Indigenous groups rally around Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond amid calls for proof of her Cree ancestry - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Indigenous groups rally around Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond amid calls for proof of her Cree ancestry

Indigenous organizations in Saskatchewan and British Columbia are expressing support for Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond in the wake of a CBC News investigation into her claims of Indigenous ancestry. But some scholars are calling on her to answer questions.

Prominent scholar has refused to provide evidence of claims

Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond ancestry questions prompt anger, but also support

2 years ago
Duration 1:56
Words of disbelief, anger and also support are pouring in for well-known scholar Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond after her claims of Cree ancestry were called into question by a CBC News investigation. The Chief of Muskeg Lake Cree Nation says Turpel-Lafond is indeed a member of the First Nation, while others continue to call on her to provide proof.

Indigenous organizations in Saskatchewan and British Columbia are expressingsupport for Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond in the wake of a CBC News investigation into her claims to Indigenous ancestry.

But some Indigenous scholars are calling on the prominent academic and former judge she is a professor at UBC and was on the bench in Saskatchewan to answer the questions it raised.

For decades, Turpel-Lafondhasclaimed to be a treaty Indian of Cree descent. However, when challenged, she hasrefused to provide evidence of her claims.

On Wednesday evening, hours after CBC's story was published, the Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs (UBCIC) said in a statement Turpel-Lafond "has been afierce, ethical, and groundbreaking advocate for Indigenous peoples for decades."

Her integrity "is beyond reproach," the organization said.

The UBCIC also saidCBChas no business investigating Turpel-Lafond's or anyone else's claims to Indigenous identity.

A woman speaks into a microphone.
A CBC News investigation about scholar and jurist Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond's claims of Indigenous ancestry has prompted both expressions of support and calls for her to provide evidence. (CBC)

"Investigations into the ancestry of individuals, filled with personal photos and digging into private matters, does not move justice, rights implementation, and reconciliation forward," it said.

"We also wonder if Dr. Turpel-Lafond's outspoken advocacy has unfairly made her a target."

The Saskatoon Tribal Council pointed out that Turpel-Lafond has been accepted as a member of the Muskeg Lake Cree Nation in Saskatchewan.

"Our kinship is defined by First Nations and not by the media or Canadian government," the council said in a statement issued Thursday.

None of the organizations addressed the fact that Turpel-Lafondhasfailed to offer evidence of herancestry. Experts note that membership in a First Nations community does not make one Indigenous.

Turpel-Lafondsays her father was Cree and was raised by her grandparents, Dr. William Nicholson Turpeland his wifeEleanor. However, genealogicalrecords show that William was ofIrish, German and U.S. ancestry, whileEleanorwas born in England to British parents.

Turpel-Lafond declined to explain this when asked by CBC News.

She has also refused to show her status card oreven indicate if she has one.

All treaty Indians - those whose relatives are on treaty lists with the Canadian government - should be entitled to Indian status, according to Michelle Good, aretired lawyer andIndigenous author (Five Little Indians) from the Red Pheasant Cree Nation in Saskatchewan.

"However, due to the contortions of the Indian Act, many have been unjustly denied status by the federal government," she said. She added that if someone claimed to be a treaty Indian, their ancestors would appear on those treaty lists at some point.

"I have not and will not be sharing any private confidential personal records with any media outlet," Turpel-Lafond wrote in an email to CBCNews.

Calls for answers

Kim Tallbear, an Indigenous professor in the faculty of Native studies at the University of Alberta, said,after reviewing CBC'sstory, that she concluded:"I don't believe that [Turpel-Lafond] is Indigenous.

"The documentation seems pretty solid to support who her parents were, who her grandparents were," she said. "The evidence is overwhelming."

Tallbear says there is a growing problem in Canadaof non-Indigenous people pretending to be Indigenous to take advantage of certain benefits.

She says, in her view, Turpel-Lafond'sclaim to Cree ancestry opened doors for her career development.

"This has given her entreto communities. It's given her entreto trust," she said. "It has given her a leg up in many ways. We know that. That's obvious."

Kim Tallbear, an Indigenous professor in the faculty of Native studies at the University of Alberta, says there is a growing number of people in Canada falsely claiming Indigenous ancestry. (University of Alberta/Jeff Allen)

If Turpel-Lafond is offended by queries about her ancestry, maybeshe shouldn't have publicly talked about it for years, saidMichelle Good.

"If a person feels that their identity is something that should be privately held and secreted away, then perhaps they shouldn't be proclaiming themselves as such publicly."

Good says, in her view, Turpel-Lafond has some obligation to answer questions.

"If she says that she in fact knows that there is Indigenous ancestry, then for the people that she claims to love and support and to dedicate her life to, she should bring that [evidence] forward, she should bring that publicly out."

The questions aboutTurpel-Lafond arehitting the Indigenous legal community hard, according toJean Teillet, an Indigenous rights lawyer of Mtis ancestry.

"I think we all have a mix of reactions," she said. "Everything from hurt and feeling betrayed to questioning to trying to understand better."

Questions about Turpel-Lafond are hitting the Indigenous legal community hard, says Jean Teillet, an Indigenous rights lawyer of Mtis ancestry. (Rob Kruk/Radio-Canada)

Teillet says she has worked with Turpel-Lafondfrom time to time since the early 1990s and never doubted that she was Indigenous.

But she says, the article had "troubling" details.

Teilletsaysshe has closely examined theissue of false claims of Indigenous identity. Last year, she was retained by the University of Saskatchewan to investigateCarrie Bourassa, a professor who had claimed to be Mtis, Anishnabe and Tlingit. Bourassa resigned from the university in June. Details about the investigation have not been made public.

Teilletsays there are manypeople falsely claiming Indigenous identity across Canada in the arts, academia, government and other sectors and that the consequences are devastating.

"For every time they publish an article, for every time they get an appointment as an Indigenous judge, they're taking that opportunity from an Indigenous person," she said. "They're hogging the microphone.

"My feeling is that they may do brilliant work and I support the work they do. And has it been helpful? Absolutely. But did they have to do it in red face?"

Clarifications

  • A previous version of this story stated that all treaty Indian are full status and would have status cards. The story has been amended to include comments by Michelle Good stating that all treaty Indians should be entitled to Indian status, but many have been unjustly denied.
    Oct 14, 2022 11:20 AM CT

With files from Sam Samson and The Afternoon Edition