BC Business Magazine

The Unifier

KAREN JOSEPH, CEO OF RECONCILIA­TION CANADA, MAKES BUSINESS PART OF THE EFFORT TO BUILD A NEW RELATIONSH­IP WITH INDIGENOUS PEOPLE

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On a rainy Sunday in September 2013, multitudes showed up at Queen Elizabeth Plaza in downtown Vancouver. They walked through an arch that had been blessed by a First Nations healer and set out for Concord Place, passing by drummers, dancers and singers. Karen Joseph, who organized the four-kilometre Walk for Reconcilia­tion, was astounded at the turnout, which was estimated at 70,000.

Joseph had planned the walk to follow the federal Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission's local four-day hearing of testimony from residentia­l-school survivors. That history is intensely personal for the CEO of Reconcilia­tion Canada, a member of the Kwakwaka'wakw nation. Both her parents attended residentia­l school, and her father, Chief Robert Joseph, was a special adviser to the TRC.

For eight months leading up to the gathering, Joseph's team at Reconcilia­tion Canada, then a joint project of social change philanthro­pic organizati­on Tides Canada and the Indian Residentia­l School Survivors Society, had facilitate­d dialogue workshops. Based on a traditiona­l healing circle, these events included a residentia­l-school survivor sharing their story. “For us, reconcilia­tion is about rebuilding the relationsh­ip between indigenous people and all Canadians, talking about the things that keep us apart—the mistrust, the racism, the misunderst­andings that we have about our shared history,” Joseph says.

The dialogue sessions were so successful that several of Reconcilia­tion Canada's funders, including Vancouver City Savings Credit Union, asked Joseph to keep going. She and her team began working with corporatio­ns such as Suncor Energy Inc. and Teck Resources Ltd. on embedding reconcilia­tion into their business models. Reconcilia­tion Canada has also held gatherings in six cities across the country, bringing together regional and national leaders to talk about reconcilia­tion and come up with ideas for action. “Karen is a mentor to many Aboriginal women as well as a mentor to many business leaders,” says Tamara Vrooman, president and CEO of Vancity.

In a wide-ranging conversati­on, Joseph easily shifts from topics like the intergener­ational trauma suffered by families of residentia­l-school survivors to self-deprecatin­g humour. Her sister, Shelley Joseph, a public outreach lead at Reconcilia­tion Canada, says that Karen always rose above their difficult childhoods, helping raise two younger siblings and going off to UBC to study microbiolo­gy at a time when few First Nations women achieved higher education or leadership roles.

But Karen isn't entirely comfortabl­e with the term “mentor.” Her role as a leader is to identify gifts in every member of her team and form a culture to support each one, she says. It's a philosophy she learned growing up in the small Central Coast community of Kingcome Inlet, where people gather in the Big House to process fish, and the children salting the salmon are made to feel that their job is as important as anyone else's. “The challenge I have with that term [mentor] is that it alludes to someone that is superior, whereas everybody, regardless of age, has something to teach us,” she says. “I play the least important role, in that my role is to create space for all those amazing individual­s to do the work they need to do.” —M.G.

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