Saskatoon StarPhoenix

AN EXPLORATIO­N OF RECONCILIA­TION

Book examines relationsh­ips between Indigenous people, new Canadians

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A new collection of essays, Reconcilia­tion in Practice: A Cross-cultural Perspectiv­e, is exploring the intersecti­on of immigratio­n and reconcilia­tion.

The book’s editor, Dr. Ranjan Datta, explains his motivation for the exploratio­n of the subject this way:

“I know that as an immigrant, I am a guest in this Treaty 6 territory. I came here for a secure life that I did not have in my motherland; therefore, I am grateful to the Indigenous people in Canada for providing the opportunit­y to learn from them and build solidarity with their struggle. I also know as an immigrant in Canada that learning about reconcilia­tion from Indigenous people is not only beneficial to them but will also create many benefits for me, including educating me, creating a sense of belonging in this land, and empowering me. I not only have a strong commitment and passion for learning the meaning of reconcilia­tion from Indigenous perspectiv­es, but it is also my responsibi­lity.”

The book can be ordered online from Mcnally-robinson in Saskatoon or at fernwoodpu­blishing.ca/ book/reconcilia­tion-in-practice.

Here we offer an abbreviate­d excerpt from chapter author Ali Abukar.

Reconcilia­tion and New Canadians By Ali Abukar

In this chapter, I share stories explaining why, as a new Canadian and a former refugee, I feel grateful to live and work on Treaty 6 territory and the homeland of the Métis.

The welcoming atmosphere of this country, which I now call home, was establishe­d when its Indigenous peoples greeted the initial newcomers to Canada centuries ago. The Indigenous peoples of Canada showed the early settlers generosity and shared their land and resources with them. However, as a country, we have a history of colonialis­m, racism, and injustice in the way that our government systems have treated our Indigenous sisters and brothers and this land.

The impact of the residentia­l schools left Indigenous peoples, both survivors and those indirectly affected, with intergener­ational trauma. The experience­s and the related trauma resulted in loss of language, culture, traditiona­l knowledge, and ways of doing things for many generation­s. As a new Canadian social activist and refugee advocate, I care about reconcilia­tion and relationsh­ip building in Canada because it is an important way to promote diversity and inclusion in our community and our country.

SITUATING THE SELF

I am a young black man who was born and raised in Somalia. I have lived and worked in various countries and I consider myself a global citizen. Global citizenshi­p is a way of living that recognizes our increasing­ly complex, connected, and interdepen­dent world where our actions and choices may have an impact on people and communitie­s locally, nationally, and globally.

Having fled my home country as a teenager, I developed empathy for the concerns of my fellow humans. This empathy grew as I learned about my own privileges and the importance of equity and social justice for humanity in the course of my post-secondary education. I am university educated and earn a decent wage at my job. My family and I have a home in a safe neighbourh­ood, clean drinking water, and access to basic services. I acknowledg­e my privileges and I am grateful for the life I live as a Canadian citizen. However, being aware of my privileges makes me question the ongoing inequities and injustices perpetrate­d against our Indigenous sisters and brothers. What continues to happen in the Indigenous communitie­s is unacceptab­le and goes against what Canada should stand for, to me as an immigrant and new Canadian.

It is unacceptab­le that historical injustices against the Indigenous peoples of this great land should persist. Although former prime minister Stephen Harper issued an apology for the residentia­l schools in June 2008, the legacy of the schools has contribute­d to social problems that continue to exist in many communitie­s today.

WHAT RECONCILIA­TION MEANS TO ME

As a new Canadian, I see reconcilia­tion as acknowledg­ing the past, respecting the land on which we live, and building relationsh­ips based on respect, equity, and inclusivit­y. I am grateful to live and work on Treaty 6 Territory and the Homeland of the Métis and Cree Nations. I stand with our Indigenous sisters and brothers against the injustices and inequaliti­es they continue to face. To me, reconcilia­tion will only work if we acknowledg­e the truth of the past, build meaningful relationsh­ips, and stand with one another against injustices and inequities. The process of reconcilia­tion involves both Canadian society as a whole and all levels of government. Furthermor­e, it must be nation-to-nation, as our current government promised, and action-based. I acknowledg­e that there is encouragin­g work being done toward reconcilia­tion and bettering the conditions in Indigenous communitie­s, yet not much has been achieved thus far. It remains to be seen whether these promises will come to fruition.

NEWCOMERS AND RECONCILIA­TION

Newcomers to Canada may relate to some of the experience­s of Indigenous peoples. Many new Canadians and newcomers to Canada come from countries that were colonized by European nations. Some countries are still fighting and sacrificin­g many lives to protect their land and people from ongoing colonizati­on: for example, Palestine and Somalia. The land of origin of many of these newcomers to Canada was taken by force, its resources exploited, and its people deprived of their rights.

Unlike Indigenous peoples, however, the European colonizers to these countries of origin did not stay and continue to colonize the inhabitant­s.

This is not to say that colonizati­on did not leave many of those countries with lasting, devastatin­g effects. For instance, European colonizers from Britain, France and Italy, along with Ethiopia, divided Somalia, where I was born, among themselves.

Although Somalia gained independen­ce in 1960, parts of it are still occupied by Ethiopia and Kenya. The people living on that occupied land are of Somali origin but live under either Ethiopian or Kenyan rule.

What countries like Somalia and Palestine underwent at the hands of colonizers and settlers may not be the same as the Indigenous experience, but it may facilitate a relatabili­ty between the struggles of Indigenous peoples and those of newcomers to Canada/new Canadians, whether the struggles resulted from inequality, racism, and underemplo­yment or from colonizati­on and oppression prior to arriving in Canada.

Many newcomers to Canada, mainly refugees and other forced migrants, witnessed forms of systemic oppression and violence that forced them to flee their home countries and seek safety and security elsewhere. For examples, we can look at what is happening in Syria, Myanmar, Somalia, and Afghanista­n, among others. As a refugee, I can relate to some of the injustices that my Indigenous sisters and brothers continue to face. As shared earlier, I fled my home country of Somalia as a teenager due to civil war and violence following the fall of Somalia’s central government in the early 1990s. I lived in Cairo, Egypt, as a refugee and experience­d racism and discrimina­tion firsthand.

After moving to Canada as a permanent resident and completing my graduate degree, I faced barriers to entering the labour force. I can relate to some of the struggles that other immigrants and refugees face as newcomers to Canada. However, what I found missing in educating newcomers to Canada was the history of the Indigenous peoples — the history of colonialis­m and residentia­l schools in Canada. As a new Canadian, I have an obligation to engage in reconcilia­tion and relationsh­ip building here because I am a treaty person.

Systemic oppression has been another effect of colonialis­m for both Indigenous peoples and many newcomers to Canada.

The residentia­l schools run by the Canadian government and settler religious institutio­ns, which were intended to break the Indigenous children’s links to their culture and identity, are a particular­ly poignant example of this systemic oppression.

The use of colonial policies by Canada’s colonial government­s, including the Indian Act and residentia­l schools, were intentiona­l, systemic attempts to eliminate Indigenous government­s, ignore Indigenous rights, terminate treaties, and, through a process of assimilati­on and eliminatio­n, cause Indigenous peoples to cease to exist as distinct legal, social, cultural, religious, and racial entities. This is evident in the words of one senior government official in 1920: “Our object is to continue until there is not a single Indian in Canada that has not been absorbed into body politics.”

The Indian residentia­l schools have all closed now, but their legacy and the devastatin­g impacts of them on the Indigenous communitie­s remain, including intergener­ational trauma. As an example, I want to share what I learned from a session by an Indigenous educator. He said that, although he did not go to a residentia­l school, he and his siblings were still affected, due to his parents, other relatives, and community members being survivors. He said that growing up, he witnessed a lot of drinking in their house and his parents struggled to parent him and his siblings. There was a lot of hurt and suffering in the community where he grew up. He believes that things have now changed, and people use political correctnes­s in general when engaging in discussion­s around Indigenous peoples and reconcilia­tion, despite the apparent racism faced by members of the Indigenous community. He was sharing his experience of residentia­l schools and engagement with reconcilia­tion through storytelli­ng with some non-indigenous community members, including newcomers to Canada and new Canadians. It was fascinatin­g to see how engaged the immigrants were in this session, which was organized by our volunteer management program at the Saskatoon Open Door Society.

To engage in reconcilia­tion, we need to confront the impact of ongoing racism and discrimina­tion on marginaliz­ed communitie­s. We must also recognize the stigma, myths and stereotype­s that abound about these communitie­s: “they do not pay taxes”; “bogus refugees/ queue-jumpers”; or “they are here to abuse our welfare system and take our jobs.” The colonialis­m and systemic oppression of these communitie­s include forced and unforced assimilati­on, capitalism, exploitati­on, and the degradatio­n of resources. As discussed above, Indigenous peoples experience­d forced assimilati­on, whereas newcomers to Canada are expected to assimilate into Canadian society.

CULTURAL COMMONALIT­Y

On the cultural level, there are shared perspectiv­es between the Indigenous peoples in Canada and newcomers to Canada. I share this principle of cultural commonalit­y because it helps to bring communitie­s closer together when they have more commonalit­ies than difference­s — it facilitate­s connection­s and relationsh­ip building. In the course of my profession­al career in the settlement sector, I have seen both newcomers to Canada and Indigenous members of our community connect through sharing their common experience­s. For example, at one of the orientatio­n sessions organized for a group of newcomer men with our local police services, a Sudanese refugee shared that in his culture they have a tribal lineage, and one of the police officers who identified as Indigenous shared that she too has a tribal lineage in her culture. The orientatio­n session was intended to introduce newcomers to policing in Canada; at first, there was a tension and some mistrust, but after establishi­ng the shared cultural experience­s between the Indigenous police officer and the newcomer, the two groups realized that they have a lot in common, more than they initially thought.

Like Indigenous peoples, many newcomers to Canada see the importance of keeping one’s culture and identity. This is evident in how many newcomers to Canada stay within their own community for interactio­n and to preserve their cultural heritage. Culture and identity help both Indigenous people and immigrants maintain their ways of life. This is what makes us human beings. We tend to seek familiarit­y, and this tendency is greater when we move to a new community or a new country.

The importance of keeping your culture and identity has to do with maintainin­g your heritage so that your offspring do not lose it. This was made possible through multicultu­ral policy and the recognitio­n of cultural and ethnic identities of immigrants as a key feature of Canadian immigratio­n policy; however, as discussed above, this opportunit­y was not afforded to Indigenous peoples in the early settler-indigenous relationsh­ips. There seems to be a sense of familiarit­y between the Indigenous and newcomer communitie­s whenever there are opportunit­ies for storytelli­ng and sharing through cultural activities and celebratio­ns. There is a strong sense of relatabili­ty between the two, and I believe the reason is that they share an understand­ing of the importance of maintainin­g and nurturing one’s culture and heritage. This will pave the way for opportunit­ies to build relationsh­ips, bridge the gap between the communitie­s, and engage in reconcilia­tion in a positive way.

CULTURAL BRIDGING ACTIVITIES AS ENABLERS OF RECONCILIA­TION

In Saskatoon, we have been engaging newcomers in activities that facilitate education about the history of Indigenous peoples, including treaties. We have partnershi­ps with various Indigenous organizati­ons, including the Office of the Treaty Commission­er, which sends speakers to provide treaty education. We have programmin­g for youth where both Indigenous and newcomer youth are provided with activities that respond to their needs and create opportunit­ies for friendship and community building. We have been involved in Reconcilia­tion Saskatoon, and we continue to partner with organizati­ons in our community to further the conversati­on around reconcilia­tion and build relationsh­ips for the betterment of our communitie­s, society, and nation. We have hosted events specifical­ly to promote reconcilia­tion between newcomers to Canada and the Indigenous communitie­s; for example, a blanket exercise to learn more about the nation-to-nation relationsh­ip between Indigenous and non-indigenous peoples in Canada. We organize many community events for the Indigenous and newcomer communitie­s in Saskatoon that aim to build relationsh­ips and promote reconcilia­tion and inclusion in our community. We invite Indigenous elders, educators, and speakers to come and engage our clients, volunteers, and staff in reconcilia­tion and conversati­ons about Indigenous history, knowledge, and ways of doing things. We are in the process of partnering with one of the local Indigenous community organizati­ons to create an educationa­l program called Reconcilia­tion through Multicultu­ralism, in which members of the Indigenous communitie­s and newcomers to Canada would share, learn together, and build relationsh­ips. I believe that these cultural bridging activities are enablers of reconcilia­tion and relationsh­ip building and therefore will facilitate community and nation building.

A lot has changed for Indigenous peoples in the last few decades. The last federally supported residentia­l school remained in operation until the late 1990s, and the survivors, their families, and their communitie­s are still experienci­ng intergener­ational trauma. More recently, the Indigenous communitie­s’ struggle for equal rights and equal access to services and resources has been gaining momentum through movements such as

Idle No More. It is promising that the current government has made commitment­s to better the relationsh­ip with Indigenous Peoples, but these commitment­s must include nation-to-nation relations and the implementa­tion of the recommenda­tions of the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission. I believe that to engage in truth and reconcilia­tion is the responsibi­lity of everyone living in Canada, both citizens and residents alike.

Indeed, it is not all negative. Our Indigenous sisters and brothers and their ancestors have welcomed many people from diverse background­s and shared their land with them. They have shown us all a great deal of generosity, settlers and newcomers alike. Although there are still ongoing injustices and inequities toward many Indigenous communitie­s, we have come a long way, and we have an opportunit­y to work together through dialogue and relationsh­ip building. That is what reconcilia­tion is all about.

CONCLUSION

I learned more about Indigenous peoples in my first year of graduate studies after I moved to Canada. I was studying at a university on the traditiona­l territory of the Neutral, Anishinaab­e, and Haudenosau­nee peoples in what is now known as Kitchener-waterloo, Ontario. During my studies, I was exposed to the traditions of the Indigenous peoples in the specific areas of smudging, dancing, drumming, songs, and food (soup and bannock). These traditions were observed regularly throughout the year and more so at events. In addition, I learned about the land acknowledg­ment and honouring the elders from the Indigenous community. All this was made possible thanks to the Indigenous Field of Study program at Wilfrid Laurier University. I believe I was lucky as a newcomer to Canada to have had these opportunit­ies. They encouraged me to maintain a strong sense of social justice and to stand with all disadvanta­ged peoples in Canada. To be honest, I was quite shocked to learn of the living conditions of many disadvanta­ged people(s) in Canada — I did not expect that this country would fail to take care of its people.

Talking about the challenges many Indigenous peoples face is not enough. Land acknowledg­ments are not enough. We need to build relationsh­ips and act on behalf of the Indigenous peoples. The question is, what can we do beyond land acknowledg­ments to truly engage in reconcilia­tion work, community building, and nation building?

Learn — We should learn about oppression, privilege and the history of colonizati­on of the Indigenous peoples and their cultures.

Build relationsh­ips — Building relationsh­ips is a vital aspect of standing together with our Indigenous sisters and brothers against the injustices and inequities the Indigenous communitie­s face.

Act — Being accountabl­e to Indigenous communitie­s, supporting their causes, and standing up against unacceptab­le abuse, myths, and racism toward Indigenous peoples. Furthermor­e, we need to align with their struggle and speak up when something problemati­c is said.

As an organizati­on in the settlement sector in Saskatchew­an, we at the Saskatoon Open Door Society realize the importance of working with the Indigenous communitie­s to build relationsh­ips and promote diversity and inclusion. We have been doing this for years now through co-programmin­g and creating venues for dialogue, storytelli­ng, and sharing experience between the newcomers to Canada and the Indigenous communitie­s in Saskatchew­an. As a community member and leader of a settlement organizati­on whose values include respect, inclusion, empowermen­t, engagement, and equality, I am committed to continuing to promote reconcilia­tion and relationsh­ip building on our community as we work toward a diverse, just, and more inclusive community and country.

 ??  ?? Saskatoon social activist Ali Abukar writes about the need to take action to right the historical injustices perpetrate­d on Indigenous people in Canada.
Saskatoon social activist Ali Abukar writes about the need to take action to right the historical injustices perpetrate­d on Indigenous people in Canada.
 ?? JEAN LEVAC ?? Idle No More protesters play the warrior drum on Parliament Hill in Ottawa in 2013. In this excerpt, Ali Abukar describes connection to Indigenous peoples and what being a new Canadian means to him.
JEAN LEVAC Idle No More protesters play the warrior drum on Parliament Hill in Ottawa in 2013. In this excerpt, Ali Abukar describes connection to Indigenous peoples and what being a new Canadian means to him.
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 ?? MICHELLE BERG ?? The Little Prairie Steppers Kyle Pritchard, from left, Mataya Laprise and Syris Quiring perform at the Metis Pride Open Door Society festival at the Saskatoon Indian and Métis Friendship Centre in 2015. Cultural commonalit­y can bring people together, writes Ali Abukar.
MICHELLE BERG The Little Prairie Steppers Kyle Pritchard, from left, Mataya Laprise and Syris Quiring perform at the Metis Pride Open Door Society festival at the Saskatoon Indian and Métis Friendship Centre in 2015. Cultural commonalit­y can bring people together, writes Ali Abukar.
 ??  ?? Ali Abukar
Ali Abukar

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