Tag Archives: history

M2, P3: Indigenous Heritage Action Plan (LAC)

Library and Archives Canada collects, preserves, and provides access to historical materials documenting the Canadian experience. In 2019, they worked with members of the Indigenous Advisory Circle to create the Library and Archives Canada (LAC) Indigenous Heritage Action Plan. The plan outlines 28 concrete actions LAC will take to engage, collaborate, manage, identify, support, and promote Indigenous heritage materials within the LAC collection.  The action plan introduces their approach to institutional change and how they intend to fulfill their commitment to the TRC calls to action.

Per the Action Plan (LAC, 2019):

Library and Archives Canada (LAC) is committed to playing a significant role in reconciliation between the Government of Canada and First Nations, Inuit and the Métis Nation based on a renewed nation-to-nation or government-to-government relationship, particularly with regard to human rights. These rights include international Indigenous rights, as defined by the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), a Declaration to which the Government of Canada is fully committed. LAC has an important role to play in ensuring Indigenous rights to culture and language preservation, and in managing information relating to Indigenous peoples. International rights extend to include victims and survivors of human rights violations, as set out by the United Nations Joinet-Orentlicher Principles (UNJOP). Through the preservation of information documenting human rights abuses, such as those that took place within the Indian residential school system, LAC supports Indigenous peoples’ inalienable right to know the truth about what happened and why.

Library and Archives Canada. (2019). Indigenous heritage action plan. Indigenous documentary heritage initiatives. https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/aboriginal-heritage/initiatives/Pages/actionplan.aspx

Module 2 – Post 1

I shared this resource as a reference in my research statement and thought I would also share it here. In this TEDx Talk, Rebecca Thomas speaks about Etuaptmumk or Two-Eyed Seeing (8:34min) and how it came to be and later puts it together in a spoken word poem (11:10min). Etuaptmumk is about having one eye focused on Indigenous knowledge and ways of knowing and the other eye focused on Western knowledge and understanding and then bringing those eyes together so that all can benefit from this combined knowledge. 

Rebecca Thomas identifies as being a Mi’kmaw First Nation person. She is a spoken word poet and is also the Coordinator of Aboriginal Student Services at the Nova Scotia Community College (NSCC). Rebecca shares how residential schools affected her own history and language and how she can share her voice of her culture with the public through education. In the information section below the TED TALK is a statement that she, “Believes that the arts and poetry can help people heal in ways beyond traditional therapies, “ and has stated, “Poetry can give a voice to the voiceless. Poetry can make a powerless person feel powerful. This is why I speak.”

TEDxNSCCWaterfront. Thomas, R. (2016, June 13). Etuaptmumk: Two-eyed seeing. [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bA9EwcFbVfg