Tag: indigenous

KANATA’s Indigenous Studies Peer-to-Peer Conference

On November 24th and 25th, KANATA- McGill’s Indigenous Studies Community will be hosting a unique event for the McGill student body: a student-led indigenous studies conference where students teach and learn from their fellow peers. This conference will include panel discussions, academic presentations, a film screening and other opportunities to learn about indigenous studies resources at McGill.

By providing a space for students to share their knowledge and learning experiences, this conference will allow peers to come together to gain broader perspectives and greater understanding of indigenous realities. This conference will demonstrate how forms of academic and indigenous knowledge can be empowering and enriching for both indigenous and non-indigenous learners involved. By fostering discussion and exploration at McGill, KANATA aims to indigenize academic and scholarly discussion across disciplines.

***Send us an email at mcgillnativestudiesjournal@gmail.com to RSVP your attendance at our conference ASAP and you will receive a coupon for free bannock and tea during the conference***

Tentative Schedule

THURSDAY

Opening Ceremony & Indigenous Studies Panel
9:00AM, Thomson House, 3650 McTavish, Montreal, QC, H3A 1Y2

  • Invited Panelists (Professors Michael Loft and Gregory Brass; Pamela Fillion co-founder of KANATA; and Dan Pujdak from the Assembly of First Nations) discuss role of indigenous studies at McGill and other universities in the country

Communal Lunch
11:45AM, First People’s House, 3505 rue Peel Montreal, QC H3A 1W7

  • Lunch will be provided for community members and conference participants free of charge

Presentation Session 1: Ways of Knowing
1:30PM, Room 302, Shatner Building, 3480 McTavish Street, Montreal, QC H3A 1W7

  • “Switching to First Person: Moving beyond the Liberal Rights Discourse in Aboriginal Rights Activism” by Aimee Louw (Concordia University)
  • “A Close Reading of Beth Brant’s ‘Physical Prayers’ in her ‘Writing As Witness: Essay and Talk’: Sex as Ceremony” by Dana Wesley (Queen’s University)
  • “Indigenous Science Education: More than Just Add Indigenous Studies and Stir”
    by Michela Ferugson (Queen’s University)
  • “Rebecca Belmore: High-tech Storytelling and Orality in Aboriginal Art” by Erin Sutherland (Queen’s University)
  • Discussion Period

Presentation Session 2: Sense of Place
4:00PM, Room 302, Shatner Building, 3480 McTavish Street, Montreal, QC H3A 1W7

  • “The Effects of the Ontario Mining Code upon Aboriginal Communities” by Sean Phipps (McGill University)
  • “‘A Quiet Settlement:’ A Historical Analysis of the Lake Babine Nation Barricade Treaty of 1906” by Venetia Boehmer-Plotz (McGill University)
  • “Resources Development and Aboriginal Communities: A Case Study of the Blood/Kainai Reserve in Southern Alberta” by Katherine Downey, Sarah Stupar & Fleur Trubert (McGill University)
  • Discussion Period

Supper Break

Film Screening: 3rd World Canada
7:30PM, McConnell 204, 3480 University St., Montreal, Quebec H3A 2A7

  • This documentary is set in the backdrop of the aftermath of the suicide of three parents in the Native community of Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug in northern Ontario. The documentary explores the impact of 3rd world conditions on the children left behind and a community’s courage in looking after them.
  • After this film, there will be a discussion period about topics that were brought up in the film.

FRIDAY

Presentation Session 3: Beyond our Borders
9:00AM, Breakout Room, Shatner Building, 3480 McTavish Street, Montreal, QC H3A 1W7

  • “Ethnic Politics in Bolivia: A Sudden Rise on Indigenous Land” by Camilla Gordillo (McGill University)
  • “The Commodification of Culture: Globalization and the Indigenous Maya” by Lauren Walshe Roussel (University of York, England)
  • Discussion Period

Presentation Session 4: Reconciling Reality
10:30AM, Breakout Room, Shatner Building, 3480 McTavish Street, Montreal, QC H3A 1W7

  • “Healing and Reconciliation at the Canadian Truth and Reconciliation Commission” by Talia Bronstein (McGill University)
  • “The Value of Aboriginal Women’s Lives” by Megan Bertasson (York University)
  • Discussion Period

Lunch Break

Aboriginal Field Studies Course Panel Discussion
1:00PM, Breakout Room, Shatner Building, 3480 McTavish Street, Montreal, QC H3A 1W7

  • This session will explore McGill’s first Aboriginal Field Studies Course, now in its third year. This course is unique: it’s  interdisciplinary between law, social work, anthropology and medicine. Nearly 30 students spend a week camping by the river together in Kahnawake learning from community members. Past participants will discuss their experiences and share the knowledge they gained through the course. A short film based on the first year will also be screened.

Presentation Session 5: Health & Wellness
2:30PM, Breakout Room, Shatner Building, 3480 McTavish Street, Montreal, QC H3A 1W7

  • “Rebirth: Birthing In and Out of the Arctic” by Andrew Childerhose (McGill University)
  • “Understanding Casual Linkages in the Increasing Incidence of HIV among Aboriginal Women in Canada” by Deveney Bazinet (McGill University)
  • Discussion Period

Presentation Session 6: Identity Mediums
4:15PM, Lev Buchman Room, Shatner Building, 3480 McTavish Street, Montreal, QC H3A 1W7

  • “Image and Memory– Art About Missing and Murdered Women” by Amber Berson (Concordia University)
  • “Kenojuak Ashevak” by Isabel Luce (McGill University)
  • “Iyiyuuh Iskew Iyiimuiiun – Cree Women and Identity” by Mary Shem & Elma Moses (McGill University)
  • “Métis Poetry & Geographies of Resistence” by William Leonard Felepchuck (Université d’Ottawa)
  • Discussion Period

Supper Break

Celebration Evening
7:30PM, Location TBA

  • Community members and Indigenous artists perform through a celebration of the conference’s events
  • Live music by invited performers
  • Treats and eats
  • Open mic time for everyone to participate

The Aboriginal Sustainability Project Presents ‘The Boreal Forest: Our Land, Our Stories, Our Responsibility’

McGill University’s Aboriginal Sustainability Project is proud to announce that we will be hosting ‘The Boreal Forest: Our Land, Our Stories, Our Responsibility’ to celebrate the leadership and commitment of Aboriginal communities in the conservation and sustainable development of the Boreal forest.

The event will take place on Wednesday, November 16  between 7:00pm – 9:00pm located at McGill University, Stewart Biology Building, Room 1/3 1205 Docteur Penfield Avenue.

The event is dedicated to Aboriginal leaders and youth who share their stories from the Boreal Forest, both successes and challenges.  In addition, the event showcases Aboriginal music and culture.

The majority of the evening is dedicated to having Aboriginal Leaders share their personal stories. There will be three wonderful speakers:
• Chief Paul Gull, Cree First Nation of Waswanipi
• Stephen Kakfwi, former Premier of the NWT and former Dene Nation President
• Grand Chief Matthew Coon Come, Grand Council of the Crees

Innu artist Kathia Rock from Maliotenam on Quebec’s north-shore will be performing. http://www.socam.net/katiarock.html

Find more about this event on facebook. 

 Aboriginal Sustainability Project’s aim is to enhance the presence of Aboriginal peoples in the McGill and Montreal community through educational and cultural activities. In partnership with First Peoples’ House, SEDE, and Aboriginal Community Outreach Coordinator. Funded by The Sustainability Projects Fund.

QPIRG’s Culture Shock Starts October 17th

From the QPIRG McGill website: “Culture Shock is an annual event series dedicated to exploring the myths surrounding immigrants, refugees, indigenous people and communities of colour.” Find out more on the Culture Shock site.

As a working group of QPIRG, KANATA is excited to encourage our friends to attend  this extremely interesting event!

Aboriginal Artists Shine During Les journeés de la culture

a dancer from kanberra

There are two free events happening this weekend in Montreal featuring Native artists as part of les journeés de la culture. The first is titled kanberra, which is happening at MAI (3680 Rue Jeanne Mance) from 3-5pm on Friday September 30th. 

The aboriginal word kanberra means encounter place and is borrowed, on this occasion, to make links with the MAI’s own positioning as a site of dialogue and exchange.

Kanberra as proposed and hosted by the MAI, in association with Journées de la culture, begins with a series of excerpts from choreographer Lara Kramer’s new work of good moral character. These excerpts will be followed by a short intimate conversation with Lara on her creative process and on the thematic she is currently exploring such as the intimacy of domestic relationships.

Immediately following this public rehearsal, Lara will be joined by fellow choreographer Emmanuelle Calvé, spoken-word artist Moe Clark, interdisciplinary artist Émilie Monnet, visual artist Nadia Myre and singer-songwriter Kathia Rock to discuss the relationship between their work and their identity as First Nation and Métis artists. Addressed will be the challenges and triumphs these artists have faced and/or are facing, their connection with their communities, and what they see for the future in Aboriginal arts and the arts in general.

To close off the afternoon, Kathia Rock will speak briefly of the mobile audiovisual production studio Wapikoni Mobile, an organization that gives young Aboriginals the opportunity to express themselves. Rock will present an overview of the organization, its mandate and its redefined strategies in light of recent funding cuts.

The second event is a performance by the extremely talented Inuk singer Elisapie Isaac. She is giving a FREE show this Friday, Sept. 30 at 8 pm at Bibliothèque St-Léonard (8420, boulevard Lacordaire, metro Cadillac).

Enjoy!