 2008
“If we want to save the planet earth to save life and humanity, we are obliged to end the capitalist system”
By Evo Morales Ayma
president of the Republic of Bolivia
Message to the Continental Gathering of Solidarity with Bolivia in Guatemala City
Sisters and brothers, in the hope that the Continental Gathering of the Social Forum of the Americas culminates with strong bonds of unity among you and a strong action plan in favour of the people of Bolivia and of our peoples, I repeat my fraternal greeting.
“If we want to save the planet earth to save life and humanity, we are obliged to end the capitalist system”
By Evo Morales Ayma
president of the Republic of Bolivia
Message to the Continental Gathering of Solidarity with Bolivia in Guatemala City
October 9, 2008 — Sisters and brothers, on behalf of the Bolivian people, I greet the social movements of this continent present in this act of continental solidarity with Bolivia.
We have just suffered the violence of the oligarchy, whose most brutal expression was the massacre in Panda, a deed that teaches us that an attempt at power based on money and weapons in order to oppress the people is not sustainable. It is easily knocked down, if it is not based on a program and the consciousness of the people.
We see that the re-founding of Bolivia affects the underhanded interests of a few families of large landholders, who reject as an aggression the measures enacted to favour the people such as a more balanced distribution of the resources of natural gas for our grandfathers and grandmothers, as well as the distribution of lands, the campaigns for health and literacy, and others.
To protect their power and privileges and to evade the process of change, the ruling elite of large landholders of the so-called Half Moon (Media Luna) clothe themselves in the movements for departmental autonomies and the rupture of national unity, lending themselves to the yankee interests of ending the re-founding of Bolivia.
However, in the revocation referendum of August 10, we just received the mandate of two-thirds of the Bolivian people to consolidate this process of change, in order to continue advancing in the recovery of our natural resources, and to insure the well being of all Bolivians, to unite the distinct sectors of society of the countryside and the city, of the east and the west.
Sisters and brothers, what happened with this revocation referendum in Bolivia is something that is not only important for Bolivians but for all Latin Americans. We dedicate it to the Latin American revolutionaries and those throughout the world, reaffirming the struggle for all processes of change.
I was going to express the way to recover the life ways of our peoples, called Live Well (el Buen Vivir), to recover our vision of the Mother Earth, that for us is life, because it is not possible for the capitalist model to convert Mother Earth into a commodity. Once again we see the profound correlations between the indigenous movement and the organisations of the social movements, which also throw in their lot in order to Live Well. We greet them so that together we can seek a certain balance in the world.
10 commandments to save the planet
Along these lines, I want to share and propose for debate some 10 commandments to save the planet, for humanity and for life, not only at this level but also to debate among our communities, and our organisations.
- First, if we want to save the planet earth to save life and humanity, we are obliged to end the capitalist system. The grave effects of climate change, of the energy, food and financial crises, are not a product of human beings in general, but rather of the capitalist system at it is, inhuman, with its idea of unlimited industrial development.
- Second, to renounce war, because the people do not win in war, but only the imperial powers; the nations do not win, but rather the transnational corporations. Wars benefit a small group of families and not the people. The trillions of millions of dollars used for war should be directed to repair and cure Mother Earth wounded by climate change.
- Third proposal for debate: a world without imperialism nor colonialism. Our relationships should be oriented to the principle of complementarity, and to take into account the profound asymmetries that exist family to family, country to country, and continent to continent.
- And the fourth point is oriented to the issue of water, which ought to be guaranteed as a human right to avoid its privatisation into few hands, given that water is life.
- As the fifth point, I would like to say that we need to end the energy debacle. In 100 years we are using up fossil energies created during millions of years. As some presidents are setting aside lands for luxury automobiles and not for human beings, we need to implement policies to impede the use of agro-fuels and in this way to avoid the hunger and misery for our peoples.
- As a sixth point: in relationship to the Mother Earth, the capitalist system treats the Mother Earth as a raw material, but the Earth cannot be understood as a commodity; who could privatise, rent or lease their own mother? I propose that we organise an international movement in defence of Mother Nature, in order to recover the health of Mother Earth and re-establish a harmonious and responsible life with her.
- A central theme as the seventh point for debate is that basic services, whether they be water, electricity, education or health, need to be taken into account as human rights.
- As the eighth point, to consume what is needed, prioritise what we produce and consume locally, end consumerism, decadence and luxury. We need to prioritise local production for local consumption, stimulating self-reliance and the sovereignty of the communities within the limits that the health and remaining resources the planet permits.
- As the next to last point, to promote the diversity of cultures and economies. To live in unity respecting our differences, no only physical, but also economic, through economies managed by the communities and their associations.
- Sisters and brothers, as the tenth point, we propose to Live Well, not live better at the expense of another, a Live Well based on the lifestyle of our peoples, the riches of our communities, fertile lands, water and clean air. Socialism is talked about a lot, but we need to improve this socialism, improve the proposals for socialism in the XXI century, building a communitarian socialism, or simply Live Well, in harmony with Mother Earth, respecting the shared life ways of the community.
- Finally, sisters and brothers, certainly you are following up on the problems that exist. I have reached the conclusion that there will always be problems, but I want to tell you that I am very content, not disappointed or worried because these groups who permanently enslaved our families during the colonial time, the time of the republic and this period of neoliberalism, they continue as family groups, resisting us.
Sisters and brothers, in the hope that the Continental Gathering of the Social Forum of the Americas culminates with strong bonds of unity among you and a strong action plan in favour of the people of Bolivia and of our peoples, I repeat my fraternal greeting.
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Day of Justice: Rally for Sisters in Spirit
Monday, Feb. 14
Parliament Hill
Noon
Come out and show support for the survival of the Native Women's Association of Canada's (NWAC) unprecedented Sisters in Spirit campaign (SIS), which, since it's inception in 2004, has worked to raise awareness about violence against Native women and girls in Canada--namely, those who have gone missing or been murdered.
SIS not only compiled a data for over 583 cases of missing and murdered Native women in five years time, but also identified key patterns integral to understanding the systemic nature of the violence: media neglect or racial bias, police racism or negligence, victimization of Native women by the Justice system, and governmental apathy and enforcement of cycles of poverty for Native communities, to name a few. In a relatively short period of time, SIS also managed to raise the profile of the issue in the media and in the minds of the population at large, while providing indispensable support to the families of victims and creating a cross-country network.
This October 86 communities organized the 5th annual memorial Sisters in Spirit March and Vigil, including one in Nicaragua.
In spite of this progress, and the ongoing collection of new data (indeed, grassroots groups have put the number of missing and murdered women much closer to 2000), the government has held SIS in funding limbo for the past 8 months, ever since the release of Canada's 2010 budget back in March, when $10 million was promised to "address the issue of missing and murdered Native women." It wasn't until November 2010 that the government finally made the announcement that confirmed the worst fears of many activists, organizers, and even opposition MPs: the money would not go to fund SIS research, but would instead fulfill the government's new idea of safety for women, and include requirements for enhanced police power: amendments to the Criminal Code to allow police to wiretap without warrants in emergencies and obtain multiple warrants on a single
application.
This will not only increase the likelihood of criminalization of women, Native communities, and other vulnerable sectors of the population, but will be expected to operate without the backbone of research and data collection. Add to this the historical and ongoing relationship of distrust between many Native communities and police, who are themselves implicated in a number of documented violent altercations with Native women. Gladys Tolley, for instance, was killed by the Surete du Quebec in 2001 and no one was ever brought to justice. Her daughter Bridget Tolley has pushed for an independent investigation for years and was recently refused.
ENOUGH is ENOUGH!! We will not stand for the continued stripping down of First Nations programs essential to the physical safety and mental and emotional health of Native women and Native communities, as we have seen earlier this same year with the Aboriginal Healing Foundation and First Nations University.
RALLY FOR JUSTICE on February 14th. SHOW YOUR LOVE!
Wednesday, February 2, 2011
The era of responsibilities: an indigenous perspective
Time: Friday, February 4. 10 am
Speaker: Dr Saavedra-Vargas
Location: UCU 206
In the modern age, national states have been established following a particular interpretation of human interactions and beliefs. Indigenous peoples are challenging the way in which this has been done by tapping into ancestral knowledge of developing respectful and harmonious relationships with all that surrounds us. It is an urgent enterprise we listen to what they have to say and assume our responsibilities, as understood by indigenous peoples throughout the planet.
Along with Las Imillitas, I will be explaining the notion of parity and its expression in human life, the chachawarmi.
You can watch Las Imlllitas below
http://scdi-icdw.ca/?page_id=405
Speaker: Dr Saavedra-Vargas
Location: UCU 206
In the modern age, national states have been established following a particular interpretation of human interactions and beliefs. Indigenous peoples are challenging the way in which this has been done by tapping into ancestral knowledge of developing respectful and harmonious relationships with all that surrounds us. It is an urgent enterprise we listen to what they have to say and assume our responsibilities, as understood by indigenous peoples throughout the planet.
Along with Las Imillitas, I will be explaining the notion of parity and its expression in human life, the chachawarmi.
You can watch Las Imlllitas below
http://scdi-icdw.ca/?page_id=405
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