Posts By: First Nations Drum

UWO Native Studies Centre hosts Ward Churchill

From the Native News Network of Canada Staff, London, Ontario

Ward Churchill, Cherokee professor of American Indian Studies at Boulder’s Colorado University, lived up to his advance publicity as “one of the most outspoken Native American activists” when he visited London’s University of Western Ontario recently.

His subject, “Racism, Colonization and Genocide: The New World Order” challenged the audience of close to 150 Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people, mostly students, to think in a new way about Indigenous history and the Original peoples’ relationship with both Canada and the United States.

As a member of the American Indian Movement (AIM) security team at the Pine Ridge Reservation, South Dakota in the early 1970’s, Churchill met an elder, Matthew King, who said he “admired” the young men for “the fire in your belly” but “I don’t know what you’re trying to accomplish. You will get your bearings from looking behind to see where you’ve come from, to know where you are, so you can know how to look ahead to see where you’re going.”

The four-year old Native child will know that the Elder was speaking of “the Great Mystery”, Churchill said, while university students are studying “epistemology” and reading books by (MIT University rofessor) Noam Chomsky on “actual reality,” “truth” and “accessible truth.”

“I speak with a harsh voice,” he said, “but I speak in truth. Each person is different and we must try to find a common denominator. We need to find ways of communicating with one another.”

Churchill offers definitions from the Aboriginal, First Nations perspective, which are inclined to turn the non-Aboriginal person’s views upside down. While the settler/immigrant populations of Canada have thought of “Indians” as one race of people, in fact what “Portuguese explorers trying to circumvent the Muslim peoples to get to India” in the late 15th century encountered were “fully self-sufficient, self-governing and independent nations in Turtle Island” so “where did we go off the rails?” he asked.

The power of Churchill’s message is his ability to share with us the history of our continent (and he indicates that the “nation” of Canada is in fact a “colony” of the United States since we are so dominated by U.S. policy and values). Following his address, Churchill was asked why changes in Canada could not be accomplished through starting a new political party to promote different policies.

“Not possible,” said Churchill, “because you would “have to build a participatory constituency” that is not possible with the current political system. “We have to learn how to think for ourselves,” he said.

And here are some more “Churchillisms”:

– Colonialism happened when states seeking “power, profit and prestige” oppressed the Indigenous peoples of Turtle Island.
– The “Indian” residential school (IRS) was intended to “deculturate” indigenous peoples, and to “reculturate” them to the dominant society.
– Genocide is not just “killing” people. It can be accomplished through sterilisation; through “forced dispersal” of peoples from their territories so they lose their “mental map”; through flooding of homeland with resulting loss of food, and prehistoric burial grounds by which they know themselves to be a people; through residential school programs and policies.
– First Nations people must reassert themselves “not through revolution, nor evolution, but by devolution”.
– In Canada, the named and numbered treaties are not being respected although they are recognised in international law. Native people must re-channel their energy “to assert those rights”.
– Canadians have to figure out for “yourselves if you reassert the rights of all people, how you will affirm the respect of each person under those rights. We should unite. Our only “right” is to leave the world a better place for our children.. That’s the Indigenous way of viewing our place in the world.”

To his Aboriginal brothers and sisters, he said: “you have a land base; become self-sustaining in your territories”. His definition of indigenous: “I believe my people walked out of a lake. From time immemorial people define themselves so far as it can be remembered in the community of a people. Every people has its own story. It comes down to knowing ourselves as the way we are. It’s “scientific knowledge” versus “stories which form my belief”.

“I greatly value Ward Churchill’s emphasis on the intellectual work that is needed alongside political activism which is the goal of the new First Nations Studies Program at the University of Western Ontario,” said Dr. Regna Darnell who heads Western’s First Nations department. “Ward tells his own story in ways that help others, both Native and non-Native, to move forward in mutual respect.”

Frank Stilson, a non-Native community social justice activist, found Churchill’s “clear analysis very inspirational” and his “action plan is clear,” he said.

“We must look at our history and our present reality intelligently, and consider actions to bring about fundamental change to individuals and structures around us.”

The first step begins with people in this land thinking about obstacles that stop or hinder our creative, emotional, physical, and spiritual beliefs. Communities must develop and gain strength from each other and build economic structures which nurture human beings on this earth.

Cree Family Accuses Judge of Racism

By Lloyd Dolha

A Saskatchewan judge drew accusations of racism from the family of a young Cree girl, when he ruled she was a willing participant – or even a sexual aggressor – in sexual activity with a 26-year-old man.

On September 4, Dean Edmondson of Melford, Saskatchewan, received a two-year conditional sentence from Justice Fred Kovatch, for sexually assaulting the (then) 12-year-old girl. He will be confined to his home, rather than face a lengthy jail term.

Judge Kovatch said that he couldn’t ignore allegations by the defense that the girl was raised in an abusive home environment. Earlier testimony suggested the girl was frequently abused by her father. During the trial, the girl’s underwear was submitted as evidence. Semen belonging to the girl’s father was found on it. That evidence, said Kovatch, supported the defense theory that the girl may have been the sexual aggressor.

In September 2001, Edmondson and two friends had been drinking heavily and driving the backwoods country roads near Tisdale; where they came upon the 89-pound girl in front of a local bar. The girl accepted a ride from the three men, all in their twenties, who gave her several beers to drink.

According to testimony, the girl ended up in Edmondson’s lap and the two kissed. Shortly thereafter, the truck pulled over and the two attempted to have sex, but Edmondson could not obtain an erection. The other two men also attempted to have sex with the girl but failed as well.

In May, Edmondson was convicted of being party to a sexual assault. His two companions were acquitted in a separate trial. The charge carries a maximum sentence of 14 years in prison.

Kovatch noted that similar sexual assault crimes almost always carry extreme penalties.

“I think it’s clear from the authorities that a conditional sentence would be rare indeed,” said Kovatch.

The judge then noted earlier testimony that suggested the girl was often abused by her father. He quoted testimony by a pediatrician who said that an abused child may show “unpredictable sexual behaviour.”

This suggests the girl may have been a “willing participant” or “the aggressor” in the incident, he said.

“That in no way condones Mr. Edmondson’s conduct, [but] in my opinion is a factor in sentencing,” said Kovatch.

The judge further noted that the girl got into the men’s truck willingly, lied about her age and drank beer.

All of these factors must be taken into account in sentencing, said Kovatch. It would have been different if the girl had been kidnapped off the street and forced into sexual activity

“No one has any business involving themselves sexually with anyone that age. That being said, there are clearly degrees. There is a difference from a sentencing perspective,” said Kovatch. The very unusual facts suggest that a jail term is “not necessarily required.”
Defense lawyer Hugh Harradence said the judge made the right decision.

“I think it is justice and it can be defended,” he said.

As the judgement was read out, family members and supporters of the now 14-year-old girl stormed out of the courtroom, shouting and accusing the court of racism.

“The young white man was sitting there with the judge protecting him. Who has justice served here? It sure wasn’t our aboriginal child,” a family spokesperson told reporters outside the courthouse.

One family member, who cannot be named by law, said the sentence reinforces what they already knew.

“This trial has never ever served our aboriginal people. It just goes to show it’s a racist system in terms of when it comes to our people. There was a wrong done on our child. The young white man got off scot-free,” he said.

Edmondson will have to perform 200 hours of community service, receive alcohol and sexual offender counselling; and pay a $500 fine.

In a brief statement to reporters, Crown prosecutor Gary Parker said he will pass the case file to provincial justice officials in Regina to consider an appeal.

A provincial women’s rights organization has also denounced the sentence. The Saskatchewan Action Committee for the Status of Women has been following the case.

“This is a travesty of justice,” said Kripa Sekhar, executive director. “This is a verdict against all children in Canada. We should all be very concerned.”

Sekhar said her organization will write letters of complaint against the judge and will lobby the provincial Minister of Justice to investigate the manner in which the case was prosecuted.

Gino Odjick Looks To Golf As A New Career

By Joseph O’Connor

The Vancouver – Calgary hockey series that is now unfolding must bring back memories to former Canuck enforcer Gino Odjick. The Algonquin enforcer as was nicknamed by Canuck fans, was riding shotgun for Pavel Bure on a Canuck team that would go to the Stanley Cup Playoffs after beating Calgary in the first round.

Gino hung up the skates two years ago while still playing for Montreal Canadians because of a concussion, the result of a puck hitting him in the head. He played his final years with the New York Islanders and the Canadians, but he made his reputation playing with Vancouver.

He is back in Vancouver, living on the Musqueam reserve and happy to be here.

“It kind of feel like it’s home, because I grew up here. I came as a boy and left as a man. Everywhere I went, I compared it to Vancouver,” Gino told The Province reporter, Kent Gilchrist.

He returned to Vancouver not only because he likes the city, he was offered a business opportunity that he couldn’t turn down. The Musqueam Band council hoped to buy back the lease for the Musqueam Golf centre and needed a partner with deep pockets.

Gino, who loves golf and was looking for a second career, jumped at the chance.

“I thank God I’ve had the opportunity to go directly from hockey to another job. A lot of hockey players don’t have college education. It’s a whole lot harder to make money in the real world.”

The official opening is not until mid-April but the task of administering the already popular course began as soon as the ink dried on the contract. Gino is up to the task working with eight teaching pros and developing new marketing strategies for a course that already is one of the most popular in the city.

He hopes to make The Musqueam Golf Centre the premier course of Vancouver and he has already started the upgrades.

“My challenge is to make it the best it can be and make the best return on investment for the band and myself. It’s a chance to create work for members. You know there’s a salmon-bearing creek here. I’m told it’s the only one left in the city and there used to be 50 at one time. I’m not here to take my pay out of it. I want to leave it in better shape than when I came.”

Gino takes pride in his new venture and surely his golf game will improve since most of his time is spent on the course. Of equal importance is the Musqueam Band taking on a venture that will bring in capital and create jobs for its members.

Last year, Chief Clarence Louie, as business director for the Osooyos band, opened the first Native-owned winery that has recorded a profit in its first year.

Andrea Menard: Metis Artist An Old Soul

Andrea Menard is a Metis actor and singer from Saskatoon. She is well known in the Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal communities as a powerful singer, a gifted storyteller, and a tremendously talented and flexible actor. Whether it be the professional theatre community, the music industry, or the film and television industry, Andrea Menard’s talent and music appeals to a wide audience.

She has written and starred in her first play, The Velvet Devil, (music co-written by Robert Walsh) which premiered at Regina’s Globe Theatre in its 2000/2001 season. The play generated much excitement and inspired the following events: a production at the National Arts Center, a CD of the music, a live broadcast of the play on CBC National Radio, and a film version with Westwind Pictures in 2004 (Designer Guys).

Andrea Menard’s powerful voice is lyrical, raw, and reminiscent of the jazz and blues singers of the 1940’s. Her presence on stage sets an audience at ease whether she is telling a story, making them laugh or making them cry.

Ms. Menard is truly a gifted performer who has the ability to cross culture and language by speaking from her heart.

Ms. Menard landed one of the leading roles in the hit new television series, Moccasin Flats, and has been featured in such films as John Ketcham’s I Accuse, Anne Wheeler’s Betrayed, and Tri-Mark Pictures’ Skipped Parts. Because of her growing reputation as a celebrity, many television programs such as APTN’s Buffalo Tracks, APTN and SCN’s Seventh Generation, CBC’s Canada Now, CTV’s Indigenous Circle, Shaw Cable’s Project Discovery, APTN and SCN’s Metcom and Canadian Learning Channel’s Careers TV, have featured Andrea as a celebrity profile or positive role model.

She was nominated for the Best Lead Female at the Saskatchewan Motion Picture Awards for her work in the short film, Harold & Katja and was invited to be a special guest on CBC’s Dead Dog Café Comedy Hour for two of their seasonal specials. Recently, Andrea was privileged to be part of the talented cast of performers at the 10th Anniversary National Aboriginal Achievement Awards in Ottawa and has been invited back next year.

Her reputation as a solid, acappella performer has earned her many invitations it perform at prestigious government events. During his recent visit, Andrea was asked to perform a one-woman show for His Royal Highness, The Earl of Wessex, at Regina’s Globe Theater. She was also invited to perform for His Royal Highness, The Prince of Wales, at the Saskatchewan Premiere’s Community Luncheon in Sasktoon in 2001.

She performed at the signing of The Metis Act in Regina, was invited to sing for the Senate during Ottawa’s Aboriginal Awareness Week, and performed for Sheila Copps at the Gathering of Aboriginal Artistic Expression. Ms. Menard just received the Queen’s Golden Jubilee Medal by the Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan for her outstanding performance in the arts.

Recent events had Andrea featured in the Government of Saskatchewan’s “Only in Saskatchewan” campaign as well as the Saskatchewan Tourism initiative that reached a wide-spread readership in neighboring state and provincial newspapers, where she was acknowledged nation-wide for creating a high profile and flourishing career in the arts.

Andrea Menard is well respected in the professional theatre community. Her credible work in new plays makes her the top actress sought by Saskatchewan playwrights and theatres. Some of the premiere theatre productions in which she has been involved include: Mansel Robinson’s playStreet Wheat, Floyd Favel Starr’s Governor or the Dew, Greg Daniels’ playFour Horses, Joe Welsh’s play Scared Places, Henry Woolf’s Bim & Bub, and a collaborative work called The Batoche Musical, held during Back to Batoche Days.

She also appeared in Prairie Theatre’s Exchange’s Premiere Production of Joni-Mitchell: River, and the classic play by Tomson Highway The Rez Sisters.

Recently, Andrea appeared in Persephone Theatre’s prduction of Only Drunks and Children Tell the Truth and starred in Saskatchewan Native Theatre Company’s production of Wawatay.

She is currently performing in her own hit show, The Velvet Devil, at the Saskatchewan Native Theatre.

Ottawa Announces New Fast Track for Residential School Survivors

By Jim West

The federal government has launched a new upgraded system for reaching out-of-court settlements with more than 12,000 former students who suffered physical and sexual abuse at church-run schools across Canada.

The new$1.7 billion dispute settlement plan will allow victims, for the first time, to sue the government and churches for loss of language and cultural damages in the 130 schools that were developed nationwide to “Christianize” aboriginal children.

The federal government’s plan to speed up settlements, announced last December, was designed to resolve up to 18,000 cases out-of-court in seven years. Ottawa would cover 70 per cent of the cost of damages for physical and sexual abuse and unlawful confinement. The churches would pay the remaining 30 percent.

But fierce resistance from plaintiffs delayed the process and forced Ottawa to consider changes. Applications were originally to be released last spring.

Ralph Goodale, the minister in charge of clearing the huge backlog of residential school lawsuits announced the changes to the government’s “fast track” plan on Thursday, November 6, at a press conference in Ottawa.

“After careful consideration of all the factors, two contentious release requirements were changed,” said Goodale.

The first required plaintiffs who enter out-of-court settlement talks to sign off on any future litigation even before an adjudicator ruled on whether the claims warrant consideration.

The second required plaintiffs to forgo future claims for language and cultural losses, which the federal government refuses to consider.

Changes allow future claims
Ottawa’s plan to fast track settlements so far has only included compensation for physical, sexual abuse and unlawful confinement.

The changes announced mean that plaintiffs won’t have to give up the right to future claims for such damages as cultural loss.

According to the government, at the current rate it would take at least 50 years to get through the backlog of 12,000 abuse claims at a cost of at least $2 billion in legal fees alone.

“That status quo scenario could mean that most claimants will simply die before their claims are resolved,” said Goodale.

Instead of clogging up the courts for decades, Goodale wants abuse victims to consider using the alternative dispute mechanism where claimants would fill out a form and take it to an independent adjudicator.

Goodale said that the alternative process could end the backlog in just seven years.

Claimants would be required to fill out a 58 page-long form and present school and work records to validate their claims.

“We think there will be survivors who will have simply no choice but to try it out,” said Darcy Mekur, a lawyer with the Toronto-based law firm Thompson Rogers.

His firm is leading a class action lawsuit that, if certified, will seek $12 billion for all kinds of abuses.

Native input lacking
Critics of the new system charge that the dispute mechanism was drafted with little First Nations input. They say that Ottawa’s move to award damages uses a point system that some have labeled a “meat chart.”

The points system awards small amounts for less serious abuses and up to $100,000 or more for the most brutal assaults.

Government officials said that the system merely reflects how damages are typically calculated in civil proceedings.

They stress that Ottawa will spend $172 million over the next ten years to help restore aboriginal languages that were forbidden in residential schools.

AFN national chief, Phil Fontaine, said that the alternative dispute resolution process is a good start but needs to be expanded into a more comprehensive package that includes healing and compensation.

“Any attempt at redress must recognize the diversity of the survivors and their individual experiences. This includes not only financial considerations, but mechanisms by which we can learn to deal with their experiences, overcome the effects and begin to heal,” said the national chief.

Noting that the government has only been willing to deal with cases of physical and sexual abuse, Fontaine further noted that research studies have documented the tremendous impacts of the residential school experience on the identity of First Nations survivors.

The subsequent inter-generational impacts that further erode culture and identity that can lead to dysfunction at the individual and community level.

The AFN say that over 60,000 residential school survivors and their families suffer from the after effects of the residential school experience.

“For many survivors, compensation is only part of the answer,” said Fontaine. “What we further need is an approach that allows survivors, elders, counselors and communities to be involved in the healing process.”

Wounded Leaders, Wounded Nations

By Dr. John Bacher & Danny Beaton, Mohawk Nation

Canadian natives suffer from a crisis of leadership under the graduates of the residential school system.

Find out how these sinister educational institutions robbed natives of their traditions and ties to Earth to replace them with Euro-American values of greed and ownership.

Residential schools for natives, which were imported from the United States prison system, were introduced to the Americas by colonists. These schools were used as a device to assimilate natives into the ideology of Western thinking. Residential schools were part of an unrelenting war to steal Indigenous lands in order for organized imperialist to profit from and control America after the guns were silenced on the American parries.

The Canadian Residential School system was a terrible nightmare created by a federal government attempting to imitate the worst aspects of the American dream – hoping that natives would lose respect for the earth and become obsessed with getting rich through real estate speculation like ordinary American citizens.

Residential schools were part of an unrelenting war on native culture after the gunfire of the American prairies was stilled. Confrontation between two ways of life shifted from the battle field to the class room. Past battles over land were coupled with newer clashes over ideals, dreams and values.

After the plains wars ended, native culture was painfully forced to adjust to life on reservations, by having cattle grazing replace the hunting of wild animals as a critical source of food. For the American government however, such a compromise was not enough. It sought to break up both the reservations and native culture.

To conform to the American dream, Native American governments would be dissolved and the tribal lands were broken up into lots, which could be sold in the real estate market. U.S. policy hoped that individual Native Americans would break their bonds with the earth, looking at the land as a source of cash, rather than of spiritual nourishment.

The sinister school system developed at a time when moderate American political opinion supported cultural genocide. They defeated the more fanatical extremists that desired the slaughter and massacre of Native Americans. Such extremists saw final solution in crude physical genocide reminiscent of a number of killings in the 19th century, most infamously, Sand Creek.

Narrow escape from native massacre
The Lakota, (Sioux) spiritual leader Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse defeated the U.S. Calvary in 1876, averting a planned massacre of natives who were resisting seizure of the sacred Black Hills, guaranteed through a treaty with the U.S. government. A dramatic victory was won to defend traditional native lands and the spiritual way of life based upon it. This was guarded through deep emotional bonds to the earth, reinforced by sacred ceremonies intended to promote reverence for life.

The Lakota triumph was won at a significant time. It took place on the eve of the American Centennial celebrations. These celebrated the American Revolution’s victory over the Crown’s efforts to defend native territories against rich and greedy colonial land speculators such as George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and Patrick Henry.

The news of the Lakota last stand in defense of Mother Earth was received in the heavily populated eastern United States on the fourth of July. This put a great damper on the American centennial festivities, challenging widespread notions of cultural superiority. It contributed greatly to a fanatical revenge war to wipe out native traditional ways.

At the time of the American centennial very few Euro-Americans, at least those who were significant then as a political force, had any sympathy for Native American efforts to defend their traditional culture and territories. In the 1870s, public opinion of the small number of politically active American citizens who actually concerned themselves with native issues was divided into two basic camps.

Both disliked how Native Americans stood in the way of Euro-American efforts to exploit the earth through environmentally harmful projects such as railways, mines and agriculture on arid lands prone to erosion. The answer of one camp was to kill all Indians. The other response was to kill the cultural ways that motivated Native Americans to defend the earth from the assaults of destructive corporate agendas.

The critical architect of the residential school system was a combat veteran of the wars of the Great Plains, U.S. Army Captain Richard Henry Pratt. Considered by the American standards of the period as racially tolerant, Pratt commanded blacks and natives against their own people to seize control over the western prairies.

Pratt fought during eight years of fighting following the end of the Civil War. He played an important role in the American military victories in plains wars. This was aided greatly by the deliberate slaughter of game animals native people needed for food and clothing. The combined policies of assaults by hunters and soldiers eventually lead to the destruction of the Great Plains horse-buffalo culture.

From his Great Plains battle experience, Pratt developed a slogan that he would repeat many times: “Kill the Indian, save the man.”

He wrote to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs: “If millions of black savages can become so transformed and assimilated…there is but one plain duty resting on us with regard to the Indians – that is to rescue them of their savagery.”

Prisons provide concept
Captain Pratt developed the concept of the residential school while serving as a prison warden of natives captured in the post-Civil War battles he fought for control of the plains. In 1875, he became the jailer of a group of Caddo, Southern Cheyenne, Comanche and Kiowa prisoners at Fort Marion in St. Augustine, Florida. They were issued military uniforms, and given instruction in drill. A handful who curried his favour became guards keeping watch over their fellow native prisoners.

Conditions for such native prisoners of war, transported thousands of miles away from their ancestral homes on the plains, were quite traumatic. Food was scarce, disease rampant. There was terrible overcrowding. Prisoners could be jailed for 30 years in Florida cells thousands of miles from their homes. Many endured great suffering behind bars until a general amnesty in 1919, when natives in the United States were finally given voting rights.

Pratt offered his prisoners hope for early release if they agreed to abandon their native ways. In 1878 he had a select group of 17 prisoners released from the confines of Fort Marion. They were sent to the Hampton Institute in Virginia, then a boarding school for black children.

Seeing a way of escape, the former inmates conformed to Pratt’s expectations and excelled in school. From this coercive experience of forced assimilation, Pratt developed his concept of what became known as the Industrial Indian Residential Boarding School. Here he believed that distinctive native cultural traits could be eradicated. Some of his former prisoners recruited natives to attend these schools.

While he was a prison warden in St. Augustine, Pratt met a number of wealthy vacationers who supported his plans for the residential school; where natives could be assimilated into American ways. Their lobbying persuaded the government to support his schemes for indoctrination, brainwashing and assimilation.

Before the 1870s, residential schools were located on or in close proximity to reservations, where parents could easily visit. They would now be deliberately located far away.

Schemes to break native ties
To obtain students for the Carlisle residential school, Pratt went to the Lakota communities which had three years earlier defeated Custer’s calvary. He persuaded the chiefs to send the children to Carlisle on the deceptive grounds that gaining education would help them defend their reservation communities from white land speculators.

While Pratt spoke with the Lakota chiefs to get students for his school, one of his key supporters was Massachusetts Senator Henry Dawes. He was the author of legislation called the Dawes Act.

The infamous Dawes Act would remove 40 percent of the remaining land held by Native Americans on reservations. Much of this former reservation land, guaranteed by sacred treaties, ended up in the hands of white speculators, logging and mining interests, and ranchers.

The Dawes Act required that reservations be divided up into individual lots to teach natives respect for American notions of private property.

Ecologists have pointed out the folly behind the Dawes scheme. Most of the land that was broken up by the Dawes Act was not suitable for intensive farming by natives on individual plots of land. It was better suited to communal grazing for animals (such as bison) than growing crops (such as wheat) on plots that would fail during common drought periods.

Both Dawes and Pratt sought to break up what they termed the “tribal mass,” and turn Indians into assimilated Americans. They had no understanding of how these native nations had evolved over thousands of years, through cultures based on respect for the earth.

Hungry, homesick and punished
The natives Pratt lured to his school received a traumatic experience in indoctrination in American ways, which is best understood as brainwashing.

When the students arrived at Carlisle they were forced to sleep hungry on the floor on their blankets. Pratt, his wife and the Carlisle teaching staff, immediately began their immersion until “thoroughly soaked” efforts at assimilation by removing all outward signs of Indian appearances. Confused and homesick, the Lakota children wept as their long hair was cut and fell to the ground. A collective wail rose up, creating a wrenching sounding echo around the campus.

The Carlisle school was organized in a fashion quite similar to his management of the Fort Marion prison. Boys were dressed in military uniforms and given ranks. As in his Indian prison, native officers were put in charge, rewarding those who sought Pratt’s favor. Students practiced marching and drilling. They were given military style ranks. Marching was done to classes and to the dining hall for meals. Inspections went into considerable detail. They even tried to ensure that the regulation red flannel underwear, which many natives found uncomfortable, was actually worn.

Cells were built to lock up students as punishment for various offenses; such as attempts to run away, a common offense.

The destruction of native languages was one of Pratt’s key objectives. Children began English lessons as soon as they arrived at Carlisle. Students were punished, sometimes severely, if caught speaking their native languages, even in private. The few parents who were able to travel long distances to the school could only speak to their children in their native tongues if permission was obtained from Pratt.

Eventually Carlisle became famous for its sports teams, especially in the area of football. This produced the professional superstar, Jim Thorpe. Native games such as lacrosse were never taught at any residential school in North America. Children who played Indian games were severely punished.

Climate change, separation anxiety and lack of immunity contributed to the death of many Carlisle students. More than 175 tombstones line the campus grounds today. Prayer cloths, strings of shell and beads and small bundles of sage and sweet grass embrace tree trunks in the cemetery. Those buried on the grounds represent only a small number of the natives who perished here. Most were sent home for burial, but some had no relatives who could make the arrangements. Several hundred died on route to their families after becoming critically ill.

Although the first students at Carlisle attended voluntarily, a few years after the school was founded, compulsory methods were used. Such harsh means were applied to the children of the followers of Geronimo, many of whom attempted to hide their children. Many of these students died and were buried at Carlisle.

Canada follows Carlisle model
Carlisle became the model for residential schools in both Canada and the United States. Most had far more serious problems of sexual abuse, torture and poor food.

While the Mohawk Institute, founded in 1829, was the first Indian residential school in Canada, it was a tiny scale operation, dependent on private British contributions, until the federal government decided to pour more money into the system.

Carlisle was founded at a critical time in Canada, 1879. This was the same time that buffalo shrank in such numbers on the plains from the deliberate extermination policies south of the border, that the shrunken herds could not support native communities on the prairies. To have education provide a means by which natives would not have to be supported by government rations was the reason that in 1879, the Conservative Party government of Sir John A MacDonald, had an inquiry into native education in Canada.

MacDonald’s government embraced the agenda and methods of the new Carlisle academy following a report by a backbencher, Nicholas Flood Davin of Regina, to create Industrial Schools for Indians and Half-Breeds. Davin was especially impressed by the American policy of what he termed “aggressive civilization.” MacDonald agreed with the approach of having the native child “dissociated from the prejudicial influence by which he is surrounded on the reserve of his band.”

Fortunately for natives it took many decades before the Canadian government could impose the residential school model on the majority of natives. Anticipating native anger, schools were not formally made compulsory until 1895. Even after this step, in many parts of the country, the regulations were not enforced until 1933, when the Royal Canadian Mounted Police were officially empowered to act as truant officers. The system did not begin to become dismantled until natives were finally given federal voting rights in 1962.

In the United States where natives were granted the right to vote in 1919, the residential school system was wound done at a much faster rate, with Carlisle the model for the whole system, itself being closed down in 1918.

Even before natives were granted the right to vote in the United States, the fanatical assumptions that gave birth to the residential school system were under public attack. This resulted in the resignation of Pratt in 1903 from the control of the school he founded.

New president brings change
The American government changed its policy of eradicating native culture after Theodore Roosevelt became president. Roosevelt was a close friend of the American photographer Edward Curtis, who became one of the most eloquent exponents of the virtues of traditional native culture.

More sympathy to Native American culture came about from the growth, even at the turn of the century, of the environmental movement. Many of the founders of the American environmental movement, such as the Canadian born Ernest Thompson Seton, had a profound reverence for the earth respecting cultures of Native Americans.

A Toronto born writer and artist, Seton learned to appreciate the earth from the examples of Native American leaders who defended their way of life. He was a close friend of the Lakota author Charles Eastman, who became an influential civil servant in the American Bureau of Indian Affairs. A medical doctor who treated native victims of the Wounded Knee massacre, Eastman effectively challenged America’s past manias for assimilation.

Influential opinion makers were horrified at the reality of the environmental destruction, especially the extermination of species that took place after Euro-Americans seized control of lands from natives. Through the efforts of President Roosevelt, the Dawes Act, championed by Carlisle graduates such as Standing Bear, was eventually repealed, and much of the land returned to the control of native communities. Natives and environmentalists worked to save the buffalo from extinction, with a herd being reintroduced to the Crow and Lakota reservations as part of the New Deal policies of Roosevelt.

Unfortunately, in Canada a strong environmental movement did not develop until after the vote was extended to natives in 1962. This was partly caused by the fact that much of Canada, unlike the United States, remained largely wild forested environments, not subjected to industrial exploitation. At the time natives received the vote, this was still true for most of Canada’s vast and more thinly populated land mass.

Humiliation techniques imitated
Some of the abuse of natives in residential schools was caused by the harsh government mandates given the churches to wipe out native culture, especially languages. More respectful church groups, notably the Jesuits, did teach in native languages for a period, but this was outlawed by the Canadian government.

Strange and cruel punishments were given to natives for speaking in their own language. Bruises from staff punishment were signs that students were still brave enough to speak their own language. Whipping and strapping were a common penalty for speaking in native tongues. A typical punishment would be to write down five hundred times that the student wouldn’t “talk Indian” any more.

The first native residential school in Canada, the Mohawk Institute, helped to pioneer various humiliation techniques, which were used by imitators across the country. This was partly supported by the slave labour farming efforts of its students. The Principal would sell off its marketable produce, such as butter and eggs, for his personal profit. To avoid the poor fare served students, the school’s higher staff and their families would eat in separate private facilities.

The only native government which attempted to challenge the residential school system before the franchise was extended to native peoples in 1962 was the Six Nations Iroquois Confederacy. At the behest of two parents, the Confederacy in the autumn of 1913 embarked on a campaign against mismanagement at the Mohawk Institute. This was done on the basis of hair-shearing, whipping, inadequate food, and the denial of parental visits. The Confederacy, through hauling the principal into court, did win awards against the school for whipping and the imposition of a three day water diet.

The Canadian government disapproved of the actions taken by the traditional Iroquois Confederacy. It refused to authorize the release of funds the Confederacy had authorized for legal expenses. Ten years after the Confederacy took the Mohawk Institute to court the Canadian government occupied the council house with an RCMP force, and seized its sacred wampum. This situation, which resulted in the imposition of an elected band council contrary to the traditional Great Law of Peace, still has not been corrected by the Canadian government, although a federal court ruled in 1973 that the 1923 actions were illegal.

Wounded leaders, wounded nations
Canadian natives suffer from a crisis of leadership under the graduates of the Residential school system, similar to that endured by natives south of the border eighty years ago. Like Carlisle, which nurtured Standing Bear’s advocacy of land ownership, the Canadian residential schools produced native leaders who became advocates of disrespecting traditional bonds to the earth.

While native leaders do not advocate policies similar to the Dawes Act, so fervently advocated by the Carlisle alumni, what they do support, in a similar disregard for native bonds to the earth, is revenue sharing. This has been done through a denial of native traditions of trusteeship of the earth, in favour of European models of ownership taught in residential schools.

The wisdom of elders that natives do not “own” the land, but are its guardians for creation, is now disputed by graduates of the residential school system, such as former Assembly of First Nations Chief, Matthew Coon Come, and his colleagues, Ted Moses and Bill Namagoose. While deploring the abuse that took place in these institutions, they have only applause for the content of the curriculum, which helped shape their defense of plans for massive flooding of the waters of their Cree homeland. This formulated their innovative doctrines that caring for the land is a low status “janitor” occupation, unworthy of respect.

It is to be hoped that as in America, the leadership role played by the alumni of residential schools will be a passing phase. Coon Come was recently rejected as Assembly of First Nations Chief – as was Standing Bear by the voters at Pine Ridge who retained their love for the earth.

Bee in the Bonnet: Point the Arrow

By B.H. Bates

“He shoots an arrow into the air . . . . it lands, he knows not where!”

What does this line of poetry mean to you? To me it means that the poor family of the Indian who shot that arrow will go hungry tonight!

To hit a target, a person has to do a number of things first, to insure the best possible outcome. You can’t just point in the approximate direction and hope to be successful. You have to take a long steady look down the shaft of the arrow, you have to line up the target, the arrowhead and the quills before you can let it fly!

Not to mention distance, wind, speed, trajectory and whether or not your target is on the move. Let’s imagine that the quills on the back of the arrow symbolize the ‘past’ and the arrowhead represents the ‘future.’ We natives must first look at where we’ve been, so that we may hit our marks.

The ‘point’ I’m tying to make is – we must review, scrutinize, check and recheck the past before we can even attempt a shot at success. And by ‘success’ I mean: “Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness!”

And by ‘that’ I mean: “WAMPUM!” And lots of it! Some schmuck once said, “You can’t buy love nor happiness.” Evidently he wasn’t a delighted millionaire with a gorgeous wife.

More than likely he was a native. And the reason I’m saying this is because it’s in the nature of the North American Native to be content with the ‘same old, same old!’ You know the old attitude … “As long as the grass grows!”

I’m not condemning you if you’re content to have ‘enough.’ Enough food, cash and a Tepee that doesn’t leak too much. In fact, for years and years, I too was satisfied with having just enough to eat and more importantly enough to drink. Then I got involved with a woman who had a horrible, horrible addiction . . . SHOPPING!

It was evident soon after the love affair started that I either had to get motivated or become the first native monk in history. Which brings me back to the arrow – if you want to hit the target, you have to focus.

You can start be reviewing your past and start asking yourself the tough questions. And in the name of the Great Spirit – be truthful!

Here, I’ll get you started.

(Q): When I get my claws on some Wampum, what’s the first thing I do with it?
(Q): Do I have an addition?
(Q): Where does the money go?
(Q): Am I following in the footsteps of a parent?
(Q): Am I jealous of other natives who’ve succeeded?
(Q): Why am I such a loser?

I told you they were tough questions! And I can also tell you, from experience, that some of you are already blaming me for your own failure to answer these simple questions. Some natives are so intimidated by the truth that they’ve stopped reading this article. If you’re still reading – congratulations! You’ve just beaten one of the biggest demons to face the North American Native since the ‘Big stick that makes thunder!’ That demon is of course – DENIAL!

After you’ve reviewed your own tracks, you’re ready to look into your future. “Am I scared of looking like a fool, in front of everyone, if I fail?” (A): Maybe. But, if you don’t even try you’ll be an even bigger fool, years from now, when you’re an old man (woman) saying things like: “I could’ve been a . . .”

If you’re the kind of native that is outgoing, gregarious and has a set of “B—S” may I suggest the exciting and profitable world of business. There’s never been a better time to get your moccasins wet – the dollar is strong, loans and outright grants are available, there are no taxes on reservations and besides all of that, you have the element of surprise on your side . . . When you think about it, who in their right mind would expect an Indian to sneak up on their business and start scalping their prices!

One of the first things I’d like to see is an Indian Princess (doll) without the words ‘MADE IN HONG KONG’ printed across her backside! There is a group of native artists from the West Coast that are trying to copyright their traditional designs and stories, with great success, I might add. I think it’s only right too, I mean, you just try to call your new restaurant ‘Micky Mouse’s Grub House’ and you won’t have to wait long before you’re up to your mouse hole in Disney lawyers!

Have yourself a prosperous year. I hope you hit the buffalo bull’s eye!

Bee in the Bonnet: Ten, Happy, New, Years

By B.H. Bates

A new year; a new beginning; another chance to start over again. Every year on the first day of January, people all around the world swear to their Gods that they will not repeat the mistakes of the previous three hundred and sixty four!

In another 364, some will celebrate an anniversary of success, others will once again swear at their Gods. For most natives, that God is the Great Spirit to whom we turn for guidance and strength.

“Oh, Great Spirit, help me give up the evils of -,” drinking, smoking, snacking, wagering, speeding, lying, pornography, pilfering, profanity . . . or whatever your damn addiction may be!

Some turn to groups like Alcoholics Anonymous for help to stay on the wagon. Others opt for re-habilitation programs and yet others turn to the aforementioned Gods, to help them get through the day. Then, finally, there’s the ‘cold turkey’ approach to sobriety, quite possibly the toughest of all the ways to avoid the red nose express.

I tried for years to beat the demon in the bottle. I first attempted the twelve steps of AA and, for some, that short walk works. But for me, it just wasn’t the path for my moccasins. Standing in front of a bunch of shaking, sweating, sober drunks made me feel uncomfortable. And some of the stories they would ‘share’ were enough to make the devil himself blush – whew! Did you ever hear the one about the hooker and the bottle of puke? Well, I did! And trust me, you don’t want to!

I did however learn a few things from their stories. One of the AA’s said that the best and worst place for the drunk or addict to wind up is the so-called ‘rock bottom’! For some, they hit ‘rock bottom’ as they sit in a cold jail cell, others can ‘hit’ it as they sit in a comfortable chair in the middle of a cozy living room.

He said his rock bottom came in the form of the shame he felt when he realized he couldn’t support his family. “It was a real punch in the gut,” he said as he shook his head. “That was the worst day and it was the last day and today is the best day and tomorrow will be one day better!”

Quite profound, but not surprising. When a person looks deep inside of themselves, they can express feelings we all know exist, yet, some won’t say them aloud, or maybe, they’re unwilling to admit. We sometimes just refuse to accept delivery!

For me, this coming New Year’s day will be “TEN” years without a drink! Ten years without suffering from one single hangover, ten years of remembering what happened the night before, ten years of not turning pay cheques into pocket change, ten years of not having to listen to my wife go on and on about dirty deeds done. And you can take it from me, that last one, in itself, is worth every ‘frigging’ delicious, mind numbing, mood moving, conscience altering, beverage ever made!

And there are other benefits to seeing the light – you can go a bar, have a coke and laugh at others as they perform their shenanigans and reflect, “That was me!”

It’s like live theatre! And the show only gets better as the night unfolds. The pick-up lines become lamer and cornier and they start to work better and faster. And, unlike, in the days of my stupid stupors – women DON’T get better looking!

There are some Bro’s who can handle the bottle and there are some who can’t. I wish I could sit down and share a social drink with friends, but I know I can’t, for me . . . . “One drink is one too many and one thousand wouldn’t be enough!” A man has to know his limitations.

Here’s a bit of advice from a Bro who has walked the walk: A lot of people will tell you to face your addition ‘one day at a time.’ I’ve found that not to be true! You only have to say no to your cravings one moment at a time, then it will pass. If you succeed you’ll feel proud and that much stronger to face the next moment. If you fail, you’ll feel guilty and weaker.

So far I’ve given up drugs, cigarettes, booze and chewing my finger nails. Now if I could only stop myself from thinking about my wife’s goodies I could become the first native Pope!

To put the last ten years in a nut shell: “Life just keeps getting better and better!” Happy? New? Year?

Blueberry River First Nations Launches $7.5 Million Lawsuit Against Gas Development

By Lloyd Dolha

Located in the heart of the booming oil and gas fields of northeastern British Columbia, the Blueberry River First Nation has filed a $7.5 million lawsuit against the province and the Calgary-based Canadian Natural Resources Ltd., seeking damages over gas-related illnesses suffered by local residents and a permanent injunction against all development and production activities within ten kilometres of their reserve.

“Our community lives in the shadow of gas wells and flares and now two-thirds of our land is unsafe to live on,” said Blueberry River Chief Malcolm Apsassin, at a press conference in Vancouver on October 20.

Apsassin said that his people suffer from a number of sicknesses and live in constant fear of the effects of the natural gas wells that encircle their community of 350 people located some 80 kilometres north of Fort St. John.

“We must be able to hunt and fish and live on our land again, so we want no oil and gas [activities] within ten kilometres,” added Apsassin.

The Blueberry First Nation’s traditional way of life, largely of trapping and ranching, has been hindered by resource development.

Surrounded by wells which produce and release quantities of hydrogen-sulphide “sour” gas, the lawsuit will demonstrate that British Columbia, which asserts legislative jurisdiction over all aspects of oil and gas development through the BC Oil and Gas Commission (OGC), and CNRL, who have significant operations in the vicinity of the reserve, have directly impacted the use and nature of the reserve.

New report on sour gas
In Alberta, a new study prepared with funding from the Ministry of the Environment suggests that there is a lot that even scientists don’t know about the toxic effects of sour gas.

The study, an examination of scientific literature, media reports personal accounts and reports from a number of institutions and research boards, says that closing the knowledge gap should be a priority.

“There are many examples that hydrogen sulphide should be regarded as a broad-spectrum toxicant and that repeated exposure may result in cumulative effects on many organs systems such as the brain, lung and heart,” states the report, prepared by University of Calgary researchers Sheldon Roth and Verona Goodwin.

Robert Coppock, a member of the American Board of Toxicology, agreed with the finding of the report that there is a need to know more.

He noted that there are more than 6,000 chemicals in sour gas, making it much different from pure hydrogen sulphide.

Coppock said that very little is known about the interactions of hydrogen sulphide with some of these other chemicals; however, he noted that carbon sulphide, which has been found in sour gas, is well known for its effects on the reproduction and endocrine systems.

Hydrogen sulphide is very foul smelling but can very quickly paralyze the sense of smell and can overcome the victim and eventually cause death. Therefore, smell cannot be relied upon to provide warnings of this treacherous gas.

It is also an irritant of mucous membranes including the eyes and respiratory tract.

The move comes after a long history of problems between the band and the province over oil and gas development around the reserve at the cost of the band.

In 1979, the reserve experienced a massive release of hydrogen sulphide, causing community members to flee for their lives. The major leak forced the evacuation and rebuilding of the reserve.

Chief Stewart Phillip, president of the Union of BC Indian Chiefs, said that there is a growing pattern of readiness on behalf of the Campbell government to grossly violate the rights of First Nations in the pursuit of an economic agenda that will create a “nightmare of litigation”.

“BC will not have the economic certainty of collecting billions of dollars in revenue unless they reach an accommodation with First Nations through honest and honourable good faith negotiations”.

Diamond Search Leads to Conflict-of-Interest Probe

By Lloyd Dolha

A high-ranking federal bureaucrat and his wife are the focus of an independent investigation over some conflict-of-interest allegations. In mid-October the pair was charged by leaders of the Deh Cho First Nations over an apparent fruitless search for diamonds along the route of the proposed $5 billion Mackenzie Valley Pipeline.

The Deh Cho question whether Mr. Paul Bernier, the vice-president of program delivery for the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency, is in a conflict-of-interest because his wife staked mineral claims along the route of the proposed gas line years before the precise route was made public.

“Not once did we ever think there would be a corrupt federal official. Government is supposed to take care of people. These are the people we depend on to give us good information,” said Deh Cho Grand Chief Herb Norwegian, at a news conference on October 21.

Norwegian said that there are 12 “fishy” mineral claims staked in 1998 by Mrs. Maureen Bernier on land claimed by the Deh Cho as traditional territory.

The Deh Cho say that Mrs. Bernier’s mineral claims compromise her husband’s objectivity to assist in overseeing the process for scrutinizing the Mackenzie Valley pipeline. They charge that Mr. Bernier has breached conflict of interest guidelines by indirectly holding the NWT mineral claims.

Norwegian said that between 2000 and 2002, Paul Berier was directly involved in the plan to streamline the pipeline’s approval, negotiating with regulatory agencies and pipeline principals of the Producers Group of major oil companies.

Ongoing land claims
About 4,000 Deh Cho are involved in on-going land claims talks with the federal government over a 220,000 square kilometer area of the Northwest Territories. The Deh Cho is the only aboriginal opponent to the pipeline plan. Every other aboriginal group in the area supports the plan.

Plans for the gas line route cross into the Deh Cho’s traditional territory for 40 per cent of the pipeline’s 1,300 kilometre length.

Of the 12 claims held by Mrs. Bernier, two fall directly in the path of the proposed route that wasn’t made public until February of this year

The mineral claims have raised suspicion for years because they are on (said-to-be) worthless limestone deposits.

Bernier’s research
Mrs. Bernier’s search for diamonds involved hiring the Toronto-based High Sense Geophysics Inc. in 1996 to carry out high resolution, airborne magnetic surveys of seven parcels of land, according to documents filed in the Yellowknife office of Indian and Northern Affairs Canada.

The report, written by geologist Eric Graigie in 1997, found no basis for a search for diamonds in the area.

“No obvious magnetic targets of potential economic interest were outlined by the surveys, and the base and precious metals and diamond potential of the permit area is deemed not to be high,” wrote Mr. Craigie. “Based on these results, additional work on the permits is not recommended at this time.”

Yet Mrs. Bernier registered the 12 mineral claims in October 1998, near Fort Simpson, NWT, after letting the original prospecting permits lapse.

Tribal council officials estimate that Mrs Bernier has spent almost $190,000 in her fruitless search for diamonds.

The husband-wife connection was only discovered after tribal council officials hired a private investigator to follow Mrs. Bernier.

Paul Bernier has since taken a paid leave of absence, pending the outcome of the independent investigation.

CEAA conducts investigation
In late October, Sid Gershberg, president of the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency, appointed well-known Montreal lawyer Vincent O’Donnell to conduct the investigation into the activities of Mr. and Mrs. Bernier.

The CEAA recently released the terms of reference for O’Donnell’s six-week investigation of conflict of interest allegations.

The Montreal lawyer will collect facts, but not make any specific recommendations.

O’Donnell will provide an assessment as to whether Mr. Bernier has followed federal law and Ottawa’s conflict of interest code.

A group of high-ranking civil servants will recommend what action, if any, will be taken.

The agency’s president, Sid Gershberg has agreed to make O’Donnell’s report public when it’s complete.

No deadline has been set for the report to be delivered, but Gershberg says he wants it as soon as possible.

The controversy of the Berniers has created uncertainty for the backers of the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline.

Imperial Oil Ltd. of Toronto and the Aboriginal Pipeline Group are the lead backers of the project. They are waiting to see if the Deh Cho’s threat to halt the regulatory process if Ottawa does not allow for greater Deh Cho input.

The Deh Cho demands that the federal government immediately cancel Mrs.Bernier’s mineral claims.

They say the regulators who developed the plan for reviewing the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline have to go back and start from scratch.