Continued Connections – Art all the way!

I am constantly energized by the connections we continue to make with this website.  Perhaps it seems small, but even one more strand in the Web strengthens the work we are all doing.

Imagine my surprise when I found this pingback while I was doing some moderation cleanup (http://www.creativeresistance.org/idle-no-more-2/).  A pingback is when someone creates a link that comes back to your blog.  This link is to Geordie Nelson’s artwork from the Fall 2013 Spirit of the Land class.  I sent a message to Geordie and he didn’t post this on their website.  This means the folks who are collecting all kinds of creative expressions of resistance to those who threaten the integrity of our natural world have found our blog, Geordie’s post, and shared it with the folks who follow their blog!

I just want to thank all of you who have contributed to this blog and who have shared it on your FB feeds, Twitter status, emails or wherever.  Who knows, maybe it was one of you that led the Creative Resistance folks to us!

And please check out their blog  (http://www.creativeresistance.org/) and share it with your social media streams.  The art there is inspiring and may help you talk with others about these important issues!

Leslie

Reconciliation and residential schools: some links

Hello everyone: It was an honour to participate in the conference. I am posting at Dittmar’s suggestion a couple of links related to TRC hearings and residential schools. Apologies ahead of time for the length of the post.

If  you go to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s main page, you will find information about the latest hearings in Calgary (November 4th and 5th) and the final national event in Edmonton in late March. Search the site for resources, information and their interim report. To watch the hearings, go to their livestream (http://www.livestream.com/trc_cvr). You can also scroll back (below the main window, even when it is offline) to see past hearings. Do look at some of the BC National event (BCNE) from September in Vancouver. I am happy to recommend particular sections I pointed out to my students. Further back in June and July, you can find the regional hearings from Red Deer, Hobbema, High Level, and others.

You can also find online a number of talks by the TRC commissioners. Like Sylvia’s and Janice’s talks, they are informative and eye-opening. Justice Murray Sinclair speaks eloquently, as does Commissioner Willie Littlechild (who of course is local from Ermineskin: he went to that residential school for many years). For good information, well-presented, on the history and legacy of residential schools, go to Legacy of Hope and, in particular, Where Are the Children?.

I also suggest a book published by the Aboriginal Healing Foundation, which itself has a wealth of resources. The anthology Speaking My Truth: Reflections on Reconciliation and Residential School, based on a trilogy of books on the same topic, is being used as a common reading text in some colleges and universities. Students in my classes are organizing the Calgary launch of the book in conjunction with the Calgary TRC hearings. The book or the trilogy can be downloaded or ordered in print for free from the AHF in any quantity from speakingmytruth.ca. The AHF can also be contacted to help fund travel for the contributors and editors of the book through the same website.

Finally two unrelated links that we suggested at our table during the conference. Sharron Proulx suggested that people looking for an accessible TV alternative news source go to Aboriginal Peoples Television Network. I  suggested the website project of a Cree Métis artist/singer/songwriter, Cheryl l’Hirondelle, called treatycard, in which she invites all settlers to print and carry our own treaty cards. We are all treaty people.

#idlenomore Call for Papers – Unsetting Resistance

As we continue our journey in Spirit of the Land, I’d like to invite you to consider submitting a proposal for the following volume…  At least read through some of the themes at the bottom and allow your thoughts to be prompted by these poignant questions.  For many of us in Spirit of the Land, we are trying to build a bridge from a settler background into a decolonized space that we have yet to imagine.  Start imagining!

“This is a call-out to you and your friends doing solidarity work and resistance, smashing colonialism, and living healthy relationships to lands and peoples. We are editing a book, for publication with an independent publisher such as AK press, that will be a compilation of lessons learned, wisdom gained, and practical strategies from those non-indigenous anti-authoritarian activists engaged in the struggle for decolonization.”

Unsettling Resistance Website