Tag Archives: reconciliation

Indigenous History From an Indigenous Perspective

Module 1, Post 2

The is an online professional learning community formed between the First Nations, Metis & Inuit Education Association of Ontario (FNMIEAO), and the Mathematics Knowledge Network. Their goal is to promote Indigenous education in Ontario for the Indigenous community and all learners in education.

There is a General Webinar Section that has 17 webinars, all a bit over an hour, presenting such topics as the colonization of North America, oppression of Indigenous people, the Truth and Reconciliation Project, and many others. It is hosted by members of the Indigenous community and is an authentic self-representation of their Indigenous experiences and issues.

First Nations, Metis & Inuit Education Association of Ontario. (n.d.). General FNMIEAO Webinars [Video]. YouTube http://www.fnmieao.com/events/

 

Legacy of Hope

MODULE 1: ENTRY 4

I had the opportunity to help set up two Legacy of Hope exhibits this pass week at our Central Learning Services. Legacy of Hope is foundation that has 19 different exhibits that are available to book for your school.  We currently have the following two:

  1. 100 Years of Loss –   Describes the history of Residential Schools in Canada

     2. Peter Henderson Bryce: Man of Conscience  – Peter Bryce was a medical officer that brought awareness to the high number of TB cases in Residential schools at the beginning of the 20th century.

The Centre for Free Expression started a Peter Bryce Prize for Whistleblowing this past year.  The first person awarded was Dr. John O’Connor, an Alberta physician that has been researching the unusually large number of rare cancers that are occurring in Fort Chipewyan in Northern Alberta. Despite being fired from his job he continued to advocate to bring awareness to the negative impacts of the oil industry.

 

References

News. (2021, March 3). Dr. John O’Connor wins the 2021 Peter Bryce Prize. Centre for Free Expression. https://cfe.ryerson.ca/news/dr-john-o%E2%80%99connor-wins-2021-peter-bryce-prize

Exhibitions. (2020).  Legacy of Hope Foundation. https://legacyofhope.ca/home/exhibitions/

MODULE1-Entry 2: My Global Knowledge on the Indigenous Peoples from Torres Strait Islander aka Australia and Aotearoa aka New Zealand

Published on January 18, 2019-The person who associated a work with this deed has dedicated the work to the public domain.

On one of my travelling experiences, I was fortunate enough to visit Torres Strait Islander aka Australia and Aotearoa aka New Zealand.  I was able to absorb the beautiful cultures and the beautiful landscapes in both regions, but I also learned some brief history about these regions and the Indigenous peoples who this land belongs to.  I learned about how the Indigenous peoples in Australia were also colonized similarly to the Indigenous peoples of Canada, and this saddened me deeply, and allowed me to inquire more into the history of how and why this could happen worldwide?  Historically speaking, “prior to British colonization, more than 500 Indigenous groups inhabited the Australian continent, approximately 750,000 people in total.[1] Their cultures developed over 60,000 years, making Indigenous Australians the custodians of the world’s most ancient living culture. Each group lived in close relationship with the land and had custody over their own Country.”

This made me stop and think, how would I have felt, if strangers barged into my home, demanding all my earthly and worldly posessions and took my freedoms away?

It’s also important to recognise that, ” from the beginning of colonisation, Indigenous people continually resisted the violation of their right to land, and its impact on Indigenous cultures and communities. It’s estimated that at least 20,000 Aboriginal people were killed as a direct result of colonial violence during this era of Australian history. Between 2,000- 2,500 settler deaths resulted from frontier conflict during the same period.[8]

Published: Aug 11, 2008
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License

References:

Australians Together. (November 17, 2020).  Colonisation, Dispossession, Disease and Direct Conflict. https://australianstogether.org.au/discover/australian-history/colonisation/#colonisationreference8
DocDolly. (August 11, 2008). Aussie Animals by DocDolly. https://www.deviantart.com/docdolly/art/Aussie-Animals-94559821
Wilkinson, T. (January 18, 2019). Aboriginal Artwork. Art Gallery Of Western Australia.  https://www.flickr.com/photos/electric_soup/46058004144/