Vancouver Sun

University chided for prof choice

Indigenous should teach own history: critics

- Brett Bundale

A UNIVERSITY IS UNDER FIRE FOR ASSIGNING A ‘SETTLER SCHOLAR’ TO TEACH A COURSE ABOUT CANADA’S RESIDENTIA­L SCHOOLS SYSTEM. THE MOVE HAS SPARKED CONCERNS ABOUT HISTORICAL APPROPRIAT­ION.

HALIFAX• A Halifax university is under fire for as signing a course about Canada’s residentia­l schools to a nonIndigen­ous professor, something activists say undermines reconcilia­tion efforts.

Mount Saint Vincent University is expected to offer the course, Selected Topics in North American History: Residentia­l Schools, this fall.

The school’s website says the professor slated to teach the course has an expertise in Atlantic Canadian First Nations history, with a specializa­tion in the historical experience­s of 20th century Indigenous women.

Yet the decision to assign a “settler scholar” to teach the course has been slammed on social media as a kind of historical appropriat­ion and reinforcem­ent of the oppression of First Nations.

Critics say only Indigenous people have the lived experience to understand the complex and cumulative ways they’ve been discrimina­ted against.

“Part of reconcilia­tion is making space for Indigenous faculty members at universiti­es and Indigenous knowledge perspectiv­es,” Patti Doyle-Bedwell, a Mi’kmaq woman and Dalhousie University professor, said Friday.

The university has called for a meeting next week between Indigenous faculty and staff and the professor assigned to the course.

The university has been actively recruiting Indigenous academics, said Elizabeth Church, the Mount’s vice-president academic, with a new faculty member recently hired and the search for another ongoing.

“It’s a very complex issue and we’re really looking at what it means to have expertise in the topic and bringing in the perspectiv­es that need to be there,” Church said.

Martha Walls, the professor assigned to the course, said in an email that she takes the “important concerns aired over Facebook extremely seriously.”

Sherry Pictou, a professor at the university who is Mi’kmaq, spoke out in support of Walls, saying she has “full confidence” in her colleague.

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