Human rights may have been enshrined in a United Nations declaration in 1948, but they are also the moors and norms meant to frame how we interact with one another both on an individual and on a societal level. From war crimes to access to ...
Human rights may have been enshrined in a United Nations declaration in 1948, but they are also the moors and norms meant to frame how we interact with one another both on an individual and on a societal level. From war crimes to access to water, share your media on human rights here.
We often hear of the difficult situation on aboriginal reserves and in their communities. For many of us, our vision is characterised by media reports of poverty, unemployment, leadership disputes and internal divisions.
We also hear their calls for treaty rights and other signed agreements to be respected by the federal government. We see their protests and actions to put pressure on the government after what is seen as years, even decades, of foot-dragging and outright disregard. But these stories are often divorced from a discussion of the impacts that decades and centuries of colonialism has had.
Last summer when the Canadian government formally apologized for the horrors of the residential school system there was a rare break is the conventional discussion. Both government officials and the media made reference to how the historical abuses of the residential school system had contributed to the current struggles facing most First Nations communities across Canada.
But those links are often both quickly forgotten and rarely discussed.
When members of the Algonquin community of Barriere Lake blockaded a major highway in northern Quebec twice this past year, there was little discussion in any venue about the historical context that would bring members of a small, northern Algonquin community to initiate a blockade and face the harsh repercussions. In episode 80 of the CitizenShift podcast, Montreal journalist and member of Barriere Lake Solidarity Courtney Kirkby delves into this history, from before the first encounters and treaties with European settlers to their current struggle to have management and say over their land and their community.
As always, if you have any thoughts or comments on this issue, wed love to see them posted below.
To find more media on First Nations and aboriginal rights and culture in Canada, visit our two dossiers, on the topic: Language Lost, on the struggle to maintain native languages in Canada, and Rebel With a Cause: Alanis Obomsawin, a look back at the work and career of this groundbreaking aboriginal filmmaker. For more on Barriere Lake, visit barrierelakesolidairty.blogspot.com.
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