Tag Archive for First Nation

Budget cuts affect residential school survivors

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-Jane Kirby of CKDU’s Operation Wakeup interviews Maya Rolbin-Ghanie, a member of Missing Justice Montreal, and Tarry Hewitt, of Aboriginal Survivors for Healing on Prince Edward Island, about the cutting of the Aboriginal Healing Foundation in the recent Federal budget. The cuts, which took effect March 31, will impact 134 programs for residential school survivors nationally, including 7 in Atlantic Canada.

Advocates speak out against the cutting of the Aboriginal Healing Foundation

By Jane Kirby

“Residential school survivors and their descendents respond more positively to traditionally-based healing services than conventional methods” says Tarry Hewitt, Project Coordinator at Aboriginal Survivors for Healers on Prince Edward Island.

But it is precisely these services that are at risk with recent federal budget cuts to the Aboriginal Healing Foundation (AHF), which funded over 130 programs for survivors of residential schools across the country.

Coming just one year after the Canadian government’s apology to survivors of the residential school system, these cuts came as a great surprise to many of those who were involved in AHF-funded programs. Funded programs included community and grassroots projects like suicide prevention programs, youth groups, traditional healing services, men’s groups and women’s shelters. Seven AHF-funded programs existed in Atlantic Canada. Many of these services, including Aboriginal Survivors for Healing on Prince Edward Island, may be forced to close their doors as a result of these cuts.

“The residential school system was in operation for decades, and the effects are not going to be addressed in ten or fifteen years”, says Hewitt. The legacy of residential schools includes the splitting of families, physical and sexual abuse and cultural genocide, and the effects of the schools continue to plague indigenous communities. The last residential school in Canada closed in 1996.

Although the AHF funding will be reallocated to survivor’s programs provided by Health Canada, advocates of the AHF insist that Health Canada cannot provide the kind of community-driven and traditional healing services that made the AHF so successful.

Campaigns have been initiated across the country to protest the cuts, including a sit-in by six non-native women in Minister of Indian Affairs Chuck Strahl’s office on March 29. One day later an emergency debate took place in Parliament to discuss the cuts, but so far the funding has not been restored.

Maya Rolbin Ghanie, a member of Missing Justice in Montreal and a participant in the sit in, says the cuts to the AHF are indicative of the Canadian government’s broader attitude to indigenous people

“It is important to draw the links between the Aboriginal Healing Foundation, missing and murdered native women, poverty on native reserves and the countless land struggles that native communities engage in”, says Ghanie “We need to take note of our government’s policies, and hold them accountable”.

Both Rolbin Ghanie and Hewitt encourage concerned community members to take action by contacting MP Chuch Strahl’s office to oppose the cuts.

Leonard Peltier denied parole after 32 years in prison

Last month, U.S. political prisoner Leonard Peltier was denied parole. Peltier has been imprisoned for 32 years, and is serving two life sentences for the deaths of FBI agents Jack Coler and Ronald Williams during a 1975 standoff on South Dakota’s Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. He was convicted in 1977.

Amnesty International has called for the “immediate release” of Peltier, citing “concerns about the fairness” of his conviction. Peltier has denied he shot the two men and says he was framed by the FBI.

Amnesty International has stated that “Although he has not been adopted as a prisoner of conscience, there is concern about the fairness of the proceedings leading to his conviction and it is believed that political factors may have influenced the way the case was prosecuted.” Numerous lawsuits have been filed on his behalf but none have succeeded.

Peltier’s next parole hearing is scheduled for 2024. Peltier will be 79 years old.

Mi'kmaq Protest on N.B./Quebec border

The New Brunswick Tribune reported that a peaceful protest started last Wednesday night at the welcome sign on the Quebec side of the J. C. Van Horne Bridge. The bridge is the border crossing between Campbellton, N.B., and Pointe-aux-Croix, Quebec. The land belongs to the Listuguj First Nation, and protest spokesman Alex Morrison said they are reclaiming Mi’kmaq land. Morrison alleged that the lease with the province was not properly signed because there wasn’t quorum at the band council meeting which approved it, and a relation of a band councillor got compensation for a land deal which put the councillor in a conflict of interest. Protesters want a teepee erected on the land, as there once was, to welcome people to Listuguj.