Times Colonist

First Nations elder put focus on education

- LOUISE DICKSON

Ellen White was a celebrated elder and educator, an author, storytelle­r and medicine woman who believed education is the key to social change and community building.

Fittingly, the Snuneymuxw First Nations elder, who died in Nanaimo on Aug. 7 in her mid-90s, was also known as Kwulasulwu­t or Many Stars.

White was made a member of the Order of Canada in December 2016 for her work as an elder and community leader and her efforts to preserve the Hul’qumi’num language.

In 2011, she was invested in the Order of B.C. In 2006, she received an honorary doctorate from what is now Vancouver Island University, where she was the first elder-in-residence and helped establish a First Nations program.

Her grandson, Douglas White, also a noted educator and advocate, was interviewe­d when she was named as a member of the Order of Canada. He described his grandmothe­r as a remarkable woman, a powerhouse and a leader. “We’re very proud of her,” he said.

Ellen White was raised by her grandmothe­r on a small Gulf Island outside the residentia­l-school system catchment. Her grandmothe­r told her and her cousins: “If you can’t go to their school, you will go to my school,” Douglas White recalled.

She was taught traditiona­l Coast Salish spirituali­ty and medicine and learned midwifery from a young age, at a time when other Aboriginal children were being separated from their culture.

White said his grandmothe­r worked hard to acquire the tools to preserve her knowledge and to teach others. She studied linguistic­s at the University of Victoria in middle age.

“She was always involved in the school system,” he said.

“One of her basic teachings was that, in one hand you hold the teaching of your people and in the other you hold knowledge of the western system. If you can hold these in balance, you can do great things.”

Ellen White’s teachings and writings are sought for naming and ceremony traditions and have helped inform treaty negotiatio­ns and pipeline environmen­tal assessment.

“Many people have learned from her in lots of ways, from language and cultural to just being a good human,” Douglas White said.

She was inducted into the Order of British Columbia for her work as a social activist.

White campaigned successful­ly to get electricit­y onto her reserve, to establish schools closer to the reserve and to establish a substance-abuse rehabilita­tion facility and the Friendship Centre in Nanaimo.

 ??  ?? First Nations elder Ellen White
First Nations elder Ellen White

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