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Make a List: Make a list of five things you know about Aboriginal people. Compare your list with a friend. Share your list.

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Presentation on theme: "Make a List: Make a list of five things you know about Aboriginal people. Compare your list with a friend. Share your list."— Presentation transcript:

1 Make a List: Make a list of five things you know about Aboriginal people. Compare your list with a friend. Share your list.

2 History and Current Issues Native People

3 Joseph Brant - Brantford

4 Brantford and Oshweken

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6 Olympics Four Aboriginal groups were official hosts of the Olympic Games

7 Asian Origins Bering Strait is a waterway that now separates Russia from North America Submerged landmass once connected Siberian mainland with North America People are believed to have moved across the land bridge 10,000 to 30,000 years ago They are now called Canada’s native people or Aboriginals.

8 Why and How Why did they come to America (not called America then)? They followed the food – elk, deer, bison and even wooly mammoths How do we know this? Fossil evidence reveals that they travelled as far as Chile by 14,000 ya

9 Aboriginal Population Aboriginal peoples First Nations Registered Indians Status Indians Indian Register Non-status Indians Inuit Métis Indian Band Reserve http://www.cbc.ca/8thfire/2012/01/ wab-on-rethinking-the- relationship.html

10 Aboriginals InuitMétis Status IndiansNon-Status Indians Wab Kinew of 8 th Fire http://www.cbc.ca/doczone/8thfire/2012/01/wab-on-rethinking-the-relationship.html First Nations Between 1971 and 2011, the Aboriginal Ancestry population grew by 487% while the Canadian population grew by 52%.

11 First Nations Group of aboriginal people who share the same culture and heritage www.afn.ca www.afn.ca Status and non-status Indians National Chief Perry Bellegarde

12 First Nations in Ontario Ontario has the largest Aboriginal population in Canada (301,430 in 2011) Aboriginal population in Ontario grew by 28.7 % from 2001 to 2006 133 First Nations communities Map of reserves http://www.ainc-inac.gc.ca/ai/scr/on/rp/mcarte/qwerty-eng.asp http://www.aboriginalaffairs.gov.on.ca/english/about/moving_forward_together/first_nation s_in_ontario_map.pdf

13 Status Indians registered as an Indian under the Indian Act are exempt from paying income tax on any income they earn on a reserve are not required to pay Ontario Retail Sales Tax (RST) on most goods or services that will be consumed or used on a reserve. personal property of a status Indian cannot be seized if it is situated on a reserve

14 Non-status Indians Not registered under the Act, but self-identify as native

15 Métis French word meaning “mixed blood” – people of mixed ancestry Children of French fur traders and Cree women in the prairies and of English and Scottish traders & Dene women in the North Recognized as Aboriginal since 1982 Controversial as to who belongs Métis flag oldest flag in Canada. Used before 1816. Has an infinity sign with two different backgrounds: Red was the colour of the Hudson’s Bay Company, Blue was the colour of the North-West Company.

16 Métis 2003 Powley hunting rights case at the Supreme Court, which gave Métis constitutional right to hunt for food Supreme Court granted land claim March, 2013 5,000 sq. kilometres promised to Métis when Manitoba entered Confederation in 1870

17 Inuit Natives originating from the region between Labrador to Northwest Territories 50% live in Nunavut Inuit Register defines as Inuit all children born to an Inuk and a person of another race, regardless of the second person’s race 59,115 in 2012 Census Median age of 21 http://www.airinuit.com/en/index.aspx

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20 Aboriginal Identity Percentage

21 Aboriginal Population Half are under age 25 (2011)

22 Where do Aboriginals live? Census 2011

23 2,600+ Indian Reserves

24 How many people live on reserves? Half of the small reserves are in B.C. Limited Google Street View.

25 Treaty Indians Belong to a First Nation that signed a treaty with the Crown

26 Indian Band Decision-making organization created under The Indian Act Sculpture graces the entrance to the Osoyoos Indian Band community in British Columbia

27 Native People A term preferred by some instead of Aboriginals or Indians

28 Aboriginal Issues Problems ignored or glossed over by history textbooks. Suicide rate Substance abuse Conditions of extreme poverty and isolation Land Claims Attawapiskat, Ontario

29 Thunder Bay Sudbury Quebec City Hudson Bay Attawapiskat, Ontario

30 Victor is located on the First Nation’s traditional lands 80 kilometres away from town of Attawapiskat. Ontario’s first diamond mine, Victor Mine produces 600,000 carats per year.

31 Residential Schools Abuse and cultural loss involving residential schools About 150,000 aboriginal, Inuit and Métis children were removed from their communities and forced to attend the schools. Church-run, government-funded boarding schools Churches: Anglican, United, Presbyterian and Catholic (75% ) Chief Phil Fontaine and Prime Minister Stephen Harper during official apology for residential schools’ abuses 2008

32 Residential School Problems Students lived in substandard conditions and endured physical and emotional abuse. Many allegations of sexual abuse. Students at residential schools rarely had opportunities to see examples of normal family life. They were in boarding school 10 months a year, away from their parents. All correspondence from the children was written in English, which many parents couldn't read. Brothers and sisters at the same school rarely saw each other, as all activities were segregated by gender. When students returned to the reserve, they often found they didn't belong. They didn't have the skills to help their parents. Students were discouraged from speaking their first language or practising native traditions. If they were caught, they would experience severe punishment. Students became ashamed of their native heritage. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2008/05/16/f-faqs-residential-schools.html

33 Common Experience Payment The Indian residential schools settlement has been approved. The healing continues.

34 Residential School Compensation $1.9 billion compensation package for those who were forced to attend residential schools set aside in 2007 Common Experience Payment: Former residential school students were eligible for $10,000 for the first year or part of a year they attended school, plus $3,000 for each subsequent year. Deadline to submit Sept. 2012 Any remaining money to support learning needs of aboriginals. As of Sept. 30, 2012, $1.55 billion paid, representing 75,800 cases. United Church of Canada formally apologized in 1986 Presbyterian Church statement of apology in 1994 Anglican Church of Canada apology in 1993 In April, 2009, Pope Benedict XVI expressed his "sorrow" to a delegation from Canada's Assembly of First Nations for the abuse and "deplorable" treatment that aboriginal students suffered.

35 Aboriginal Issues Years of being excluded from Canada's formal political process Could vote only if gave up treaty rights, until 1960 http://archives.cbc.ca/politics/elections/topics/1450/ http://archives.cbc.ca/politics/elections/topics/1450/ Proposed assimilation of all First Nation peoples into the mainstream of Canadian society in 1969 Proposed removal of First Nations from the Canadian Constitution Tsleil-Waututh, Squamish and Musqueam nations and environmentalists crossed Burrard Inlet in traditional canoes

36 Proposed Pipelines

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38 First nations leaders sign declaration banning pipelines, oil tankers in B.C. December, 2011

39 Northern Gateway Pipeline

40 Call for Official Inquiry into missing Aboriginal Women http://www.amnesty.ca/our-work/issues/indigenous-peoples/no-more-stolen- sisters Indigenous women are going missing and being murdered at a much higher rate than other women in Canada

41 Racism Winnipeg Video: http://www.cbc.ca/news/can ada/manitoba/rosanna- deerchild-reacts-to- maclean-s-racism-article- after-appearing-on-cover- 1.2930054

42 Health Issues: Aboriginal Treatment Makayla Sault, 11-year-old member of the Mississaugas of New Credit First Nation who refused chemotherapy, died of a stroke Suffered from acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and stopped chemotherapy in May because of the side effects of the drug. Told her parents, Ken and Sonya Sault, who are pastors, that Christ had appeared in her hospital room to tell her she was healed. No known cases of survival of this type of leukemia without a full course of chemotherapy treatment. Treated at the Hippocrates Health Institute, a private holistic centre in West Palm Beach, Florida

43 Health Issues: Aboriginal Treatment Editorial: health-care system must respect aboriginal healing traditions, which are deeply valued ancestral practices.

44 Aboriginal Voices Wab Kinew, interviewed by George Stroumboulopoulos http://www.cbc.ca/8thfire/2012/01/wab-on-rethinking-the- relationship.html LINK http://www.cbc.ca/8thfire/2012/01/wab-on-rethinking-the- relationship.htmlLINK Who is Wab? 8 th Fire: Aboriginal Peoples, Canada and the way forward 500 Years in 2MIN LINK to 8th Fire INTRO 10 MIN So, what went wrong? WAB on RESIDENTIAL SCHOOLSRESIDENTIAL SCHOOLS Explain Paul Martin’s comments at the end:

45 The Trials of Nunavut In extremis – stats & video of crime surge Capital Crime – gallery and northern patrol, Iqaluit Culture and Clash –home & art, Cape Dorset Road to Redemption – Leo & Repulse Bay http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/natio nal/nunavut/

46 In 2007, the United Nations passed a resolution called the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples:  Self-determination and self-government;  Pursue economic, social, and cultural development  Own and manage lands and resources; and,  A nationality. Article 2 of UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: (a) Killing members of the group; (b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; (c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; (d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; (e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.

47 I’m not the Indian You Had in Mind http://www.nsi-canada.ca/2012/03/im-not-the-indian- you-had-in-mind/ http://www.nsi-canada.ca/2012/03/im-not-the-indian- you-had-in-mind/


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