Appropriation on campus: Illustration leads to reconciliation between student association, Haida First Nation | CBC Radio - Action News
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Now or Never

Appropriation on campus: Illustration leads to reconciliation between student association, Haida First Nation

Sometimes people initiate acts of reconciliation, and sometimes they find themselves in the midst of it by accident.
Severn Cullis-Suzuki is an environmental activist and author. (Twitter)

When Severn Cullis-Suzukistarted grad school at the University of British Columbia, she was excited to learn things that would help solidify the workshe had been doing for years.

Cullis-Suzukimoved to Haida Gwaii10years ago when she married her husband, and in doing so became a member of the Skidegate community. She got involved with the movement to protect and revitalize the endangeredHaida language, learning from the few remaining elders, and teaching the language to her two children and other community members. She loved the work, but lacked the foundationalknowledge.

On her first day at UBC, she was given her orientation package, which included a bunch of schwaglike sunglasses.

"I came home with all this stuff, and didn't really think about it, and later on that day my husband came home and he picked up the sunglasses and he said 'hey, that's our crest!'"

The university's grad student society's logo was the sea monster, a five-finned illustration of a culturally significant supernatural being, which also happened to be her husband's family crest.

GSS president Genevieve Cruzrealized this was an issue that deserved to be talked about, even if she didn't know where to start.

"Many of us admitted that we didn't know what to do, but there were many of us who were willing to sit down and talk about it, and Severn was that person who was willing to sit with us, also, and just get into our level of ignorance, if you will, and tell us this history," she said. "I didn't know about this history, so I'm one of those people who learned a lot."

ForCullis-Suzuki, this specific conversationaround appropriation andreconciliationspeaks to her view of reconciliation as a whole.

"It is labour, it's a lot of work and it's not comfortable, but it is worthwhile and it is something that we have to do in order to move together as a family, and that's what we think this country is, it's a Canadian family."

Read Severn's thoughtful blog post aboutthis experience or click Listen above to hear more.