'We'll continue to win': How Indigenous leaders reached new heights in 2018 - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 25, 2024, 08:12 PM | Calgary | -13.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

'We'll continue to win': How Indigenous leaders reached new heights in 2018

From winning a landmark court case against the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion and a Sixties Scoop settlement to a renaissance in Indigenous languages, it has been a fascinating year in Indigenous politics.

Trans Mountain pipeline decision, child welfare and language renaissance were major headlines in 2018

Rueben George addresses the media in Vancouver following the Appeals Court announcement that halted the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion in August. (Nic Amaya/CBC)

From a landmark court decision that put the brakes on the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, to a Sixties Scoop settlement, to a renaissance in Indigenous languages, it was a fascinatingyear in Indigenous politics.

The stories have shed light on tensions, inequality and resilience in Indigenous communities.

Here are the highlights:

1. Pipeline pullout

The debate over the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion didn't just trickle across the B.C. and Alberta borders, it surged acrossCanada.

Thousands of Indigenous people weighed in on a judicial review launched by several First Nations, including the Squamish and Tsleil-Waututhnations. In August, a federalAppeals Court court ruling quashed approval of the pipeline project.

Rueben George is the manager of the Sacred Trust, an initiative of the Tsleil-Waututh Nation mandated to stop the Trans Mountain expansion.

"I always knew from the very beginning that we would win,"George said.

"It was huge. Not not just across the country, but around the world.And it was a victory for First Nations, for sure, but it was a victory for everybody."

But not everyone thought it was a win not the Canadian government norbusinesses in B.C. Some feared the decision would put a chill on international investment in the province.

Some First Nationslike the Whispering Pines, the Peters Band and a Mtis organization in B.C. were looking at potential equity, a say in environmental protection and jobs for their communities.

Canada's purchase of the pipeline meansthe saga will not be over anytime soon.

Rejection of pipeline expansion fuels B.C. celebrations

6 years ago
Duration 2:52
The Federal Court of Appeal's rejection of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion is fuelling celebrations for environmentalists and some of B.C.'s Indigenous peoples.

2. Indigenous child welfare

Few knew about the lifelong effects of theSixties Scoop until this year. In 2018, thousands of survivors applied for compensation, receiving up to $50,000 each under a class action settlement they won.

The case found the federal government failed to prevent Indigenous children from losing their identity after they were forcibly taken from their homes.

Thousands were placed in non-Indigenous care between 1959 and 1991, which resulted in psychological harm. But Indigenous children in great numbers continue to face being disconnected from their culture in non-Indigenous foster homes.

Child welfaredominated headlinesin2018 from revelations that poverty and paperwork are the leading reasons that more than 60 per cent of children in care in B.C. areIndigenous, to a social worker named in several lawsuits for siphoning money for Indigenous youth.

For Mary Teegee, executive director of CarrierSekaniFamily Services, the most important story of2018 was when Ottawa announced it would hand over child welfare services to Indigenous governments. The move was made inan effort to drive down the highnumber of Indigenous children in foster care.

"We're on the precipice of making fundamental changeand it's an exciting time," said Teegee, who is also a board member of the First Nations Caring Society.

"The ability to actually draft our own codes and our own laws based on our traditional child-rearing practices based on our culture, it's a phenomenal time right now and in Canadianhistory," she added.

Finding Cleo: How a CBC podcast solved the mystery of a missing Indigenous girl

7 years ago
Duration 12:55
Finding Cleo is part of the CBC podcast series Missing and Murdered it follows a Cree family's search for their missing sister and attempts to uncover why she and her five siblings were taken into government care in the early 1970s. Cleopatra Semaganis Nicotine and her siblings, Johnny, Mark, Annette, April and Christine, were part of a wave of apprehensions of Indigenous children by child welfare authorities that has become known as the Sixties Scoop

3. Renaissance in Indigenous languages

This year saw a surge in exposure for Indigenous languages infilm, educationand music.

The movie Edge of the Knife was scripted solely in the Haida language, Jeremy Dutcher sang his album entirely in his language and immersion languageclasses popped up across Canada.

For some, thissolidified the importance of Indigenous people telling their own stories, rather than outsiders providing an anthropological view. Debates around cultural appropriation were critical this year, as well as recognizing the importance of authentication.

"I'm really hopeful that 2019is going to give us an opportunity to get more coordinated andstrengthen our voice together and and build from solutions," saidLou Anne Neal, aKwaguilthartist who has been working to ensure Indigenous art is officially authenticated by governments.

First Haida language film offers rare, powerful glimpse of Haida people

7 years ago
Duration 10:36
The first Haida language film is currently in production and tells the powerful story of a dying language and what its few remaining speakers are doing to save it.