Tuesday 31 May 2011

Treaties from 1760 - 1923: Two sides to the story

Between 1760 and 1923, the British Crown signed 56 land treaties with Aboriginal Peoples. Part of the protocol was to award a medal to the chiefs who signed certain treaties. On one side of the medal was a bust of Queen Victoria; on the other, a British officer and a native chief shaking hands.
For Michael Anderson, this handshake symbolizes the profound meaning of historic treaties. Anderson is research director of Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak, an organization that defends the political interests of the some 30 groups that signed treaties 4, 5, 6 and 10.
"The essence of the treaty was to create a nation together that will exist in perpetuity, for as long as the sun shines, the grass grows and the waters flow. The core concept is to share the traditional land of the First Nations who have entered into a treaty with the Crown and the Canadian settlers, and also to benefit from the Crown’s resources, such as medicine and education."
But the text of the written treaties tells a whole other story. According to these documents, native groups surrendered all of their rights to the land in exchange for small reserves and meagre compensation.
For the British Crown, the treaties offered substantial benefits, such as:
  • freeing up land for loyalists who had supported the British during the American War of Independence;
  • advancing colonization in the west;
  • providing agricultural land and natural and mineral resources.
Sometimes, aboriginal communities themselves sought treaties, because settler expansion had greatly diminished wildlife populations and they feared starvation.
These historical treaties cover present-day Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, the Northwest Territories, and parts of Yukon and British Columbia.

From oral to written treaties


Were the treaties signed on equal terms? Reports of the negotiations, recorded in the treaty commissioners’ diaries, would suggest not. The oral tradition, maintained by aboriginal elders, also shows discrepancies between the treaty texts and the verbal content of negotiations.
In essence, the surrender of land rights was based on the concept of private property — an incomprehensible notion in aboriginal culture.
The treaties were negotiated in a matter of days, in English, with interpreters who were not always equal to the task. They were signed by aboriginal chiefs who generally could not read English and who had not been advised by anyone. Often, the negotiation process did not respect the community’s hierarchical structure.
On several occasions, aboriginals indicated that they wanted to continue hunting and fishing. The English negotiators led them to believe they would be able to do so. In reality, the treaty texts only allowed them to hunt on lands that were not occupied by white settlers, and also included regulations that could prohibit these activities during certain periods of the year.
To make themselves understood, the British used a language very different from that used in the treaty texts. Queen Victoria was referred to as “the great white mother,” and the aboriginals, her “red children.”
Take, for example, this speech by commissioner David Laird, who negotiated Treaty 7 with the Blackfoot:
"The Great Spirit has made all things—the sun, the moon, and the stars, the earth, the forest, and the swift running rivers. It is by the Great White Spirit that the Queen rules over this great country and other great countries. The Great Spirit has made the white man and the red man brothers, and we should take each other by the hand. The Great Mother loves all her children, white man and red man alike; she wishes to do them all good."
The Supreme Court of Canada has recognized the need to interpret the treaties in light of what was said before they were signed. “The treaties, as written documents, recorded an agreement that had already been reached orally and they did not always record the full extent of the oral agreement,” reads the Badger judgment, handed down in 1996. This judgment states that it is necessary to interpret treaties “in the sense that they would naturally have been understood by the Indians at the time of the signing.”

From then to now


The land has been developed since the treaties were brought into effect. Some of it has been turned into immense wheat fields. The subsurface is rich in oil, uranium, copper, gold and diamonds that are lining the pockets of oil and mining companies. Forests feed the lumber and pulp and paper industries.
The First Nations who live in these areas maintain that their ancestors would never have surrendered their rights to the land and its resources. They continue to hope that the dialogue started at the time of the original negotiations will be continued.
Once again, the Supreme Court can play an important role. Two judgments rendered in 2004 (Haida and Taku River Tlingit) ruled that the government must consult with Aboriginal Peoples when their ancestral rights could be undermined by development, and must accommodate them, if applicable. These ancestral rights are tied to the practices, traditions and customs of aboriginal societies before contact with the Europeans.
For Michael Anderson, the research director of Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak, this duty imposed by the Court is a means to renew the tie established between the Crown and Aboriginal Peoples at the time the treaties were signed: “We see the duty to consult as a central mechanism to operationalize the treaty relationship in the 21st century.”
The notion of a tie of trust is at the heart of the strategy titled Sacred Treaties, Sacred Trust: Working Together for Treaty Implementation and Advancing our Sovereignty as Nations, adopted in 2010 by Canada’s Assembly of First Nations.
This strategy seeks to support treaty signatories and their efforts to have their rights recognized. Planned measures include setting up an independent tribunal and developing mechanisms to share resource development revenues.

Posted: May 26, 2011

All you hear about is the Jets in Manitoba, only WPG Free Press wrter Bartley Kives acknowledged the problem recently.

Lake Winnipeg at 'tipping point': report

Posted: May 31, 2011 Beginning of Story Content

A five-year study of Lake Winnipeg sows phosphorus levels are approaching dangerous levels for human health.
Dr. Peter Leavitt’s study of Lake Winnipeg, commissioned by the province, establishes a clear benchmark for restoring the health of the lake, Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger said, promising action on preserving the lake.
In an interview, Leavitt said phosphorous levels in the lake must be reduced by 50 per cent. "If nothing's done then you have the potential of having algae that are toxic within the lake, not potentially toxic. There's human health risks associated with liver disease and even potential for cancer in some instances.
"Phosphorous levels in the lake are now worse than they were in Lake Erie when people were describing that lake as dead," said Leavitt, Canada Research chair in environmental change and society, department of biology, University of Regina.
"We’re at a tipping point and if something isn’t done now, the consequences will be dire," he predicted.
Increased phosphorous levels are entering the lake from livestock farming, pollution from cities and through wetland loss.
"It’s the challenge of the next decade," said Dr. David Schindler, Killam professor of ecology, department of biological sciences, University of Alberta.
"Large reductions in phosphorus loading are necessary to save Lake Winnipeg and for Manitoba’s sustainable development," said Dr. Hank Venema, director of the International Institute for Sustainable Development’s Water Innovation Centre.
"Like potash, phosphorus is an increasingly scarce and strategic resource essential to world food security, which should be intercepted, recycled and transformed into high-value products rather than allowed to foul Lake Winnipeg," said Venema.
"We all have a part to play if we’re going to stop the death of Lake Winnipeg; the stakes are just too high," said Selinger.

Monday 23 May 2011

Hockey Fighting Thoughts

It was a tough job, dealing with the pressure, worrying about getting beat up in front of thousands of people, your friends and family, & representing my people. I started to smoke weed to deal with the pressure, and the pain. Now there is no doubt in my mind the carcinogens from the THC will have effects on my health in the future. I am thankful I never began to abuse prescription pain pills with alcohol, and use steriods to get an edge on my competition. I been in over 300 hockey fights, took more than ten thousand punches to the head over the course of sparring, boxing, in my ten plus years of fighting. I take comfort in living a clean lifestyle now, eating a good diet which includes oatmeal, flax seed, and a fish oil pill every morning. Also the fact that I am stimulating my brain in school,  which is like exercise. Most of all, I take comfort in the teaching that sage keeps the brain young. I smudge with it often.
I read that a hockey player was dismissed of assault charges from a fight at a bar because of his previous concussion history. It was a hard thing to deal with the fact that the hockey/ fighting career comes to an end. I had dreams unfulfilled, and it left me angry to not reach them in my first couple years of being back from playing. I tried chasing past glory and go out with a bang in Ice Warriors in Finland, I felt fine when I got there, ready to rumble, until I saw the draw. I had to go through the two favorites to get to the final. Sean McMorrow and Derek Parker. I had a mental breakdown before the tourny started, beatdown with self-doubt. I later came to rationalize, in talking to another fighter, that it wasn't a weakness that that happened. It was my bodies way of protecting itself, a strength. A way of telling me I had enough.
I feel like I got out of fighting early, I look on a website and see the number of fights others who are still competing are putting up, and its numbers that make me think. Joel Theriault, 300, Mike Brault, 500, Jacques Dube, 400. Did I get out too early and will regret not pursueing my dream later in life. Or will I see friends and others I have fought suffering the effects later in life, hear tradgic stories about early deaths, brain damage, and so on.

Hockey Fighting Article

Monday 2 May 2011

I'm First Nation, and I don't vote!


Why Play the White Man's Game?

Led by the Assembly of First Nations and Aboriginal media types, there are many people calling for First Nations men and women to vote in the upcoming federal election. All sorts of reasons and arguments are being put forward to justify the position that First Nations should, must!, become players in the Canadian electoral system. I think people who advocate this position are wrong, and that anyone who believes that it is in the interest of our people and our nations to vote in Canadian elections is deluded by the effects of their own assimilation into the mainstream. They have forgotten who they are. But rather than adding more words to the debate, I will put this piece forward, an opinion column I originally wrote for the Windspeaker newspaper and which was published in October 1999. I believe the arguments I made then are still true, and trust that it will give heart to those people in all of our nations who are "keeping it real" and refusing to become white-washed imitations of Onkwehonwe, the original peoples of this land.  

Where I come from, voting in the white man's elections is taboo; only four people from Kahnawake voted in the last federal election (and word is that they were non-Indians living on the reserve). The reason for this taboo is clear: as Iroquois people, we do not participate in the white man's government system because we are Rotinohshonni, not Canadian. But I have noticed a different opinion among our brothers and sisters in some other parts of Turtle Island where voting, supporting political campaigns and even running for federal or provincial offices is accepted as a good thing. I often ask myself why is it that some Indian people participate in federal and provincial elections?
It seems so clear that participating in the white man's political system goes against the basic idea that we are nations. An Indian giving a vote to a political candidate in a Canadian election is the same thing as giving an "OK" and smiling high five to the whole system that's been created to control us and take away our rights. If one chooses to validate their rule over us in this way, it becomes hypocritical to claim distinct nationhood as "First Nations," treaty Indians or Indigenous peoples. One of the strongest arguments we have against the legality of the white man's Indian Act is that we have never agreed to be subjects of that authority. Our ancestors never signed treaties of surrender, yet by participating in the white man's politics, we are caving in and surrendering and in effect giving the Canadian government the consent it so desperately needs to justify the situation it has created. By casting a vote or taking part in Canadian elections, what Indians are really saying to Canada is "I hereby agree to be part of your system, and accept the authority of your Constitution and your laws over me."
Aside from the contradictions on principle, as a practical matter, Indian participation in the Canadian political system makes no sense at all. Our populations are too small to matter in all but a very few federal and provincial ridings. Even with the rare election of Indian candidates, the Canadian parliamentary system's "party discipline" rule (all members must support the party line) renders this small-scale representation meaningless anyway. Our ability to influence the political decision-making process in the normal Canadian way (by pumping money into a political party, financially supporting a candidate or flexing economic muscle in a riding) is sadly non-existent. Most often times Indians who do participate in the white man's political system just end up getting used as tokens, political footballs, or worse, as tools in the divide-and-conquer tactics that Canadian governments still use against us. Whether it's the Liberal Party's co-optation of Indians through patronage appointments and pay-offs, the NDP Party's false promises, or the Reform Party's crass manipulation of dissenters, Indians who play political games always end up serving the white politicians rather than their own people.
So why do people do it then? I have to believe that most of the Indian people who vote in Canadian elections are not consciously betraying principles, but vote simply because they have not considered all of the implications of the act. But I suspect it is a different story for Indian leaders who get deeply involved with Canadian political parties. I may be accused of being cynical here, but let's remember that politics is a very cynical business these days. Most Indian politicians who give their support and allegiance to Canadian political parties do so out of selfishness and greed - they possess a special hunger for money and power that drives them to knowingly betray the principles of nationhood in exchange for favours and status within the white man's system.
If we hope to rise above dysfunctional politics imported from the white man's system, rid our communities and organizations of corrupt government and begin to make real progress toward re-building our nations, we need to return to our traditional ways and identities. Basically, "traditional" means taking ourselves seriously, being consistent and acting with pride like true nations. As Indian people we must stop saying "OK" to the white man's claimed authority over us and then complaining about it in loud and empty rhetoric. We need to start putting our faith in true leaders who believe in our nations and who know our traditions, and we need to stop voting for slick politicians who play the games white men play.

Dr. T. Alfred's Blog

http://taiaiake.posterous.com/