Decolonial Study Group – Jan 10

IPSMO Decolonial Study Group

Decolonial Study Group
Sunday, Jan. 10 at 1pm
Exile Infoshop, 256 Bank St. (2nd Floor)
Sorry this location is not wheelchair accessible
Everyone Welcome!
ipsmo@riseup.net
http://www.ipsmo.org

The reading for the study group on Sunday, Jan. 13 will focus on “British
Colombia”.

The Decolonial Study Group is a new project of the IPSM Ottawa. We will be
deepening and broadening our understanding and analysis of indigenous
struggles for decolonization, social justice and revolution. We will be
doing this through readings, workshops, oral presentations, movies and so on.

For this study group there will be core articles which we ask everyone to
read, as well as additional articles and information for people who have
the time and the interest to get deeper into the subject matter. And
everyone is welcome whether they’ve done the readings or not!

Core reading:

“Oppose the BC Treaty Process: BC Treaty Monster Grows 3 Heads” Warrior
Publications & “New Relationship or ‘Final Solution'” by Arthur Manuel:
both posted at http://noii-van.resist.ca/?page_id=37

“Domestic Laws versus Aboriginal Visions: An Analysis of the Delgamuukw
Decision” by Candice Metallic and Patricia Monture: posted at
http://www.borderlands.net.au/vol1no2_2002/metallic_angus.html

Additional reading:
http://csc.lexum.umontreal.ca/en/1997/1997scr3-1010/1997scr3-1010.html

Dec 12: Resist the Olympic Torch in Ottawa

RESIST THE OLYMPICS TORCH RELAY IN OTTAWA

2pm, Sat Dec 12
Ottawa City Hall (between Laurier and Lisgar, Elgin and the canal)

Come help us show our opposition to the Vancouver Olympic Games!!

Endorsed by:
– Olympics Resistance Ottawa
– Common Cause Ottawa www.linchpin.ca
– Indigenous Peoples Solidarity Movement Ottawa www.ipsmo.org

Meet at 2pm on Saturday at Ottawa City Hall
(not sure yet whether it’s Laurier or Lisgar side of the bldg)

A bit about the torch relay:
– The Olympic torch relay was an invention of the Nazis in Germany for the 1936 summer Olympics held in Berlin. It proved to be a propagandist’s dream, igniting nationalistic fever and pride in a receptive public. Not to be outdone in propagandandic posturing, the relay was renamed ‘Relay of Peace’ for the next summer Olympic games held in London in 1948.

A bit about the Olympics:
– The Olympic games are a multi-billion dollar industry backed by real estate, construction, hotel, tourism and media corporations, and powerful elites working hand in hand with government officials and the International Olympic Committee (IOC). While public pressure is unlikely to stop the 2010 Games from occupying Vancouver, critical resistance is needed to expose deceptions about the Games’ impact and purposes, voice our dissent to the world, and strengthen social movement solidarity.

Decolonial Study Group – Dec 13

Decolonial Study Group
Sunday, Dec. 13 at 1pm
Exile Infoshop
256 Bank St. (2nd Floor)
Sorry this location is not wheelchair accessible
Everyone Welcome!
ipsmo@riseup.net
http://www.ipsmo.org

The reading for the study group on Sunday, Dec. 13 will focus on treaties between the Mi’kmaq and the British Crown, and on the recognition of Mi’kmaq treaty rights in the Marshall decision.

The Decolonial Study Group is a new project of the IPSM Ottawa. We will be deepening and broadening our understanding and analysis of indigenous struggles for decolonization, social justice and revolution. We will be doing this through readings, workshops, oral presentations, movies and so on.

Some of the readings for the next study group are still to be determined.

For this study group there will be core articles which we ask everyone to read, as well as additional articles and information for people who have the time and the interest to get deeper into the subject matter. And everyone is welcome whether they’ve done the readings or not!

Core reading:

Additional reading:

Books:

We Were Not the Savages by Daniel N. Paul
The Marshall Decision and Native Rights by Ken Coates

Two Spirit and Queer Liberation Movements

Two Spirit and Queer Liberation Movements
From Radical Revolt to Freedom Fighting Justice

7:00pm – 9:00pm
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
at Montgomery Legion Hall
330 Kent Street near Somerset Ave
(wheelchair accessible)

With presentations by:

  • Jessica Yee, Executive Director of the Native Youth Sexual Health Network
  • Gary Kinsman, co-author of “The Canadian War on Queers”
  • Ashley Fortier, Q-Team
  • Zaheen, Agitate! Ottawa

Suggested donation $5-10, no one turned away
Advance tickets available at OPIRG Carleton (326 UniCentre), OPIRG-GRIPO (631 King Edward Ave, 3rd floor) Venus Envy Ottawa (320 Lisgar St), and Octopus Books (116 Third Ave)

Talk descriptions:

>> Two Spirited Indigenous Feminist Freedom Fighting with Jessica Yee <<

Jessica Yee is a self-described Two Spirited Indigenous Feminist Freedom Fighter – and as such will outline how frameworks like reproductive justice and movements like Indigenous feminism come into play with her work with Two-Spirited youth specifically as the founder and Executive Director of the Native Youth Sexual Health Network – currently the only Aboriginal organization in North America to work within the full spectrum of reproductive and sexual health.

Jessica Yee is a 23 year old Two Spirited young woman from the Mohawk Nation. She is the founder and Executive Director of the Native Youth Sexual Health Network, a North America wide organization working on issues of healthy sexuality, reproductive justice, cultural competency, and youth empowerment.

>> Remembering Revolt and Resistance: Queer Struggles Against the Canadian National Security State with Gary Kinsman <<

Queer liberation started as a radical revolt against heterosexual hegemony in alliance with other groups fighting against oppression and for social liberation. This presentation actively remembers queer organizing against the Canadian national security state from the late 1950s to the 1990s. This resistance undermined and dismantled the Canadian War on Queers which had led to the purging, surveillance, and harassment of thousands of queer identified people. This presentation draws from the just-released book “The Canadian War on Queers: National Security as Sexual Regulation” which will be available for sale at the event.

Gary Kinsman is a longtime queer liberation and anti-capitalist activist. He is the author of The Regulation of Desire: Homo and Hetero Sexualities (1996), co-editor of Whose National Security? (2000), and Sociology for Changing the World (2006). He is a professor of Sociology at Laurentian University in Sudbury.

>> Queer Organizing Against Apartheid with Ashley Fortier <<

Drawing on a long history of queer solidarity organizing against South African apartheid, and in response to Israel’s branding of itself as a safe haven for queers in order to distract from its racist policies towards Palestinians, a growing movement of queer solidarity against Israeli Apartheid has emerged in recent years. This presentation will highlight some organizing successes and challenges throughout Canada and the U.S. and demonstrate the importance for queers to learn about and join in the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions campaign against Israel.

Ashley Fortier is based out of Montreal where she organizes around radical queer, prisoner justice, and Palestine solidarity struggles. She’s also a part-time activist researcher with the Collectif de recherche sur l’autonomie collective, works as a coordinator at QPIRG Concordia, and hopes one day to complete her graduate certificate in Editing and Publishing from Ryerson University.

>> Agitating Ottawa: A Local Perspective on Queer Anti-Racist Organizing with Zaheen <<

Think Ottawa’s bureaucratic and stuffy reputation is a drag? Unfortunately, this reputation has permeated many facets of our community, including the activist and queer communities. Anti-racist and queer organizing has never been easy in this city, but we have definitely come a long way. Zaheen from Agitate!, a local collective for queer people of colour, will address some challenges in doing this type of organizing in our city, as well as successes and ways we have overcome and continue to overcome these challenges.

Zaheen is a local community activist and has been a member of Agitate for almost 5 years. She is also involved with other community organizations such as Ladyfest Ottawa, SASC, and has recently joined the staff at OPIRG-GRIPO as one of their Coordinators. In her spare time, she likes to eat ice cream, be a Muslim heathen, and rock out to Whitney Houston.

* * *

Endorsed by the CUSA GLBTQ Centre for Sexual and Gender Diversity, the CUSA Womyn’s Centre, the CUSA Aboriginal Service Centre, the Carleton Centre for Aboriginal Culture and Education, OPIRG-Ottawa/GRIPO-Ottawa, the Indigenous Peoples Solidarity Movement-Ottawa, Agitate! Ottawa, Queer fAction, Q-Team, the Native Youth Sexual Health Network, PTS LBTTQ Women’s Health and Sexuality Program, Students Against Israeli Apartheid-Carleton, After Stonewall, Venus Envy Ottawa, and Octopus Books.

Brought to you by OPIRG Carleton . . . research, education and action on social and environmental justice issues, since 1980.

For more info, contact opirg@carleton.ca or 613 520 2757.

Film screening: H2Oil

Film Screening: H2Oil
‘Because the Tar Sands and Water Don’t Mix’
Presented by Polaris Insitute
Endorsed by IPSMO

The Film will be screened 4 times at the Mayfair Theatre:

  • Friday, November 27th at 7:00PM
  • Saturday, November 28th at 7:00PM – ***Please note that neither Tony (Polaris) nor Clayton (IEN) will be able to attend this evening’s screening as initially planned. Clayton will however be available on Sunday, November 29th***
  • Sunday, November 29th at 7:00PM – ***Clayton Thomas-Muller from the Indigenous Environmental Network will be available for a Q & A session after the screening***
  • Monday, November 30th at 7:00PM

Admission will be:
MayFair Members $5.00
Non-Members $9.00
Seniors & Children $6.00

ABOUT THE FILM

Ever wonder where American gets most of its oil? If you thought it was Saudi Arabia or Iraq you are wrong. America’s biggest oil supplier has quickly become Canada’s oil sands. Located under Alberta’s pristine boreal forests, the process of oil sands extraction uses up to 4 barrels of fresh water to produce only one barrel of crude oil.

H2Oil follows a voyage of discovery, heartbreak and politicization in the stories of those attempting to defend water in Alberta against tar sands expansion. Unlikely alliances are built and lives are changed as they come up against the largest industrial project in human history.

Ultimately we ask what is more important, oil or water? And what will be our response?

With hope and courage H2Oil tells the story of one of the most significant, and destructive projects of our time.

Press release: Barriere Lake governance

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Canada seeks to unconstitutionally abolish Algonquin’s customary government to avoid honouring agreements and recognizing legitimate leadership

Kitiganik/Rapid Lake, Algonquin Territory:– On Friday, October 30, 2009, Indian Affairs Minister Chuck Strahl sent notice to the Algonquins of Barriere Lake that he will not recognize their legitimate leadership, but instead impose elections on the community in April, 2010 by invoking a section of the Indian Act that would abolish the customary method they use to select their leaders.

The attempt at assimilation would be a violation of Barriere Lake’s constitutionally-protected Aboriginal right to their customary system of government.

“The Canadian government doesn’t want to deal with our Customary Chief and Council because we are demanding that the federal and Quebec governments implement agreements they signed with us regarding the exploitation of our lands and resources. So rather than recognize me, they want to do away with our customary system of government by which I was selected,” says Jean Maurice Matchewan, Customary Chief of Barriere Lake. “And while they are not recognizing our community’s legitimate leadership, Quebec has been taking advantage by illegally allowing forestry companies to clear-cut our forests in violation of our Trilateral agreement.”

Documents released under court-order indicate the Government of Canada was invested in quashing the precedent-setting Trilateral agreement, signed with Barriere Lake in 1991, and undermining Barriere Lake’s legitimate Customary Chief and Council.[1]

Jean Maurice Matchewan was reselected as Customary Chief on June 24, 2009, but the Government of Canada has refused to answer six consecutive letters sent by Barriere Lake’s lawyers, the last on Thursday, October 29, requesting that the Government recognize this result. The June leadership selection process was facilitated by Keith Penner, a former Member of Parliament who chaired the Special Parliamentary Committee on Indian Self-Government in 1983 that culminated in the historic Penner Report on Indian First Nations Self-Government. Penner concluded that Matchewan and his Council “followed and adhered to in each and every respect” Barriere Lake’s Customary Governance Code and are the “the legitimate and properly constituted leaders,” a result which should clear up confusion about the identity of Barriere Lake’s legitimate Customary Chief and Council.[2]

At a Federal Court hearing on September 24, 2009, Prothontary Tabib urged the Minister, in light of the new leadership selection, to withdraw his recognition of Casey Ratt, whom the Minister has been dealing with as Chief since March 2008.  This could allow the claims to leadership to be resolved through the Courts. Rather than recognize the June leadership selection or take direction from the Courts. Minister Strahl has decided to impose elections on Barriere Lake, alleging the community is “lacking the political will and the governance tools to resolve this matter” of their leadership selection.

“We already have a Customary Governance Code, which would work well if it were not for the internal interference of the Government of Canada. First the Government of Canada recognized and worked with a minority faction which didn’t respect our Customary Governance Code, in order to derail our signed agreements. Now that we have the Government backed into a corner because of our legal challenges and the recent leadership selection process, which was documented by credible witnesses, they are trying to win some more time by attacking our customs,” says Customary Chief Matchewan.

Section 74 of the Indian Act states that the Minister of Indian Affairs can impose an electoral system on First Nations with customary leadership selection processes. But Barriere Lake’s Customary governance code is recognized and affirmed by Section 35 of the Canadian Constitution, and the Minister is therefore prevented from changing their customary system of government.

Barriere Lake wants Canada and Quebec to uphold signed agreements dating back to the 1991 Trilateral Agreement, a landmark sustainable development and resource co-management agreement praised by the United Nations and the Royal Commission since 2001. Quebec signed a complementary Bilateral Agreement in 1998, but has stalled implementation despite the 2006 recommendations of two former Quebec Cabinet Ministers, Quebec special representative John Ciaccia and Barriere Lake special representative Clifford Lincoln, that the agreement be implemented. The 2006 recommendations include forest plans to harmonize logging operations with the Algonquin’s land use and revenue-sharing to give the Algonquins a $1.5 million share of the $100 million in resource revenue that comes out of their territory every year.

The Algonquin Nation Secretariat, a Tribal Council representing three Algonquin communities including Barriere Lake, continues to support Chief Matchewan.

– 30 –

Media contacts:
Jean Maurice Matchewan, Customary Chief of Barriere Lake: 819-435-2136

Notes
[1] http://barrierelakesolidarity.blogspot.com/2009/08/another-smoking-gun-top-diplomats.html
[2] http://ia341334.us.archive.org/0/items/2009-06-24AblPennerLeadershipReport_695/2009-06-24AblLeadershipReport.pdf

Decolonial Study Group

Decolonial Study Group

Sunday, Nov. 15 at 1pm
Exile Infoshop, 256 Bank St, 2nd floor (corner of Cooper)
Sorry this location is not wheelchair accessible
Everyone Welcome!

ipsmo@riseup.net
http://www.ipsmo.org

The Decolonial Study Group is a new project of the IPSM Ottawa.  We will be deepening and broadening our understanding and analysis of indigenous struggles for decolonization, social justice and revolution.  We will be doing this through readings, workshops, oral presentations, movies and so on.

The reading for this first Decolonial Study Group will be “Decolonizing Anti-Racism” by Bonita Lawrence and Enakshi Dua.

http://racismandnationalconsciousnessresources.files.wordpress.com/2008/11/bonita-lawrence-decolonizing-anti-racism.pdf

Ottawa’s First Decolonial Thanksgiving Dinner

Ottawa’s First Decolonial Thanksgiving Dinner:
community feast and celebration of indigenous struggle for land, survival and sovereignty

Featuring:

* Marylynn Poucachiche – Barriere Lake
Algonquin community activist

* Beverly Pyke – Akwesasne People’s Fire

* and more TBA

Sunday November 8
5:30 PM
Bethel Field House ( 166 Frank St.)
* located in the park behind the Second Cup, at Elgin & Gladstone
Free

anti-colonial struggle for land, survival and sovereignty

You’re invited to the first annual Decolonial Thanksgiving Dinner in Ottawa.. The DCT dinner is an autumn celebration bringing together indigenous and settler communities involved in land defense, urban indigenous people involved in diverse daily struggles for justice, and anyone else interested in learning from and supporting these diverse struggles.

In the past year, indigenous communities across Turtle Island have stood up against illegal developments, government repression and for indigenous sovereignty in their territories. There have been blockades in Akwesasne, Tyendinaga, Barriere Lake, and Six Nations. New developments have been reclaimed by Six Nations. There have been restorative justice programs across Turtle Island.   On the west coast, an indigenous resistance network has been mobilizing resistance to the 2010 Olympics. Families and communities of missing and murdered aboriginal women are working to find their stolen sisters, and engage indigenous and settler communities to end the epidemic of violence against indigenous women.

Across Canada the tension is mounting as the aspirations of anti-colonial peoples and colonial culture collide. In Akwesasne, the Canadian Border Services Agency is attempting to re-install the border crossing, and to arm the notoriously racist border guards. In an attempt to stifle ongoing direct actions for land rights in Tyendinaga, the OPP is attempting to bring in a contentious police station to the territory, in an attempt to stifle ongoing struggle for land rights. In Barriere Lake, there has been a renewal of clearcut logging, and the Quebec government has handed out illegal timber concessions on unceded land, in violation of the 1991 Trilateral agreement. The 2010 Winter Olympics are set to start in February on stolen native land, and the Olympic torch is coming through every large native and non-native community from coast to coast.

The dinner will be a potluck, so please bring a dish to share if you are able to. Food will also be provided, with both traditional indigenous foods and vegan fare being available.

Bethel Field House is a wheelchair accessible space, and the space will be child-friendly.

To RSVP, or for any questions or concerns, contact ipsmo@riseup.net or visit www.ipsmo.org for updates and further information.

Indigenous Sovereignty Week Oct24-31

National Indigenous Sovereignty Week site – www.defendersoftheland.org/isw

Indigenous Sovereignty Week is a pan-Canadian event intended to deepen the commitment of both Indigenous and non-Indigenous people for justice for Indigenous Peoples. The Ottawa Working Group will offer a range of discussion forums, cultural activities, educational opportunities and opportunities for action as a first step in solidifying relationships and localizing the struggle. Please come out and explore ways that you can join those who wish to address our colonial history and work for a sustainable future.

>> Click to download and print off posters: — 8.5″x11″ size11″x17″ size1/4-pg flyers

>> Note: we are video recording many of the ISW events, see the IPSMO youtube channel for everything we’ve got posted thus far

SCHEDULE:

Sat Oct 24
Celebrating Indigenous Cultural Resistance!
3:00-5:00pm – Workshop: Circle Stories Rising Strong: Love Your Voice, Share Your Song
6:00-10:30pm – Opening Ceremony; Community Dinner served with Buffalo Chili with bannock; Kick-off concert for Indigenous Sovereignty Week
all at Odawa Friendship Centre, 12 Stirling Avenue (at Scott)

Sun Oct 25, 1:00pm
Remembering Residential Schools
at Ottawa Public Library main branch auditorium, 120 Metcalfe St (at Laurier)

Mon Oct 26, 6:30pm
Indigenous Perspectives on the Environment
at Ottawa Public Library main branch auditorium, 120 Metcalfe St (at Laurier)

Tues Oct 27, 7:00pm
Fighting for Our Rights: Indigenous Women and Youth in an Urban Context
St. Joseph’s Church, 151 Laurier Ave E. (at Cumberland) [Hall entrance at 174 Wilbrod St]

Wed Oct 28
5:00pm – New Frontiers of Resistance: Exploring Kahnesatake and the Tar Sands (click on link for updated timing for the evening: 5:00pm Ellen Gabriel, followed by film, followed by speakers Garry Benson and Jack Woodward on Beaver Lake Cree Nation and the Tar Sands)
St. Joseph’s Church, 151 Laurier Ave E. (at Cumberland) [Hall entrance at 174 Wilbrod St]

Thurs Oct 29, 7:00pm
Defenders of the Land: National Speakers Tour
St. Joseph’s Church, 151 Laurier Ave E. (at Cumberland) [Hall entrance at 174 Wilbrod St]

Fri Oct 30, 6:00pm
Pachakut’i (Cosmic Upheaval): the Emergence of Indigenous Peoples
Alumni Auditorium, Jock Turcot University Centre, University of Ottawa

Sat Oct 31, 11:00am
Workshop: Indigenous Solidarity for Settlers
room 205, Jock Turcot University Centre, University of Ottawa

Sat Oct 31, 1:00pm
Celebrating Indigenous Sovereignty march and rally
meet at corner of Rideau and Sussex
(followed by closing ceremony for Indigenous Sovereignty Week, on Victoria Island)

Sat Oct 24 – Celebrating Indigenous Cultural Resistance

Indigenous Sovereignty Week
Celebrating Indigenous Cultural Resistance!

Saturday, Oct. 24, 2009
Odawa Friendship Centre
12 Stirling Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario
Free!

The kickoff for Indigenous Sovereignty Week in Ottawa, followed by a week of events focused on Indigenous struggles for justice.  Join us in celebrating Indigenous knowledge and culture through traditional and contemporary performance.

3 pm – 5 pm
Workshop: Circle Stories Rising Strong: Love Your Voice, Share Your Song
facilitated by: Moe Clark, Métis, and Emile Monnet, Algonquin – together the Bird Messenger Collective

We all have stories to share. Through acting and singing games, we will support participants in discovering their true voice and celebrate with pride their unique expression of that voice. Be ready to move a little, share and sing quite a bit and have a whole lot of fun! Perfect for teens and adults of any skill level with a willingness to share.

6 pm – 10:30 pm
Opening Ceremony
Community Dinner served with Buffalo Chili with bannock
Kick-off concert for Indigenous Sovereignty Week

Featured Performers:

  • Albert Dumont, Algonquin
  • Every Women’s Drum Group
  • Moe Clark, Métis and Emile Monnet, AlgonquinBird Messenger Collective
  • Mosha Folger, Inuit – Eskimocentricity
  • Suzanne Keeptwo, Metis of Algonquin/French and Irish
  • Christopher Herodier, Cree
  • Rachel Wuttunee, Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug
  • Luis Abanto, Peru

More about the performers:

~~~~

Albert Dumont
Algonquin, Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg
http://albertdumont.com/

Albert Dumont is an activist, a volunteer and a poet who has been walking the Red Road for over 20 years. He has published 3 books of poetry and short stories and several organizations, both native and non-native, are currently featuring his poetry in their promotions, among them are the Wabano Centre for Aboriginal Health and the Native Veterans Association.

He is the founder of the Pagahamatig Poetry Circle, the founder of the Turtle Moons Contemplations greeting card company and the founder of the Activists for the Protection of Aboriginal Arts.

Albert has dedicated his life to promoting Aboriginal spirituality and healing and to protecting the rights of Aboriginal peoples particularly those as they affect the young.

~~~~

Bird Messenger Collective

Moe Clark and Emilie Monnet come together to form “Bird Messengers”, an independent collective of two female Aboriginal performance artists. As young Indigenous artists, we feel deeply concerned with the destruction of Mother Earth and Indigenous ways of living. We believe that our ancestral ways of prayer, peacemaking and healing are vitally needed today. It is our intention to bridge the wisdom of Indigenous peoples of the Americas, from the past, present and future generations, through storytelling and song. Our vision is to serve as messengers, follow the migration, and support the reconnection and reconciliation of the peoples of Mother Earth. Through ethical transmission, reflection and artistic action, we wish to celebrate traditional knowledge with contemporary performance. This is how we hope to contribute towards a better world.

Moe Clark
www.myspace.com/moeclarkspokenword

Métis sound artist Moe Clark fuses her unique understanding of performance narrative with traditions of circle singing and spoken word. With a background in voice, spoken word, and visual arts, she creates a lyrical style, steeped in ritual and poetic exploration. Her poetic songs resonate with the power to heal, to celebrate spirit and to connect with authentic purpose.

After her debut album release “Circle of She: Story & Song” (April ’09) Moe toured extensively across Canada and recently made her debut performances in Europe and South America. As a featured artist in the 2009 Maelström ReEvolution Poétique FiEstival in Brussels, Belgium, she performed alongside Wemotachi elder and storyteller Matotoson Iriniu (Charles Coocoo, Quebec). Her work will be published in a bilingual poetry book in Spring 2010 through Maëlstrom publications, with translations by Marseilles poet Pierre Guéry. Preliminary translations of the texts were performed bilingually with Guéry at the Maelström Festival also. Feature highlights include performances for the ’07-’08 Canadian Festival of Spoken Word, the 2009 festival voix d’Amériques, the 2009 Diverse as This Land Performance at the Banff Centre, and the 2007 CBC Calgary Poetry Face-Off. Moe has collaborated with and performed alongside established artists such as Ian Ferrier (Montreal), D.Kimm (Montreal), Sheri-D Wilson (Calgary), and Tanya Tagaq (Nunavut).

Aside from her poetry performance work, Moe has also stepped into larger artistic collaborations in areas of artistic production, composition and performance creation. In 2008 she collaborated with contemporary dancers Jenn Doan and Carmen Ruiz to create Transfiguration, an interdisciplinary performance show featuring dance and voice that ran to sold-out audiences in Calgary, AB. In Spring 2009 Moe collaborated with the National Film Board of Canada and film artist Emmanuel Hessler on a short poetry video entitled Circle Haiku, a production that involved translation work, compositional development and audio engineering. Most recently she received support from Bravo!Fact and other sources to create and direct a video poem for Intersecting Circles, a poem that won the 2007 CBC Calgary Poetry Face-Off and has since become a full-stage performance and part of a permanent archive collection in Northern Alberta. Continued collaborations include working with youth and adults on storytelling and writing workshops, performing with Ian Ferrier and his experimental group Pharmakon, and continuing to develop visual design work for festivals and other artists. Moe believes in the power of transformation and the continuum of the oral tradition through active involvement in communities, both locally and internationally.

Emilie Monnet

Born to an Anishinabe mother from Kitigan Zibi and a French father, Emilie was raised between the Outaouais and the Celtic coasts of France.  Her dual cultural heritage profoundly inspires her work as an artist and the stories she wishes to communicate.

In 2006 Emilie graduated from the three-year theatre program offered by the Native theatre company Ondinnok (in collaboration with the National School of Theatre of Canada). Since then, she has been working as a theatre artist and storyteller under the artistic direction of Yves Sioui Durand (Ondinnok), Peter Batakliev, and choreographer Denise Fujiwara. In February 2009, she was granted an artist residency from the Maison Internationale du Conte to create a contemporary storytelling show on indigenous erotica and sexuality (Sans réserve : contes coquins et autres indienneries, February 2009).

Emilie uses voice as a medium for artistic expression and a tool for fostering a stronger relationship to her Anishinabe roots. As a member of Odaya, an all Aboriginal women’s drum group, she is able to share her gift of song and empower herself and others. In the past year, Odaya has performed extensively around Montreal and Canada. Performance highlights include the Festival du Monde Arabe with Gnawa master Hassan Boussou (Théâtre Maisonneuve ‘08), Quebec City’s 400th Anniversary at the SATosphere, and alongside Samian at the 2009 Musique Multi-Montreal Festival among others. The group has also performed at various Aboriginal events to promote social justice and raise awareness on Aboriginal issues. In the coming year they plan to record an album.

Prior to becoming a professional artist, Emilie worked for many years with grassroots organizations both in Canada and Latin America, building bridges between indigenous peoples worldwide. These experiences have nourished her critical thinking and strengthened her commitment towards community development and social justice. She strongly believes that performing arts and music are vehicles for healing, transformation and social change. A key part of her intention as an artist is to inspire others in finding their own voice through creative expression. She facilitates theatre and sound workshops to women prisoners and sex workers as well as First Nations youth in remote communities as a means to fight against criminalization of poverty. She is also a founding member of Artivistic, a collective that promotes interplay of art, communication and activism and holds a Masters in Peacebuilding and Conflict Resolution (Spain, Sweden).

~~~~

Mosha Folger, M.O.
http://www.myspace.com/moshafolger
http://www.inukhiphop.com/bio.html

M.O. brings a pure distillation of hip-hop and the polar ice cap. Producing beats and using complex wordplay that has been likened to Prevail of Swollen Members, M.O. “hopes to update southerner’s perceptions of Inuit life.” (Kate Porter, CBC Radio One)

M.O. was born in Iqaluit, Nunavut (Frobisher Bay, NWT at the time) during the coldest November in the town’s recorded history. A product of an Inuk mother and a Brooklynite father, he and two sisters were raised by their father in Iqaluit and in Vancouver, BC.

There were varied musical influences floating through M.O.’s childhood: from classical Indian music like the sitar and sarod, the Talking Heads and Nine Inch Nails to Kool Moe Dee just to name few.  This eclectic range of influences, coupled with M.O.’s cultural history and connection to the North, has led to a unique style of music, with beats and lyrics that soothe and inform and get your mind and body working.

You ain’t never heard nothin’ like this before!

~~~~

Suzanne Keeptwo

Suzanne Keeptwo is Métis from Quebec of Irish/French & Algonquin heritage. She is the proud mother of two, wonderful children. She juggles independent work as a writer, editor, public speaker, consultant and facilitator of Aboriginal Awareness & Cultural Sensitivity Training with her teaching career. She recently started  a master’s degree in Aboriginal & World Indigenous Educational Studies. She is also a freelance contributor to the Anishinabek News and writes poetry to help process the world around her. Suzanne is the recipient of two, consecutive Canada Council for the Arts writers’ grants for creative non-fiction and was recently short listed for her first work of fiction entitled Can’t Fool Me by the annual Writers Union of Canada short story competition.

An advocate for Aboriginal rights, Suzanne has volunteered extensively on various councils, committees and boards throughout the region; her work includes co-developing Aboriginal Education policies, Anti-racism documents, and Traditional Healing Justice programs.

Her true passion will be revealed in her next work of non-fiction which is about Traditional Aboriginal Spiritual Teachings and how to apply them in modern, mainstream society.

~~~~

Rachel Wuttunee

Rachel is from Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug in north western Ontario and Red Pheasant Saskatchewan.  Her name is Kesigatic Sagastas Saali Rachel Wuttunee and she is from the Bear Clan. She has two daughters Niteh and Miyosiwin and lives in Nanaimo, aka Snuneymuxw Territory on Vancouver Island BC.  She received a Bachelor of Arts Degree in First Nations Studies from Vancouver Island University (VIU) June 2008, and has committed to a one year volunteer term as an Aboriginal Mentor at VIU.

Rachel has worked in many First Nation communities as an outreach worker on an administrative capacity, which included raising public awareness as well as providing entertainment.  Her highlights include facilitating workshops with the youth and incorporating First Nation culture and language into hip hop music.

Rachel has been appointed the youth representative of her nation, Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug, on International Issues.  She is also experienced working as a positive Aboriginal role model in many Native communities.  A large portion of her workshop is centered on colonization and its intergenerational impacts and the reclamation of Indigenous cultures and traditions.  She believes that by reinforcing our culture via participating in the ceremonies that honor the Earth and our bodies, we will help our people reclaim their lives.

Rachel also worked with the Cowichan Tribes Youth Pilot Project to promote First Nations skills related to the media.  During which time she created a music video called Learn Off the Land to teach people about First Nations culture http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lpw8I-1lWpM. Throughout her life she has modeled various First Nations designs including Bruno Henry from Ontario, and Trish Shaunassy, from Alert Bay British Columbia, as well as touring Europe twice with Pow Wow Dance Group White Braid Society and with her father Winston Wuttunee.

In October 2008, she went to a Water Policy Forum, which was held in Garden River ON where the First Nations declared their jurisdiction over all waters in their territories. In March 2009, Chiefs of Ontario hired her to present this declaration at a youth forum in Kenora days before it was released to the public.  In December 2008, she went to Indigenous Cooperative on the Environment Elders Council in Ottawa where solutions were presented from many nations on environmental issues.  She also presented this information for Chiefs of Ontario at Youth Council.

Her previous work includes Coordinating a 24 week youth work experience program called Higher Elevation for Snuneymuxw First Nation.  This program was eight weeks of skill building and career searching, four weeks of community work in Snuneymuxw Territory and twelve weeks of work placement.  All the participants secured employment after the program was completed and four of them went on to treatment centre’s to continue their healing journey.

Since January 2009, Rachel has done work with Vancouver Island University presenting on Women and Self-Governance to the fourth year First Nations Studies course.  She has also MC’d the Welcoming feast, performed for Aboriginal Visitation day, feasts, and worked on leadership development with the FN Land is Life class.  She also got one of the participants from the work experience program to help her work on a research contract with BC Aboriginal Child Care Society interviewing elders on traditional methods of child rearing.  She is told the report will be published and used to develop the curriculum for Aboriginal Head Start programs in BC.

Rachel is currently working with the Chiefs of Ontario on two different jobs.  She is doing note-taking/coordinating for the nuclear waste management meetings, and creating a song for their health department on healthy lifestyles, culture, and respect for tobacco protocols.  All of the work she has done with First Nation’s communities is put into her music so she can spread the information to the youth in a positive way, which can be reinforced at anytime with the hit of a play button.