Treaties were made to endure—“as long as the sun shines, the waters flow, and grass grows”—because they aren’t about a one-off agreement or exchange. Each Treaty speaks to a relationship that, for those who remember, is just as real today as it was in the 1780s.
Read MoreThe government of Canada has failed to take responsible steps to provide healthcare services to Indigenous people in the past. First Nations have chronically experienced barriers to accessing health care due to shortages in healthcare facilities, equipment, supplies, and staff—which COVID-19 has only worsened.
Read MoreI was too young to remember much, but my parents later told me that they were warned by settlement services about ‘those people’—you know, the urban Indigenous. So began the socialization process that alienates the land we know from Canada’s original inhabitants.
Read MoreThe land itself is scarred, I could see that even while I was growing up. But I wonder about the scars in our relationships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Treaty people when the Treaties themselves were part of a system of exploitation and resource extraction.
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