The Borneo Post

Canada’s Indigenous tours amplify underheard voices

- Karen Gardiner

AS an Indigenous guide, Joe Urie offers an experience different from typical tours of Jasper National Park in Alberta, Canada. While taking his guests into the Maligne Valley and in search of bears, wolves and moose, he often counters the Canadian Rockies’ establishe­d history. “Since tourism began bringing people to the mountains, the narrative has been very colonial,” Urie says. “The narrative of my valley was that David Thompson discovered the path through the mountains, which isn’t true at all. He was shown the way through by Indigenous people. He just happened to draw a really excellent map.”

Urie, a member of the Métis Nation, has run Jasper Tour Company for more than a decade. Guiding visitors through his homeland along the Athabasca River is in his blood. “My ancestors used to take Europeans looking for fur. I take you looking for similar things, but this time, you take nothing but pictures and leave [the animals] to their skins.”

The types of tours offered by Urie and other Indigenous operators around Canada satisfy much of what travelers seek today: that deeper connection to place and underheard perspectiv­es. When the travel industry talks of regenerati­ve travel, inclusion and justice, it seems as though it is just catching up to what Indigenous tourism has long been doing. It seems a particular­ly cruel trick of timing that just as Indigenous tourism in Canada was poised to meet its potential, it almost collapsed.

Indigenous tourism had been the fastest-growing sector in Canadian tourism, increasing by 23.2 per cent between 2014 and 2017, compared with a 14.5 percent increase in overall tourism in Canada, according to the Indigenous Tourism Associatio­n of Canada (ITAC). In 2018, ITAC and Destinatio­n Canada, the national tourism marketing organizati­on, found that 1 in 3 internatio­nal visitors were interested in Indigenous experience­s. And 2019 closed with 1,900 Indigenous tourism businesses in operation, employing 40,000 people, ITAC reported, but now, only about 1,000 Indigenous tourism businesses and 15,000 employees are estimated to remain.

“Covid-19 has been pretty devastatin­g to our industry,” says Keith Henry, ITAC’s CEO. Although the organizati­on, which has supported Indigenous businesses since 2015, avoided the insolvency it had feared, he says it’s “still fighting to survive.”

Of the businesses that have folded or gone into “hibernatio­n” amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, Henry says, “we just don’t know if they’ll be able to ever rebuild. So we’re desperatel­y trying to keep a core group of businesses alive, and that’s what we’re doing with marketing and a number of initiative­s.”

With the support of Destinatio­n Canada, ITAC has launched a new designatio­n, “The Original Original,” to help travelers identify Indigenous tourism experience­s and products in Canada. In a first for Indigenous tourism in the Americas, the mark identifies businesses that have been certified by ITAC and meet criteria that include being at least 51 percent Indigenous­owned and offering a marketread­y experience.

Along with raising awareness and providing assurance that there are standards being met, Henry says, “this is a very tactical campaign: It’s driving packages and direct sales.” A dedicated website, Destinatio­n Indigenous. ca, streamline­s the booking process, allowing customers to search for experience­s by location or interest, then follow through to a particular company’s website to complete a booking. Perusing the options gives a sense of the diversity of experience­s on offer and may change perception­s of what an Indigenous experience looks like, whether it’s bear-watching and wine-tasting in British Columbia or dog-sledding and dining in Manitoba.

It has taken decades for Indigenous tourism in Canada to reach the point where, Henry says, “we are world leaders in the developmen­t and operation of Indigenous experience­s.” Misconcept­ions and concerns from all sides had to be addressed, foremost by breaking down stereotype­s and raising awareness of the diversity of contempora­ry cultures in the more than 700 First Nations, Inuit and Métis communitie­s in Canada.

“We feel that a lot of what consumers may or may not realize that they’re looking for is really a Hollywood stereotype,” Henry says. On the other hand, among some Indigenous communitie­s, there has been hesitation to get involved in the tourism industry. “They don’t want to have their culture exploited. A lot of our people don’t want to be Disney-fied.”

Many of the people who have embraced tourism see it as a force for good. Candace Campo is a member of the Sechelt First Nation and is the owner and operator of Talaysay Tours in Vancouver, B.C., which has restarted in-person walking tours alongside its virtual offerings.

Talaysay’s tours share “how our people relate to the land culturally and spirituall­y, and how we utilize the land for food, medicine and technology.” Visitors “want to get a sense of the place,” she says, “and because of Indigenous tourism, we’re able to share the long extended history of this region, past the 150 years [of Canadian Confederat­ion], but the thousands of years of history here.”

Campo says tourism brings value to her community as a platform for promoting its stories, history and worldviews. “And I believe, in a very small, humble way, that we facilitate and create part of that dialogue for reconcilia­tion.”

In 2008, Canada launched the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission to investigat­e the federally funded, often churchrun, residentia­l schools that operated for around 120 years. More than 150,000 First Nations, Métis and Inuit children were removed from their families and communitie­s and put into the schools, where they were forced to abandon their traditions, cultural practices and languages. The commission’s aim was partly to move Canada toward mutual respect and understand­ing, which seems even more urgent with the recent discoverie­s of hundreds of unmarked graves of Indigenous children near former residentia­l schools.

In Alberta, as Urie slowly and cautiously reopens to visitors, he says he has had phone calls asking for “a reconcilia­tion tour.” That’s not exactly how he bills what he does, “but I’ve spoken to it and people have heard me speak to it” on social media. “People are very curious right now about Indigenous ways, especially [since] the children have come back into the light from the residentia­l schools.”

It ties into the need to properly tell history. Going back to the well-worn stories of White explorers such as Thompson, Urie says more visitors are now saying, “‘Okay, that’s interestin­g . . . but what happened before that?’ “

In Canada and the United States, he says, “these things are beginning to be taught in schools, but there’s a great difference when you have to go and sit at a desk and are told you have to learn something, to when you go and look for it yourself.”

Campo shares a similar sentiment: “We’re more the friendly, the softer introducti­on to a very complex shared history.”

“You’re still coming to the mountains and calling it a holiday. I don’t want to send you home in despair,” Urie says. Correcting narratives is an integral part of the experience, but “I want to couple it with the beauty of this place and the hope for the future.”

 ?? Tourism Associatio­n of Canada — Indigenous ?? The Spirit Bear Lodge in British Columbia offers visitors a variety of cultural and outdoor experience­s.
Tourism Associatio­n of Canada — Indigenous The Spirit Bear Lodge in British Columbia offers visitors a variety of cultural and outdoor experience­s.

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