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Current
Issue
COVER
200
Years of Haida Art Arrive in Vancouver
ART
Museum Rescues Rare Indian Artifacts
BEE
IN THE BONNET
To
Rez, or not to Rez?
A Buck, With
Bucks!
BUSINESS
Alberta
Band Joins Oils Business
MISSING WOMEN
Edmonton
Suspect Charged in Murder
Search
Begins for Edmonton Serial Killer
Conference
Tackles Missing Women Crisis
Young Hearts, Young Lives
MODERN TREATIES
Six
Nations Iroquois Protect Haldimand Grant
WOMEN
Esquao
Awards Honour Alberta Aboriginal Women
Human
Rights Activist Honoured
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Human
Rights Activist Honoured
By
Clint Buehler
EDMONTON - An abiding belief in the strength and spirit of Aboriginal
women and her concern for the rights of all humanity has led Muriel Stanley
Venne to devote her life to championing human rights.
Her
dedication has resulted Ain extensive recognition, most recently the Order
of Canada and, The Honourable Lois E. Hole Award for Lifetime Achievement
at the Edmonton YWCA's Tribute to Women of Distinction.
Her career as a human rights advocate began in 1973 when then-Premier
Peter Lougheed appointed her one of the first seven commissioners to the
Alberta Human Rights Commission. In honour of her commitment and work
in the area of human rights, Stanley Venne, who is Metis, was presented
with the Alberta Human Rights Award on the 25th anniversary of the Alberta
Human Rights Commission.
Stanley Venne, the mother of four and grandmother of three, was born on
a farm 60 miles east of Edmonton at the end of the Great Depression, the
eldest of nine children and part of a long line of strong-minded women.
(A grandmother built her own covered wagon and drove it halfway across
Alberta when she was in her late 50s.
She survived two bouts of tuberculosis that ended her high school career
early and entered two marriage which were marred by violence. Marrying
young, and with little education, she was scrubbing her kitchen floor
with two young children in tow when she heard on the radio that it was
possible to complete high school through correspondence. She began this
process in 1965 and finished Grade 12 six years later.
She attended university for three years, then left four courses short
of a degree to become department head of Job Opportunities and Placement
for the Metis Association of Alberta.
She was executive director of Native Outreach for 10 years, working to
gain employment for Aboriginal people in Alberta; Bechtel Canada's Community
Relations Officer for the Alsands Project in Fort McMurray; coordinator
of the Metis Settlements Carpentry Training Program; general manager of
Settlement Sooniyaw Corporation (financing Metis Settlement businesses),
then marketing officer for the National Film Board of Canada in Edmonton.
She left the film board to create MSV Development Corporation with its
four divisions: Aboriginal Expressions, Square Sircle Boxing Club, Esquao
Fashion Design and MSV Consulting. As her focus turned to the issues confronting
Aboriginal women, she concentrated on human rights with her new company,
Dynamic Dimensions Consulting Inc., through which she conducts human rights
seminars and project management within the context of the Aboriginal community.
But her iconic achievement was the creation of the Institute for the Advancement
of Aboriginal Women (IAAW), created "to let our voices be heard.
Now we are ready, willing and able to address the need to be heard, listened
to and excellerated into decision making" for Aboriginal women. "We
will help each other. We are ready for action."
Key initiatives for the IAAW are the Esquao Awards (covered elsewhere
in this issue) and its Social Justice Award, recognizing those who have
made an exceptional contribution to human rights such as Amnesty International,
for drawing the world's attention to the abuse of Aboriginal women in
Canada.
"For them to recognize the injustices and issues of Aboriginal women
in this country is extraordinary, and we have benefited from their attention
to this."
One of Stanley Venne's major concerns and initiatives has been the tragic
plight of the missing or slain women, most of them Aboriginal and many
of them sex trade workers, in western Canada.
"Hundreds of Aboriginal women are missing and murdered in Canada
but does anyone care? The Insititute for the Advancement of Aboriginal
Women says, 'not enough.'"
She hopes that perhaps now something can be done to address the social
conditions that lead women into that world, what she calls a national
disgrace.
"We still have a long way to go," she told the Edmonton Sun,
"but the first thing that must happen before any problem is addressed
is awareness. We're finally at that point."
At long last, times are changing, she says, "and there's almost a
groundswell, or revolution among Aboriginal women. We realized that things
were bad, but we didn't think that we could do anything to change it.
We're coming together, and now we're no longer willing to believe that
we have to accept these things."
A critical step in that awareness was the "Gathering Our Strength
Conference on Violence Against Aboriginal Conference" that she organized.
Stanley Venne and the IAAW produced a booklet, "Rights - Path Alberta"
with the assistance of Aboriginal lawyers, referring to the racism involved
in the Connie and Ty Jacobs killing by an RCMP officer at the T'suu Tina
First Nations near Calgary. The booklet was created to inform Aboriginal
people of their rights and responsibilities. The booklet gained international
attention when it was endorsed by Mary Robinson, High Commissioner for
Human Rights at the United Nations.
When she received the 2004 National Aboriginal Achievement Award for Law
and Justice, she said, "I am delighted and honoured to be receiving
a National Aboriginal Achievement Award."
The former NAAF board member added that "receiving the award is important
to me because it gives me an opportunity to bring forward some issues
affecting Aboriginal women. Creating awareness of what Aboriginal women
face is an essential part of IAAW's work.
"I will continue to reach out to Aboriginal women, to listen to them
and to validate their concerns. It's critical that women feel supported
and see opportunities for participating in the community."
In 2005, Stanley Venne received the Governor General's Award in commemoration
of the Persons Case, an early 20th century challenge of legal definitions
that denied women their rights, basically defining them as not being persons.
A recent project dear to her heart was the book "Our Women in Uniform"
which she edited, chronicling the contributions of Canada's Metis women
in the armed forces.
She says she is very proud of the accomplishments of these courageous
women.
"This is a unique historical record of our women that reflects the
dreams of these young women to defend our country. They give us a glimpse
of their growing up, how things were during the war years, the courage
it took to join up, the romance and toughness of it all."
Stanley Venne is currently chairman of the Aboriginal Human Rights Commission.
Among the the many other awards she has received are the Bowden Native
Brotherhood Award, the 2002 Queen's Commemorative Medal, Metis Woman of
the Year, the Canadian Merit Award, and the Aboriginal Role Model Lifetime
Achievement Award.
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