I didn't go out today, so only the household saw my orange shirt, but I got another segment of the Reoprt of the TRC commission done.

It may take a few months before it's all ready to go.

It's difficult to read some parts, there's hope in many other parts but the saddest part is how little progress Canada has made in its calls to action and how little Canadians seem to care.

#TruthAndReconcilation #EveryChildMatters

Today's word of the day in #Mikmaq

Pusu'l (bu·suul)

Pusu'l means hello

#truthandreconcilation #orangeshirtday

@suqdiq Hey, I'm not saying Canada is perfect. But they've done more to acknowledge #TruthAndReconcilation than the freakin' #Fascist USA!
Mistodon: to you, it's just an #OrangeShirt that AdeptApril has illustrated in #ANSIart. But if you're in Canada, the shirt represents the imposition of the #ResidentialSchool system on Indigenous children for around a century and a half, removing them from the care of their parents and extinguishing their language and culture in a slow-moving campaign of genocide. We wear the symbolic garment today in a gesture in support of #TruthAndReconcilation.
The Treaty has been used to the advantage of the settlers to the detriment of those who were here before us: Our long, hard journey: Treaty 4 and 150 years of unfulfilled promises #Treaty4 #Saskatchewan #FirstNations #TruthAndReconcilation #Indigenous
https://leaderpost.com/feature/our-long-hard-journey-treaty-4-and-150-years-of-unfulfilled-promises
Our long, hard journey: Treaty 4 and 150 years of unfulfilled promises

Treaty 4 turns 150 years old on Sunday, Murray Mandryk writes about hope, broken promises, and what might lie ahead.

Regina Leader Post

Reflecting on Change, by the #WabanakiREACH Board

August 8, 2024

"REACH has been through many changes and transitions over the years, evolving from an idea of #decolonization to becoming an official non-profit with a board, staff and many volunteers. It has been quite the journey thus far and we continue to transform to meet the emerging needs of the people in the #Dawnland.

"Many of the same individuals who formed #Wabanaki REACH gathered in 1999 to improve the state’s compliance with the Indian Child Welfare Act (#ICWA). When tribal and state child welfare professionals first came together for that purpose, they did not envision the impact they would continue to have twenty-five years later.

"The Tribal-State ICWA Workgroup initiated the historic #Maine Wabanaki-State Child Welfare Truth and Reconciliation Commission to further the work of increasing ICWA compliance and honoring tribal self-determination. As the Commission was launched, REACH began to form as an organization, first with a fiscal sponsor to help us gain access funding and administrative support for our work. Then in 2018, REACH became an official non-profit organization.

"In 2015, the Truth Commission’s final report spoke to the importance of the Tribal-State Workgroup and Wabanaki REACH. The Commission's recommendations continue to guide their respective work.

"The Tribal-State ICWA Workgroup continues to meet regularly to practice co-case management of ICWA cases and provide support to tribal child welfare partners; they recruit, train, and support community members to serve as ICWA Qualified Expert Witnesses; they provide a day-long educational experience for caseworkers, assess and update state child welfare policy, provide #ICWA education to Guardians ad Litem, attorneys, judges, and other service providers, and they helped create the new state law Maine Indian Child Welfare Act in 2023.

"REACH’s decolonization work centers on how to restore Wabanaki lands, water, culture, and people by:

- Continuing truth-telling initiatives. Beyond the Claims:Stories from the Land and the Heart is completing its work that sought to deepen understanding of the experiences and impacts of the Maine Indian Claims Settlement Act. We are focusing on what needs to come next.

- Supporting Wabanaki wellbeing through education, building and celebrating community, reclaiming Wabanaki ways, and protecting the earth we share. REACH supports Native inmates with newsletters, books, peace and healing circles, and sweat lodge ceremonies. Food sovereignty work has been focused on creating medicine gardens, restoring clam beds, supporting food pantries, and partnering on events to increase awareness of protecting the fisheries. We hold wellness gatherings and provide direct support to community members in need. This summer, REACH supported sending 21 Wabanaki youth to summer camp.

- REACH has developed and provides impactful educational programming, believing that when people more deeply understand what happened in this territory they wish to be part of writing a different history for our grandchildren.

"The truth and reconciliation commission has truly helped people understand intergenerational trauma and strength and the process of truth, healing, and change that is now taking place in many forms in both Wabanaki and non-native spaces. We are so heartened to see these planted seeds of decolonization sprouting all over Wabanaki territory."

https://www.wabanakireach.org/reflecting_on_change_wabanaki_reach_board

#IndigenousPeoplesDay #WabanakiAlliance #TruthAndReconcilation
#Colonization #BoardingSchools #MaineSettlementAct #NativeAmericans #PenobscotNation
#Maliseet #Passamaquoddy #Mikmaq #FirstNations #MaineTribes #TruthTelling

From 2014:

"We Are Family" a performance by the musical group #Pihcintu during "#Genocide & #Maine: Shining the Light of Truth".

"Pihcintu is a multinational chorus of young women from Cambodia, China, Congo, El Salvador, Egypt, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Uganda, Vietnam, British West Indies and Zambia, along with children whose families have been here for generations. With Director Con Fullam, they perform across New England.

"Goals for the event:
• Make what is often invisible about genocide seen
• Make what is often silenced about genocide heard
• Motivate the development of our awareness and action to face the challenges that affect all Maine people"

Event organized by:
#ImmigrantLegalAdvocacyProject, Maine #WabanakiREACH, Maine #Wabanaki-State Child Welfare Truth & Reconciliation Commission, and United to #EndGenocide."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n31bdwsMzqw

#UnitedToEndGenocide #NativeAmericanHistory #TruthAndReconcilation #Colonization #SettlerColonialism #Genocide #Decolonize

Genocide and ME: Performance by Pihcintu

YouTube
B.C. teacher reprimanded for failing to ‘contribute to truth, reconciliation and healing’

Deborah Laurie Croft was teaching at an independent school in B.C. during the 2019-20 school year when she was involved in two separate incidents with Indigenous students.

Global News