BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//132.216.98.100//NONSGML kigkonsult.se iCalcreator 2.20.4// BEGIN:VEVENT UID:20260513T031438EDT-7700FUJ224@132.216.98.100 DTSTAMP:20260513T071438Z DESCRIPTION:鶹ýվ’s Indigenous Awareness Week is designed to in crease awareness at 鶹ýվ about Indigenous peoples in Canada. The week ho nours the many Indigenous cultures across the country including the Métis\ , the Inuit and First Nations. The week also offers an opportunity to coll aborate with community partners and draws active participation from 鶹ýվ students\, faculty and staff.\n\nThe week is organized by the Social Equi ty and Diversity Education Office at 鶹ýվ.\nSEDE's Indigenous Education Program seeks to develop a broad-based educational campaign by providing Indigenous-specific programming and opportunities for bridge-bui lding among diverse members of the 鶹ýվ community.\nFor more information \, please contact the Indigenous Education Advisor\, Allan Vicaire.\n\n\n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nMonday September 23\, 2013 \n\nOPENING CEREMONY\n12:00 PM – 3:00PM\, Ballroom\, Thomson House\, 3650 McTavish Street\nThe Opening Ceremony for the 3rd annual Indigenous Awareness Week will begin with a w elcoming address and blessing from 鶹ýվ’s elder Alex Sonny Diabo. The wa rm welcome will be followed by traditional Inuit throat singing by Nina Se galowitz and Taqralik Partridge. Finally\, our keynote speaker\nTeresa Edw ards\, Director of Human Rights and International Affairs for the Native W omen’s Association of Canada\, will be presenting the realities and curren t issues faced by Indigenous women across Canada\, ranging from healthcare \, to domestic violence\, to missing and murdered women.\nOpening Ceremony Schedule:\n\n12:00PM – 12:30PM: Lunch Buffet\n12:30PM – 1:00PM: Welcoming Address and Blessing\n  1:00PM – 1:20PM: Inuit Throat Singing\n  1:20PM – 2:10PM: Challenges and Barriers for Indigenous Women with Michèle Audette \n  2:10PM – 2:30PM: Closing Remarks\n\nAbout the Speaker:\n\nTeresa Edwar ds is a Mi’kmaq woman\, a member of the Listuguj First Nation\, and the mo ther of three wonderful children. Her traditional name is Young Fire Woman . She has worked formore than 20 years to advance the needs and rights of Aboriginal Peoples\, with a particular focus on addressing Aboriginal wome n’s human rights.\nIn 2004\, she worked with the Native Women’s Associatio n of Canada (NWAC) to secure funding for the Sisters In Spirit initiative\ , aimed at raising public awareness about the growing number of missing an d murdered Aboriginal women in Canada. She has travelled to more than 100 First Nations’ communities within Canada and to international fora to enga ge people in identifying ways to address all forms of violence\, including trafficking in humans\, Nation-building and re-building\, human rights aw areness and implementation\, education andeconomic development and many ot her socio-economic issues.\nIn her current role as the Director of Interna tional Affairs and Human Rights\, and internal Legal Counsel for the Nativ e Women’s Association of Canada (NWAC)\, Teresa is dedicated to promoting gender equality in such forums as the United Nations (UN) and regional org anizations such as the Organization of American States (OAS)\, where Indig enous issues are advocated for collectively with other Indigenous Peoples. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTuesday September 24\, 2013\n\nKANIEN’KEHÁ:KA ONKWAWÉN:NA RAOTITIÓHKWA LANGUAGE AND CULTURAL CENTRE TOUR \n9:00AM - 1:00PM\, Kahnawa ke Cultural Centre\n\nJoin us on a tour of the Kahnawake Cultural Centre’s permanent exhibit which showcases the rich culture and history of Kanien’ keha:ka. Beginning with the foundation of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy to the 1990 Oka Crisis\, the permanent exhibit features key cultural and his torical events that best explain who the Kanien’kehá:ka people are.\nSpace is limited. Register by e-mailing asp.sede [at] mcgill.ca \n\nRESTRUCTURI NG THE INDIGENOUS-CROWN RELATIONSHIP IN CANADA: THE PROMISE OF INDIGENOUS MULTILEVEL GOVERNANCE\n2:00PM - 4:00PM\, Ballroom\, Thomson House\, 3650 M cTavish Street\n\nOne of the most important political challenges facing th is country is the strained relationship between Indigenous communities and the federal\, provincial\, and territorial governments of Canada. Althoug h Canada has tried a variety of ways to better engage and establish strong er relationships with its Indigenous peoples\, these efforts have largely failed\, resulting in widespread distrust and conflict.  Recent trends\, h owever\, offer some hope. In this presentation\, Christopher Alcantara\, a n award-winning professor from Wilfrid Laurier University\, will discuss h ow the emergence of Indigenous multilevel governance may provide an innova tive and achievable model for repairing the relationship between the Crown and Canada’s Indigenous populations.\nChristopher Alcantara is an associa te professor in the department of political science at Wilfrid Laurier Uni versity. His main research interests are in the fields of Indigenous-settl er relations and politics\, territorial governance in the Canadian north\, federalism and multilevel governance\, public policy and administration\, and more recently\, Canadian voting behaviour.  He has written two books\ , Negotiating the Deal: Comprehensive Land Claims Agreements in Canada (UT P: 2013) and Beyond the Indian Act: Restoring Aboriginal Property Rights ( MQUP: 2010)\, the latter of which was coauthored with Tom Flanagan and And re Le Dressay. He has published numerous articles in the Canadian Journal of Political Science\, Canadian Public Administration\, Electoral Studies\ , Public Choice\, Publius: Journal of Federalism\, Regional and Federal St udies\, and Urban Affairs Review among others. His research was a finalist for the Donner Prize in 2011 and the McMenemy Prize in 2013\, and has won the J.E. Hodgetts Award for best article in the Canadian Public Administr ation journal\, as well as the David Watson Memorial Award for 'the paper published in the Queen's Law Journal judged to make the most significant c ontribution to legal scholarship.”\n\n\n\n\nWORKSHOP ORGANIZED BY KANATA\n 4:00PM - 6:00PM\, Room 5001\, Brown Building\, 3600 McTavish Street\nDescr iption TBA.\n\nUNDERSTANDING MOHAWK: LANGUAGE AND HISTORY\n6:00PM - 8:00PM \, Room 430\, 3610 McTavish Street\n\nDiscover and learn Mohawk. The sessi on will provide opportunities to learn basic Mohawk and understand the his torical evolution of the language and its recent revitalization program in Kahnawake. Guiding the session will be Akwiratékha Martin\, Mohawk Langua ge Instructor from the Kanien'kehá:ka Onkwawén:na Raotitióhkwa Language & Cultural Centre.\nAbout the Speaker:\nAkwiratékha Martin is Kanien'kehá:ka from Kahnawà:ke and has been teaching Kanien'kéha for the past 9 years. A long with teaching\, he has also been a translator and/or voice dubber for several APTN television shows\, such as By The Rapids\, and Finding Our T alk. He has recently worked for Ubisoft on Assassin's Creed 3 as Kanien'ké ha Language Consultant. He is currently employed at Kanien'kehá:ka Onkwawé n:na Raotitióhkwa Language and Cultural Center in Kahnawà:ke.\n\n\n\nWedne sday September 25\, 2013\n\nMCGILL'S VISION: INDIGENOUS STUDIES PROGRAM\n1 1:00AM - 12:00PM\, Lev Bukhman Room (2nd floor)\, SSMU Building\, 3480 McT avish Street\nSince the early 2000s\, efforts have been made to develop an Indigenous Studies program at 鶹ýվ. On November 27th 2012\, a forum was held jointly by the Students’ Society of 鶹ýվ and the Social Equity and Diversity Education Office. This forum was held to consult members of the 鶹ýվ community on their vision for an Indigenous Studies program.\n\n\nDREAMCATCHER MAKING WORKSHOP (STAFF AND FACULTY ONLY )\n12:00PM - 2:00PM\, Arts Council Room\, Room 160\, Arts Building\n\nExpl ore your creative side and discover a part of First Nations traditional cr aft: the Dreamcatcher. The workshop will be led by Marie-Celine Charron fr om the Naskapis First Nation of Kawawachikamach.\n\n\nTRADITIONAL HOOP DAN CING WORKSHOP\n2:00PM - 4:00PM\, Lower Campus\n\nThe Indigenous Student Al liance wants the 鶹ýվ community to join them on the Lower Field for an i nteractive workshop on Indigenous hoop dancing. This will be an opportunit y to get moving and discover traditional First Nation dancing.\n\n\n\nLAW VS. JUSTICE: HOW THE COURTS ARE PREPARING THE WAY FOR ONE LAST\, FATAL\, R OUND OF TREATY NEGOTIATIONS WITH INDIGENOUS PEOPLES IN CANADA\n5:30PM - 7: 00PM\, Maxwell Cohen Moot Court (Room 100)\, New Chancellor Day Hall\, 364 4 Peel Street\nIn interpreting section 35 of the Constitution Act\, 1982\, the Supreme Court of Canada has laid out a framework that relies heavily on outmoded concepts of colonial law.  The Court has expressed a preferenc e that the major work of reconciling Canadian sovereignty with Indigenous sovereignty should be done at the negotiating table.  The Court has also e mphasized “consultation” as the appropriate way for government to deal wit h conflicts between resource extraction and the historical claims of Indig enous peoples\, but said that Indigenous peoples in those consultations ca n never simply say “no”.\nIn an era of mounting pressure to squeeze every ounce of economic value from Indigenous land\, on an often breathtaking ti metable\, this Supreme Court doctrine condemns Canadian First Nations to t ake part in one last round of “Treaty” negotiations\, where the stakes are sky-high\, the cost of failure is potentially catastrophic\, First Nation s’ negotiating position has been undermined\, and they may simply not have the resources to have lawyers and negotiators at the tables for as long a s it takes.\nAbout the Speaker:\nMary Eberts joined Hensel Barristers as c ounsel in 2013\, after completing her term as Ariel F. Sallows Chair in Hu man Rights at the University of Saskatchewan. She has litigated in trial o r appellate courts in most of the jurisdictions in Canada\, in the Federal Court and Court of Appeal\, in the Supreme Court of Canada\, and at inque sts and administrative proceedings\, appearing as counsel in many leading cases. She has been litigation counsel for the Native Women’s Association of Canada for over twenty years\, and was a co-founder of the Women’s Lega l Education and Action Fund (LEAF).\nMary Eberts writes and lectures\, nat ionally and internationally\, on constitutional and Charter law\, Indigeno us law\, and human rights. Ms. Eberts received her legal education at West ern University and the Harvard Law School. She has been a faculty member a t the Faculty of Law\, University of Toronto\, and held the Gordon Henders on Chair in Human Rights at the University of Ottawa. Before opening a spe cialized litigation practice in 1994\, she was a partner at Torys in Toron to. Ms. Eberts grew up in southwestern Ontario\, near Lake Erie\, and is a mother and grandmother.\n\nOrganized by The Wallenberg Conference\, honou ring Raoul Wallenberg\, the Swedish diplomat whose actions saved the lives of thousands of Jews in Hungary during the Second World War.\n\n\nThursda y September 26\, 2013\n\nKAIROS BLANKET EXERCISE\n10:00AM - 12:00PM\, Room 200\, Coach House\, 3715 Peel Street\n\nAn interactive exercise on the re lationships between the Crown and Canada’s Indigenous populations\, from t he settlers’ arrival to modern times. Participants are guided through cent uries of denial of Indigenous nationhood and the gradual appropriation\, r elocation\, and removal of Indigenous peoples and territories.\nThe exerci se begins with blankets spread across the floor\, which represent land occ upied by Canada’s Indigenous populations. As participants are guided throu gh centuries of negotiations\, treaties\, decrees\, and other interactions with European settlers\, the blankets on which they stand are slowly remo ved\, until only a few participants remain on a small area representing wh at little remains of Indigenous territory today. The exercise will then be followed by a talking circle.\nThis event is hosted by Allan Vicaire\, In digenous Education Advisor\, and Paige Isaac\, Coordinator of the First Pe oples’ House.\nSpaces are limited. Register by e-mailing asp.sede [at] mcg ill.ca \n\n\n\n\n\nDREAMCATCHER MAKING WORKSHOP (STUDENTS ONLY)\n12:00PM - 2:00PM\, Arts Council Room\, Room 160\, Arts Building\n\nExplore your cre ative side and discover a part of First Nations traditional craft: the Dre amcatcher. The workshop will be led by Marie-Celine Charron from the Naska pis First Nation of Kawawachikamach.\nSpaces are limited. Register by e-ma iling asp.sede [at] mcgill.ca \n\n'WHO MAKES THE CALL?' A PANEL ON INDIGEN OUS IDENTITY\n1:15PM - 3:15PM\, Lev Bukhman Room (2nd floor)\, SSMU Buildi ng\, 3480 McTavish\nCenturies of colonization through government policies have blurred the line between Canada’s Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal popul ations. Today\, Indigenous identity is a complex and multifaceted topic wi th different points of view to distinguish between Indigenous and non-Indi genous peoples.\nWho has the right to define what it means to be an Indige nous person? Also\, how important are language\, ancestral territory\, and culture in identifying oneself as being Indigenous? Is blood percentage a valid metric in determining this? Is Indian/Inuit status necessary to con sider oneself Indigenous? Our panelists will address these questions and e xplore the complexity of this controversial and engaging subject.\nModerat ing this discussion will be Indigenous rights activist Ellen Gabriel. Pane lists will include:\n\nMohawk activist Cecile Charlie\,\nAboriginal artist Skawennati Fragnito\,\nand 鶹ýվ’s Michael Loft from the School of Socia l Work.\n\n\n\nWAPIKONI MOBILE: PREMIERE OF SHORT FILMS\n7:00PM – 8:30PM\, Théâtre J. Armand Bombardier\, McCord Museum\, 690 Sherbrooke Street West \n\nJoin us for an exclusive screening of short films directed by First Na tions youth.  The Wapikoni mobile is a travelling audiovisual and music tr aining studio that reaches more than 300 First Nations youth annually from across the province and provides them with valuable experiences in film a nd music creation.\nRaymond Caplin\, filmmaker of the short film animation In Your Heart from the Mi’gmaq First Nation community of Listuguj\, will present his new short film and hold a Q&A session.\n\n\nFriday September 2 7\, 2013 \n\nKANEHSATAKE: 270 YEARS OF RESISTANCE\n9:00AM - 11:30AM\, Room 102\, New Chancellor Day Hall\, 3644 Peel Street\n\nOn a July day in 1990 \, a confrontation propelled Native issues in Kanehsatake and the village of Oka\, Quebec\, into the international spotlight. Director Alanis Obomsa win spent 78 nerve-wracking days and nights filming the armed stand-off be tween the Mohawks\, the Quebec police and the Canadian army. This powerful documentary takes you right into the action of an age-old Aboriginal stru ggle. The result is a portrait of the people behind the barricades. Follow ing the film\, we will be joined by Elder John Onawario Cree who will disc uss the aftermath and effects of the Oka Crisis on the Kanehsatake Mohawk community\, then and now.\nAbout the Speaker:\nJohn Onawario Cree\, Bear C lan Faithkeeper\, Haudenosaunee\, was born at his grandmother Marjorie’s h ome in Kanehsatake\, Mohawk Territory and raised by his grandparents.  He has worked in the United States as a Tree Surgeon\, as an aircraft refuell er and Aircraft Refueller Supervisor at Mirabel Airport and Trudeau Airpor t. He then became a bus driver for the Kanehsatake Education Centre for ma ny years.  In 2005\, Onawario was  hired as a Grandfather (Elder) to work with Indigenous inmates through Corrections Services Canada\, from the min imum to the Super Maximum Special HandlingUnit in Ste. Anne des Plaines\, Quebec. He is now retired but is often called upon to do retreats\, openin gs\, Sweat Lodge Ceremonies and Healing and Talking Circles and enjoys act ively participating in conferences. Onawario has been happily married to h is wife Linda for 43 years. They are very proud parents of a daughter and three sons\, and grandparents to four grandsons and five granddaughters. O nawario still manages to do what he loves best – growing the “Three Sister s” - Indian white corn\, beans and squash\, traditional Grandfather tobacc o and in the Spring\, making maple syrup on his land in Kanehsatake.\n\n\n \nINDIGENOUS HEALTH FOR FIRST NATIONS\, INUIT AND MÉTIS\n2:00PM - 4:00PM\, Room 14\, Leacock Building\n\nWhen we think of the health and well-being of Canada’s First Nations\, Inuit and Métis populations\, many questions i nevitably arise. How does Indigenous health compare to non-Indigenous heal th? Where is Indigenous health headed? How can we incorporate healing thro ugh nature and culture into the practice of healthcare? How can we impleme nt strength-based approaches to healthcare programs and policy in Canada? Simon Brascoupé\, Adjunct Research Professor at Carleton University\, will be giving a presentation on the status of healthcare for First Nations\, Inuit and Métis peoples in Canada.\nAbout the Speaker:\nSimon Brascoupé\, Anishinabeg/Haudenausanee – Bear Clan is a member of Kitigan Zibi Anishina beg First Nation\, Maniwaki\, Quebec. Simon Brascoupé is an Adjunct Resear ch Professor at Carleton University\, and an Adjunct Professor in the Depa rtment of Indigenous Studies at Trent University in Peterborough\, Ontario .  He was recently awarded a Certified Aboriginal Professional Administrat or (CAPA) from the Aboriginal Financial Officers Association of Canada (AF OA). He has a B.A. and M.A. from State University of New York at Buffalo\, where he is also completing his Ph.D.  He has a research interest in land -based healing\, traditional medicine\, and traditional knowledge. He cond ucts research and writes on cultural competency and safety. He published a n article\, Cultural Safety – Exploring the Applicability of the Concept o f Cultural Safety to Aboriginal Health and Community Wellness\, in the Jou rnal of Aboriginal Health. He teaches Indigenous Studies at Carleton Unive rsity.  Previously Simon Brascoupé was Chief Executive Officer\, National Aboriginal Health Organization\; Director\, Primary Health Care Division\, First Nations and Inuit Health Branch\, Health Canada\; and Director\, Ab original Affairs Branch\, Environment Canada. He has written and worked in the field of traditional knowledge and intellectual Property Rights and i s on Trent University’s Ph.D. Indigenous Knowledge Council.  \n\n\nCOMMUNI TY SOCIAL & FEAST\n5:00PM – 7:00PM\, Native Friendship Centre of Montreal\ , 2001 Saint-Laurent Blvd\n\nCome together and partake in the closing cere mony of the 3rd Annual Indigenous Awareness Week. Socialize\, eat\, sing\, dance\, and share your experiences of the past week.\nIndian tacos will b e served. Dancers are encouraged to bring traditional regalia.\n DTSTART:20130923T160000Z DTEND:20130927T230000Z SUMMARY:3rd Annual Indigenous Awareness Week URL:/channels/event/3rd-annual-indigenous-awareness-we ek-230027 END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR