Indigenous Awareness Week
The 8th Annual Indigenous Awareness Weeks
Indigenous Awareness Week privileges Indigenous voices on campus, offeringthe opportunity to learn aboutIndigenous issues and promote greater knowledge and understanding about the Indigenous peoples in "Canada." The week aims to raise awareness and initiate an exchange of ideas on First Nations, M茅tis and Inuit topics within the 捆绑SM社区 community.
Schedule of Events
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September 17, 4-7:30pm
Ballroom, Faculty Club (3450 Rue McTavish)
Come celebrate our Indigenous community and success at the launch surrounded by beautiful local Indigenous artwork. This is one of the special initiatives that was organized this year for the launch event. The historical paintings in the Faculty Club will be taken down for the evening to give space to celebrate the beauty of local Indigenous artwork. Our promotional material this year is also a representation of local Indigenous art by Tekaronhiahkwa Margaret Standup (links to more info on her work below).
Keynote address will be delivered by Janelle Kasperski, Indigenous Education Advisor & IAW organizer. Insight on the special initiatives of this year's IAW will be discussed as well as information on upcoming events. Traditional singing accompanied by water drums and rattles will be the featured performance by local members of the Kahnaw脿:ke community. Refreshments and hors d鈥檕euvres will be served in the networking hour. We look forward to seeing you there!
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September 18, 3-4:30pm
Moot Court, New Chancellor Day Hall- Faculty of Law (3644 Peel St)
DISCUSSING INDIGENOUS POLITICAL AND LEGAL ISSUES FROM A PERSONAL PERSPECTIVE:
Including experience with:
-The Ipperwash Inqiury
-MMIWG Inquiry
-The Independent Street Checks Review
PLEASE RSVP:laura.davis3 [at] mail.mcgill.ca
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September 19, 10:30am-12pm
3630 Rue University
A Panel Discussion with Indigenous Health Professionals and Allies. Join Tania Dick (Kwakwaka'wakw Nurse), Wanda Gabriel (Mohawk Social Worker), Suzy Goodleaf (Mohawk Psychologist), and Dr. Saleem Razack (Pediatric Intensive Care Physician) to discuss solutions for creating a safe learning and healing environment with Indigenous peoples.
Presented by the Indigenous Health Professions Program during Indigenous Awareness Week. In partnership with Social Accountability and Community Engagement Office, Ingram School of Nursing and the School of Social Work at 捆绑SM社区.
Refreshments and coffee will be served.
*We acknowledge this date as the day of Yom Kippur. The panel discussion will be available online for community members who are unable to attend the live discussion.
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September 19, 4:30-7:30pm
Thomson House Ballroom (3650 McTavish)
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The Turtle Island Reads initiative celebrates stories written by Indigenous authors. Now in its third year, the objective of TIR is to connect readers with Indigenous stories.
Each year, we choose three books of fiction written by an Indigenous author as well as three advocates who will act as a "champion" for each book.
Nantali Indongo, host of CBC Radio One鈥檚 The Bridge, will reveal this year鈥檚 Turtle Island Reads books, authors and advocates. There will be a special performance by the women鈥檚 singing and drumming group, ODAYA. We will also be announcing the shortlist for the 2018 CODE Burt Award for First Nations, Inuit, and M茅tis Young Adult Literature.
The event will also offer a storytelling roundtable discussion, which will take place from 4:30 - 5:30 p.m. The roundtable features educator and filmmaker Tharionente Barnes (Kanien鈥檏eh谩:ka), authors Cherie Dimaline (M茅tis), Rosa Rosa Washee (T鈥檒icho Dene), Jessica Deer (Kanien鈥檏eh谩:ka ) Journalist, CBC Indigenous Unit, Montreal.
The launch event on September 19 is part of 捆绑SM社区's annual Indigenous Awareness Week celebrations.
The Turtle Island Reads initiative is a partnership between CBC Montreal, 捆绑SM社区's Indigenous Education Advisor, the Faculty of Education at 捆绑SM社区, LEARN, Quebec Writers' Federation, and CODE (NGO)
A book table will also be set up as of 5:30pm for book signing & book sales with Good Minds Books, Brantford, ON
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September 20, 2-4pm
Thomson House Ballroom (3650 McTavish St.)
JOIN THE BLACK STUDENTS NETWORK AND THE INDIGENOUS STUDENTS ALLIANCE AS WE ENGAGE IN AN EVENING OF SOLIDARITY
This event will be a panel/roundtable discussion with self-identifying (Black & Indigenous) panellists:
Kyle T. Mays, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of African American Studies & American Indian Centre at the University of California, Los Angeles
Latisha Reddick, Graduate from Osgoode Hall Law School and is currently articling at Gowling WLG (Canada) in the Toronto office.
This will be a full day of solidarity events. The panel/roundtable discussion will be followed by a CLOSED arts event for BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and People of Colour). Separate FB event will be posted for this Open Mic Arts night. The ambition behind our joint planning was to create a space for conversation around solidarity, support, intersectionality and the difficulty in finding your identity. How do we stay true to our identity and also hold space in solidarity and support of other groups who need it?
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September 20, 4-7pm
Thomson House Ballroom (3650 McTavish)
CLOSED EVENT TO BIPOC (BLACK, INDIGENOUS, AND PEOPLE OF COLOUR).
Join us for a lovely evening of poetry, song, stories and much more. This is the second portion of the In Solidarity and Support - Panel/Roundtable discussion event for Indigenous Awareness Weeks 2018.
After an afternoon of in depth (and sometime heavy) conversation about what solidarity means to us, let's also release and recharge together at this open mic night. This will be a safe space for BIPOC folks to listen, speak, and celebrate in solidarity and support. Snack buffet will be present and Thompson House beverage services will be available.
Please contactjanelle.kasperski [at] mcgill.caif you would like to sign up as a performer/speaker.
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September 21, 11am-4pm
Lower Field, 捆绑SM社区
Join us under the big tent to catch the Grand Entry at 11:00am on 捆绑SM社区鈥檚 Lower Field. It will be a full day of traditional dancing, drumming, and singing. This is an excellent opportunity to browse artisan vendors, learn about student groups, and connect with Indigenous organizations.
The Pow Wow is free and open to the public!
No tickets or registration needed, just come on over to the lower field and check things out.
Interested in being a vendor, coming to dance, or drum? Have any questions? Contact the First Peoples' House atfirstpeopleshouse [at] mcgill.ca
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September 24, 6:30-8:30pm
Lower Field, 捆绑SM社区
OUTDOOR BIKE POWERED FILM SCREENING: "WAKE UP! HARD FEMME INTIMACY"- A Screening of 2-Spirit Indigenous Short Films, followed by a conversation with Tio'tia:ke based Dayna Danger abd Beric Manywounds
(check the IGSF website or Cinema Out of the Box Facebook page for exact location details)
/igsf/events
Co-presented by the Institute for Gender, Sexuality and Feminist Studies, 捆绑SM社区, Indigenous Awareness Week, Mediaqueer and Cinema Out of the Box. Part of 鈥淭he Arts of Trans, Gender Diverse and Two-Spirit Lives鈥, funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.
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September 25, 5-6:30pm
捆绑SM社区 Indigenous Studies Program (3643 Peel St.)
Join us for a panel featuring some of the most distinguished contemporary Inuit women in the arts: Heather Igloliorte (釗晥 釔冡挕釗椺摃釔呩枀釕), Niap Saunders (釗傖悐釕 釗瘁搻釕愥攨), Nina Segalowitz (釗傖搰 釗拹釗椺晻釕︶攨), and Beatrice Deer (釔贬悐釕愥悐釘 釕庒悈).
Light refreshments will be served.
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September 27, 12-1:45pm
1st floor, Faculty of Education (3700 McTavish St.)
Our People will be Healed nfb, 2017 Alanis Obomsawin (dir.), 97 minutes
Our People Will Be Healed is Alanis Obomsawin鈥檚 50th film. This 2017 film, reveals how a Cree community in Manitoba, has been enriched through the power of education. Through the work of community members, language speakers, teachers, and musicians the students at the the Helen Betty Osborne Ininiw Education Resource Centre in Norway House have powerful experiences that build a strong sense of identity and pride of self.
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September 27, 5-8pm
215W Arts Building
In this Indigenous Awareness Week talk, Ktunaxa poet and PhD Candidate, Smokii Sumac, will share stories of his many journeys "home," as an Indigenous adoptee and two-spirit person, in ceremony, with chosen family, within his nation, and to his homelands. While stories of loss and devastation tend to forefront today's conversations on Indigenous issues, Sumac argues that we must seek out and share narratives of returning, remembering, and what Gerald Vizenor calls "survivance" in order to learn to restore and celebrate the relationships that colonization seeks to destroy: relationships with the land, our bodies, our selves, families, communities, nations, knowledges and ceremonies. With a background in Indigenous literary studies, Sumac weaves thoughtful analysis of Indigenous works such as Cherie Dimaline's the Marrow Thieves, Jeff Barnaby's Rhymes for Young Ghouls, and Linda Hogan's Solar Storms with deeply personal and moving stories of his own experiences learning what it means to come home.
Bio
Smokii Sumac is a proud member of the Ktunaxa nation located in what is currently southeastern British Columbia. They are a PhD Candidate in Indigenous Studies at Trent University where their research centres on 鈥渃oming home鈥 as a Ktunaxa adoptee and two-spirit person. Smokii identifies as queer, transmasculine, two-spirit, a poet, and uncle, and auntie and a cat person. They accept he/him/his or they/them/theirs pronouns. Smokii鈥檚 work has been published in Write Magazine, and under his former name* (he is a man of many names) in Canadian Literature, Aanikoobijigan //Waawaashkeshi (a project by Anishinaabe/M茅tis artist Dylan Miner), and on coffee sleeves in local Peterborough coffee shops as one of the winners of e-city lit鈥檚 artsweek contest in 2014. Smokii currently shares his time between Ithaca, NY where he lives with one of his families, and Nogojiwanong (Peterborough, Ontario). He also teaches Ktunaxa 100: Intro to Ktunaxa Cultures online through College of the Rockies.
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September 28, 4-6pm
Thomson House Ballroom (3650 McTavish St.)
As part of Indigenous Awareness Week (IAW) 2018, we will be hosting a panel discussion involving members of both the Indigenous and Tibetan communities intended to foster dialogue and knowledge exchange. The topic of the panel will be "Commodification of Spiritual Items" and Dismantling Commodification, Reclaiming Spirituality in Everyday Life.
Our panel will be multi-generational and multidisciplinary in order to ensure that a diversity of perspectives are represented. We will engage with the topics of commoditization and depoliticization of spiritual aesthetics in both Indigenous and Tibetan communities. We will address how objects that carry spiritual significance, such as prayer flags, dreamcatchers, mandalas, and headdresses, work themselves into settler colonial imaginaries and become repurposed as benign objects of beauty. As the panel will explore, the appropriation of sacredness is rooted in systems of oppression which impede both groups鈥 self-determination. By making these processes known, we hope to work towards strategies that could be used for effectively reclaiming these practices and spaces.
The panel will consist of 4 panelists (of which Khando Langri will serve as moderator for the Q&A portion of the event). Each presenter will speak on the sub-topic of their choice for approximately ten minutes. Two prepared questions will then be presented by the moderator, and a ten-minute open panel discussion will follow.
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