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Marginalization of Aboriginal Women

Provides a brief history of the marginalization of Indigenous women. Discusses traditional roles and power of Indigenous women and critiques the gendered discrimination of the Indian Act. A fantastic introductory resource giving a detailed yet general picture of the history of violence against Indigenous women in Canada, linked to specific legislation, with an extensive bibliography for further reading.

Ressources sur les Pensionnats

La Fondation Autochtone de Guérison (FAdG) est un organisme à but non-lucratif, d'envergure nationale et dont la gestion est autochtone, La FAdG a réservé cette page aux articles et autres documents desituée à Ottawa, établie le 31 mars 1998, à qui une subvention unique de 350 millions de dollars a été allouée par le gouvernement fédéral du Canada selon les recommandations du Rassembler nos forces – Plan d’action autochtone du Canada. Un mandat d’une durée de onze ans, se terminant le 31 mars 2009, a été confié à la Fondation autochtone de guérison dans le but d’encourager et d’appuyer, à l’aide de contributions financières et de recherches, des initiatives de guérison communautaires conçues et réalisées par les Autochtones, celles-ci visent le traitement des séquelles des abus physiques et sexuels subis sous le régime des pensionnats indiens au Canada, y compris les répercussions intergénérationnelles. La vision de la FAdG, c'est que les Autochtones auront, de manière significative, traité les effets de mauvais traitements subis dans les pensionnats et ils auront rétabli un plus grand bien-être pour eux-mêmes et les descendants des sept générations futures. Ce lien mène à une section du siteweb de la FAdG réservé pour des articles et autres documents de référence se rapportant au sujet des pensionnats. Il contient: un répertoire des pensionnats au Canada,un repéertoire des sources de finanement pour les activités de guérison communautire et, finalement, un répertoire de tous les documents publiés par la FAdG lesquels traitent aux aspèts divers des séquelles et comprisent des rapports officiells, oeuvres littéraires et disques CD, entre autres.

Chroniques de Nitinaht

« Ce long métrage documentaire de Maurice Bulbulian trace le portrait sans fioriture d’une communauté autochtone luttant pour mettre un terme à un héritage douloureux d’agressions sexuelles, d’inceste et de violence familiale. Pendant près de sept ans, le cinéaste primé a recueilli les témoignages des Ditidahts du village de Nitinaht Lake en Colombie-Britannique, après qu’un aÎné respecté de la communauté eut été reconnu coupable d’agressions sexuelles sur sa petite-fille. Grâce au courage des participants, ces récits ont joué un rôle déterminant dans le processus de guérison de la communauté, en permettant aux membres de partager ce qu’ils avaient vécu et de mettre fin au cycle de la violence sexuelle et aux conséquences dévastatrices du système des internats. Ce film doit être visionné avant d’être présenté à un public non averti car il comporte des propos qui pourraient choquer, en particulier des propos sexuels explicites. En anglais avec sous-titres français » (Description tirée de l’ONF).

The Education of Augie Merasty: A Residential school Memoir ( The Regina Collection

This memoir offers a courageous and intimate chronicle of life in a residential school. Now a retired fisherman and trapper, the author was one of an estimated 150,000 First Nations, Inuit, and Metis children who were taken from their families and sent to government-funded, church-run schools, where they were subjected to a policy of "aggressive assimilation."

Indian School Days

This book is the humorous, bitter-sweet autobiography of an Ojibwa who was taken from his family at age ten and placed in Jesuit boarding school in northern Ontario. It was 1939 when the feared Indian agent visited Basil Johnston’s family and removed him and his four-year-old sister to St. Peter Claver School, run by the priests in a community known as Spanish, 75 miles from Sudbury. "Spanish! It was a word synonymous with residential school, penitentiary, reformatory, exile, dungeon, whippings, kicks, slaps, all rolled into one," Johnston recalls. But despite the aching loneliness, the deprivation, the culture shock and the numbing routine, his story is engaging and compassionate. Johnston creates marvelous portraits of the young Indigenous boys who struggled to adapt to strange ways and unthinking, unfeeling discipline. Even the Jesuit teachers, whose flashes of humor occasionally broke through their stern demeanor, are portrayed with an understanding born of hindsight.

Fatty Legs: A True Story

Eight-year-old Margaret Pokiak has set her sights on learning to read, even though it means leaving her village in the high Arctic. Faced with unceasing pressure, her father finally agrees to let her make the five-day journey to attend school, but he warns Margaret of the terrors of Residential schools. At school Margaret soon encounters the Raven, a black-cloaked nun with a hooked nose and bony fingers that resemble claws. She immediately dislikes the strong-willed young Margaret. Intending to humiliate her, the heartless Raven gives gray stockings to all the girls — all except Margaret, who gets red ones. In an instant Margaret is the laughingstock of the entire school. In the face of such cruelty, Margaret refuses to be intimidated and bravely gets rid of the stockings. Although a sympathetic nun stands up for Margaret, in the end it is this brave young girl who gives the Raven a lesson in the power of human dignity. Complemented by archival photos from Margaret Pokiak-Fenton’s collection and striking artworks from Liz Amini-Holmes, this inspiring first-person account of a plucky girl’s determination to confront her tormentor will linger with young readers. *Ten Best Children’s books of the Year, The Globe and Mail USBBY Outstanding International Books Honor List PubWest Book Design Awards, Bronze Nautilus Award, Silver Skipping Stones Honor Book Information Book Award, Honor Book Best Books for Kids & Teens, starred selection, Canadian Children’s Book Centre First Nation Communities Read Selection Sheila A. Egoff Children’s Literature Prize finalist Book of the Year Award finalist, ForeWord Reviews Cybils, Blogger Literary Award nomination Saskatchewan Young Readers’ Choice Award nomination Hackmatack Award nomination Children’s Literature Roundtables of Canada Information Book Award nomination Golden Oak Award nomination, Ontario Library Association Rocky Mountain Book Award nomination Young Readers Choice Award nomination, Pacific Northwest Library Association

National Indigenous Women's Resource Centre Advocacy Curriculum

The Advocacy Curriculum is a great resource for social workers or teachers. The two part curriculum provides basic and comprehensive information on violence against Indigenous women and is paired with an advocacy skills section. Can also be used for public education, cross training initiatives, in-services and tream building. This is an American resource, but we think the information is still valuable for Canadian teachers.

National Indigenous Women's Resource Centre

Several national hotlines for victims and survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, sex trafficking and more. This is an American resource, but some of the numbers are 1-800, and a similar phoneline for Canadian callers is included on this list as well.

The Cultural Sociology of Anglican Mission and the Indian Residential schools in Canada

This book focuses on the recurring struggle over the meaning of the Anglican Church’s role in the Indian residential schools--a long-running school system designed to assimilate Indigenous children into Euro-Canadian culture, in which sexual, psychological, and physical abuse were common. From the end of the nineteenth century until the outset of twenty-first century, the meaning of the Indian residential schools underwent a protracted transformation. Once a symbol of the Church’s sacred mission to Christianize and civilize Indigenous children, they are now associated with colonialism and suffering. In bringing this transformation to light, the book addresses why the Church was so quick to become involved in the Indian residential schools and why acknowledgment of their deleterious impact was so protracted. In doing so, the book adds to our understanding of the sociological process by which perpetrators come to recognize themselves as such.

Tears in the Grass

At ninety years of age, Elinor, a Saskatchewan Cree artist, inveterate roll-your-own smoker, and talker to rivers and stuffed bison, sets out to find something that was stolen almost a lifetime ago. With what little time she has left, she is determined to find the child taken from her when she, only a child herself, survived sexual abuse at a residential school.

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