Edmonton Journal

Native women taking reins

Recent AFN leadership election sees spike in female candidates

- Heather Scoffield

OTTAWA – They did it without quotas, action plans or affirmativ­e action.

Half of the eight candidates in the recent election for national chief of the Assembly of First Nations were women — a novel event, not just for the native organizati­on but for Canadian politics in general.

The secret to such high female participat­ion is twofold, says Michele Audette, president of the Quebec Native Women’s Associatio­n.

It lies in politics at the local level, where women on reserves have been taking the reins more and more often, she says.

And it lies in an inclusive approach to men, making them realize that their own health and welfare improve along with the empowermen­t of women, Audette said in an interview as the AFN elections wrapped up.

“We do not push the men away,” she said.

Audette recalls that just 30 years ago, the women of her reserve had to peer through the windows of the band office to read the lips of the male counsellor­s in the room making decisions on their behalf. Women had been banned.

She grew up to be an ardent feminist, eventually becoming the deputy minister in the Status of Women ministry in Quebec. She believed in quotas and rules and affirmativ­e action. But she later returned to First Nations politics, and found she had to change her approach.

The word “feminist” does not really exist in her native language, she said, but that’s not because women weren’t standing up for their rights. They just did it differentl­y.

“We started to think, we have to work with the men, and have a healing process. And we have to work with the women, and empower them,” she said.

Violence against women has proven to be a catalyst, Audette said. Native women, and then their husbands, sons and fathers, have been organizing against violence for years.

Now, the issue is a top priority for any national chief, and the key activists on the file are as likely to be male as female, she added.

Shawn Atleo, who defeated the four women and three men for the title of national chief to retain his title, notes that many First Nations have matrilinea­l roots — roots that were often disrupted by the imposition of the Indian Act.

“The issue of gender division (is) one of the external influences that have come into our communitie­s and the re-building of relationsh­ips between men and women is something all our communitie­s are undergoing.”

At the AFN, the four women candidates — Ryerson professor Pam Palmater, Winnipeg lawyer Joan Jack, Quebec activist Ellen Gabriel, and former treaty chief Diane Kelly — astounded the audience of chiefs and delegates with their articulate and passionate vision for First Nations, said Liberal MP Carolyn Bennett, a one-time leadership candidate herself.

“It’s amazing to see the talent and the passion,” she said. “Women run when they want to change things.”

But in the end, they didn’t win. Indeed, Palmater blamed her distant second-place finish partly on the old boys’ club. Jack spoke out publicly about sexism among the leadership candidates themselves during the pre-election campaign. And many chiefs wondered out loud whether the AFN was ready for a female leader.

“Are we ready to put in a woman? I don’t know,” said Audette. “I feel like we will get there.”

Her advice to non-First Nations women thinking of taking the plunge? “Never give up.”

 ?? Michelle Siu, The Canadian Press ?? Michelle Audette was one of four female candidates in the recent AFN national leadership race.
Michelle Siu, The Canadian Press Michelle Audette was one of four female candidates in the recent AFN national leadership race.

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