Respect

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Native Appropriations

All My Relations is full of great podcasts that are educational. This podcast specifically explores the topic of cultural appropriation and what it really is. Creators Adrienne and Matika care deeply about Indigenous representation and talk a lot about this subject. This is the opportunity for settlers to listen in on these conversations.

You Hold Me Up

Consultant, international speaker and award-winning author Monique Gray Smith wrote You Hold Me Up to prompt a dialogue among young people, their care providers and educators about reconciliation and the importance of the connections children make with their friends, classmates and families. This is a foundational book about building relationships, fostering empathy and encouraging respect between peers, starting with our littlest citizens.

Teaching Resources

IPInCH is an international collaboration of archaeologists, Indigenous organizations, lawyers, anthropologists, ethicists, policy makers, and others, working to explore and facilitate fair and equitable exchanges of knowledge relating to heritage. We are concerned with the theoretical, ethical, and practical implications of commodification, appropriation, and other flows of knowledge about the past, and how these may affect communities, researchers, and other stakeholders.This page of their website is full of teaching resources. With a focus on knowledge transfer there is a Tracing Roots Study guide. A guide called Think Before You Appropriate is a fantastic guide for creators and designers.

InuIt QaujImajatuQangIt: The role of IndIgenous knowledge In supporTIng wellness In InuIT communITIes In nunavuT

Extract from the article: "Indigenous worldviews are generally holistic in perspective and encompass interconnections amongst all aspects of life and place (Barnhardt & Kawagley, 2005). From this interconnected view of the universe, a sense of cultural identity, collective purpose and belonging is derived. Cultural wellbeing relies on the individual becoming situated within
a cultural worldview. For Inuit, being grounded in Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit supports personal wellness, but also contributes to a collective cultural sense of health and wellness which has sustained Inuit over generations.1 Inuit Elders in Nunavut are documenting Inuit worldview so that the strengths which have always sustained them will still be available to future generations."

Speaking our Truth

Canada's relationship with Indigenous people has suffered as a result of both the residential school system and the lack of understanding of the historical and current impact of those schools. Healing and repairing that relationship requires education, awareness and increased understanding of the legacy and the impacts still being felt by Survivors and their families. Guided by acclaimed Indigenous author Monique Gray Smith, readers will learn about the lives of Survivors and listen to allies who are putting the findings of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission into action.