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Sunday, November 18, 2007

Birch Bark Biting preserved by coincidental names

"I was born at Midnight Lake, Manitoba," explained Angelique Merasty Levac, about the far northern reaches of central Canada. "It is bush and nobody lives there. Once in a while a few of my siblings or family members traps there." Angie holds close memories of a distant place spent with her grandparents in the decades of the 1950s and 1960s. It was a Cree people’s playground and belonged to no one else.

Angelique Merasty Levac
"I lived beside a nice lake," and enjoyed the company of loons going 'co-co-op' in the morning hours. Angie recollects, "My grandparents tried to teach me how to trap when I was six years old." It was a tiny squirrel trap set under a bundle of roots at the base of a tree near the lakeside, not far from the family dwelling, a large canvas tent.
Her grandmother, she recalls, provided explicit instructions about the patience of trapping, leaving the site alone to permit the process to take its course. Little Angie waited till grandparents went to sleep and approached her fledgling trap line to see if she was enriched.
She stuck her six year old hand into the squirrel-sized cubby hole and trapped herself, snap. Ouch. So she hollered with an affinity for the squirrel that wasn't there and recalls a painful few minutes by inspecting her long, feminine fingers on both hands. It was the end of Angelique Merasty Levac's life as a trapper and a few families of bushy tailed squirrels have reason to chatter in gratitude.
Those years in the lakes district straddling the Manitoba-Saskatchewan border were similar to a nomadic way because Angie’s grandpa found it necessary to break camp and find a different place every few weeks. He was a trapper, "My grandpa never lived in one place," and packed the large tent and barrel stove to set off looking to camp at the right spot. It was a lean existence.
"I used to help my grandmother gather branches she used to make a floor inside the tent," and, "there was nothing to play with when I was a child. Do you know what my toy was?" She told her grandmother she wanted a doll. “We had a flour sack and she tied up the bag into a rag doll, eyes made from the soot of the fire; that was my doll.”
At nine years of age Angie began to spend more time with her mother and less time with her grandparents, because she would be more help to her mother raising 12 children on the Lynn Lake railroad line in northern Manitoba. She went out with ladies on berry picking sojourns, blue berries found in burned out areas, cranberries found in forested places.
It was the cranberry picking trips where she saw the women take a rest and conduct little competitions. They would peel birch bark and make pieces of art with their teeth but Angie was too young to think much about it. It was a first impression of the way the ladies made social exchanges while causing artistic impressions by birch bark biting that she adopted as a fast disappearing cultural practice.
Angelique Merasty Levac has become a Cree cultural icon and reigning queen of a disappearing form of First Nation culture. Over the past three decades Angie has garnered a lot of attention for the artistic skill at birch bark biting. She has beautiful straight teeth with which to take on the task of an ancient artistic craft.
In an oddly important coincidence her teacher of the art was also named Angelique Merasty. The elder Angelique Merasty has passed away and almost miraculously passed the legacy to Angelique Merasty Levac under the most difficult conditions imaginable.
The reason the younger Angelique was found to return to the art form is partly owed to bingo, for the mentor Angelique Merasty was one day sitting waiting for a ride to bingo and was, miraculously, in the company of an anthropologist while she waited. To pass the time she reached over and peeled a piece of birch bark off a log and bit into it until the art was born. The taxi arrived and she cheerfully left it to the professor, who promptly sent it to an archivist and writer.
Soon an article appeared detailing the art and the artist, who had been interviewed and expressed a wish to pass the craft onto someone before it was forgotten. Angelique the student saw the magazine article when she was 24 years of age. It is important to realize where our Angie grew up. She did not speak English until she was about 12 to 15 years of age, and only spoke Cree. (This was prior to Bill C-31 and she had no access to school for her mother had been stripped of her status by her marriage to a Metis man.)
Our Angie did not read English until she taught herself by reading the Holy Bible. By the time she was 24 she was able to read and stood amazed to see her name described in  a magazine at a store. She stared at the magazine story about Angelique Merasty, not herself, but her name, who was a practitioner of an ancient art form, a Cree culture artform, and this same Angelique Merasty described in the article how she, "would like to pass this Native art form onto another."
Our Angie had those recollections of the ladies in the berry patches taking a respite to bite into the birch bark and she decided thereabouts that the passing ought to be to herself.
She credits her worship of God, "The Lord put that in my heart. Since I did it, it opened doors that I never dreamed of," including a visit to Bill Cosby in Philadelphia, USA, with a guest appearance on his remake of the TV classic 'You Bet Your Life.' She was interviewed by Keith Morrison on CTV, and appeared on BCTV, APTN, the Knowledge Network, and in numerous print articles, including this one in the nationwide Native Journal. (For more information about Angelique’s art email her at angeliquesnativearts@yahoo.ca)

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Fraser River Salmon Table Society meetings devise long-term strategies for sustainable salmon returns

The Fraser River Salmon Table Society is working toward consensus, said Richard McGuigan, PhD, co-chair of the salmon table (along with Marcel Shepert, Pacific Salmon Treaty) during the meeting in Prince George, BC, Sep 18 07, at the Prince George Native Friendship Centre.

Dr. McGuigan said, “Cooperative Decision Management is the way to achieve consensus,” for the fledgling table society.

By this emerging method interest-based negotiations are conducted through (three) stages and everybody abides by a final consensus. Cooperative Decision Management allows no veto to any party, and is not co-management, which, “has a negative reputation and gives regulators a lot of power,” said co-chair McGuigan.

The salmon table process must respect the ability of First Nations to represent their constituencies, said Doug Kelly, Sto:lo Tribal Council, “especially regarding the inter-tribal treaty process.” The table is open as long as Aboriginal rights and title are respected.

David Moore worked on table planning, “One goal of the salmon table is to create transparency in marketing, ultimately to resolve problems like selling caviar for as low as 11 cents per pound and finding out it fetches $15 a pound in the US food market.”

This transparency is the goal of a Siska First Nation demonstration project, to, “catch, process, and sell their fish harvested from a fish wheel,” with approval of CFIA, BC Food Safety Act, and BC Centre for Disease Control.

Salmon is a commodity from the wild realm, and salmon is still largely misunderstood in terms of behaviour and even physiology

Moore explained, “We have learned colour of the flesh is not determined by how far up the river the fish has gone,” a previous assumption, “rather, maturity is the determinant in quality and colour of the flesh.”

This is interesting because the old view was the farther up the river salmon were caught the less red and more dark the flesh would be (and dark is inedible). Now upstream fishers can join the mainstream market.

“The key is flexibility in marketing,” said Moore to the table society meeting.

He said, “Micro-processing can be done profitably without over-capitalization.” A boondoggle may exist in the changing provincial management of food health via Regional Health Authorities in BC.

The BC government says on the internet, “This structure, introduced in December 2001, modernized a complicated, confusing and expensive health care system by merging the previous 52 health authorities into a streamlined governance and management model.”

Today, said Moore, “these regional health authorities are charged with supplying permits required for the catching processing and selling of fish.”

The commercialization of fresh caught salmon may be advanced through a new process, noted Moore, now including a specific container for storing a fish, a card-board, wax-coat that preserves ice and fish together for the few hours required to get a fish a proper larder.

The problem is, however, a lack of fish to market. Teresa Ryan works in Vancouver as a fish biologist on the Pacific Salmon Commission and a scientist representing coastal First Nations. They were all asking the same question: where have all the fish gone?

A report in the Prince George Free Press said low salmon returns found along the Fraser River this year show nets producing a tenth the expected catch. As a result people are not going fishing.

Obviously this is a major concern in Canada’s North West Pacific where often the First Nations are losing of a way of life. Traditional salmon harvests unite communities but this year nobody goes to the river.

These people are facing a disappearing cultural diet, a staple food for the poor, and a lack of control over problems associated with the loss.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Multi-faceted Aboriginal Justice Plan from the UBCIC

The Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs (UBCIC) released the ‘Draft BC First Nations Justice Action Plan,’ May 23 07, to create a dialogue on justice. It begins discussing pre-existing culture and ways of life, governance never ceded, and laws respecting peace and balance as inherent principles in justice. STORY continue after picture 
 
 Any justice plan must reconcile accused, victim, and community. Presently justice disseminates racial discrimination apparent from a disproportionate First Nation incarceration rate, in which, 3% of Canada is Aboriginal but Canada’s prisons hold populations averaging 18% Aboriginal (and 20% in B.C.).
 
The draft discusses collective responsibility for health and well-being of the First Nation communities and land. Justice is a primary concern of all the governance accords, including among these, a New Relationship signed with the province of B.C. in ‘05.
 
Agreements are based on respect, recognition, and accommodation of Aboriginal rights and title, in addition, adding parity to the First Nation standard of living lies at the heart of justice. First Nation legal standing is crucial, derived direct from law, and constitutionally recognized as an inherent right of First Nation governance.
 
In Kelowna, BC, in ’95, a Transformative Change Accord was signed by First Nations Leadership Council, the Government of Canada, and the Province of B.C., and focussed on closing the socio-economic gap.
 
"First Nations jurisdiction over justice programs within First Nations communities,” will reduce overrepresentation in prisons and eliminate ‘systemic discrimination’ within the justice system.
 
The draft said, the purpose of First Nation justice is to, "maintain peaceful relations and harmonious co-existence between all elements of creation.”
 
The draft said, justice aims at decreasing First Nations over-representation in prisons. The draft discussed holistic approaches in healing through recognition of First Nations jurisdiction.
 
UBCIC wants legislation to "establish our own justice system,” and increase the importance of First Nations (ancestral) governance in criminal justice. The draft discussed initiatives of shared decision-making based on governance, healing strategies, and justice programs within communities.
 
The draft calls for diversity and creative new processes using traditional knowledge and current research. The draft anticipates government-to-government agreements written with "common visions” about administrative capacity and infrastructure, legal recognition, and procedural integration of First Nations justice into policing, courts, and corrections.
 
The draft discussed the Aboriginal Justice Strategy: the federal justice website says, "The AJS was designed to help establish policies and programs that will be the foundation of long term administration of justice improvements within the framework of the Canadian law for Aboriginal people.”
 
The AJS was established in ’96 with five year mandate, and renewed in 2001, and UBCIC wants it renewed again. Aboriginal justice incorporates First Nations knowledge and mentoring, cultural awareness, and cross-cultural trained personnel, under direction of a First Nations Justice Council.
 
Improving public safety is the paramount concern of justice, said the draft. Policing and correctional services require meaningful input as to how First Nations obtain equal access to police services. Current pilot projects, like "Community Safety Constables” require adequate resources.
 
The draft suggested a provincial level First Nation Police Commission and Commissioner and called for more corrections officers.
 
Corrections services need facilities for the relevant cultural experience; reintegration to society must be accessible through Aboriginal representation on the National Parole Board. Sentencing panels must be composed of First Nations input, and directions in police priorities must enhance First Nation justice plans.
 
A strategy of transparent communication will allow justice to enter discussions on a high note of prevention. A First Nations Justice Council would include oversight of relationship-building; it would conduct open dialogue, both community-based and culturally relevant.
 
UBCIC wants business engaged in a dialogue, and the draft calls for cross-culturally trained police to assist First Nations in management of justice programs in their communities. These communities want direct input into selection procedures for police in their communities.
 
The draft pointed to common objectives about rehabilitation. Restitution for crimes on Indian Reserves should be arranged by revenue sharing fines as another step in harmonizing justice. First Nations crime follows the same trends as other communities, and they need assistance to prevent gang violence and organized crime or recovery from vandalism.
 
Public education must address systemic racism. The draft discusses importance of First Nations Police officers within communities on and off-reserve. First Nations officers of the court must be cultivated; only this way can equal access to justice programs and services be created.
 
Public safety is an overarching concern of justice. UBCIC intends their plan to be comprehensive community planning with locally-inclusive tri-partite agreements.
 
The draft said a lot of UBCIC First Nations are clamouring for justice in fisheries and wildlife, and the draft calls for restorative justice programs specific to these inherent rights. In the course of the past century people became hampered from protecting traditional and sacred sites.
 
The draft calls for participation on justice panels and the end of over-representation on fishing charges. Protection of First Nations fishing and hunting must include a dispute resolution protocols and a new jurisdiction of conservation courts.  An interesting gambit called for, "First Nations Title and Rights,” to be, "affirmed by government on occasions designed to mark the restorative/reconciliation process.”
 
Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) must be enshrined in legislation, and policy changes to education must include revitalized First Nations languages. Strategies for community health and safety, of children and families, must become culturally appropriate.
 
First Nations need grassroots facilities like safe houses for women and children with programs providing mediation, counselling, and legal support. Youth interventions, restorative and traditional justice resolution, and rehabilitation, must all turn community-centred, culturally relevant, and restorative in character.
 
The draft discusses teaching First Nation children individual rights and listening to them to increase protective measures for children, which would build and improve community relationships beneficial to children. 
 
The development of justice, "must transcend spatial boundaries of the reserve.”  New capacities in urban centres will provide tools for crisis intervention on family traumas and reduction of re-victimization.
 
Research continues worldwide on Indigenous law, Canadian First Nations law, rights, title, traditions, values, and cultural preserves. The draft calls for hearing the Elders, whose influence and advice belongs at any table with conventional government policy-makers.
 
The UBCIC is concerned about justice in remote communities, their education, sensitivity training, disclosure, and reporting of statistics. These communities need access to understanding of their own cultures, insightful early childhood experiences, and an end to grinding poverty.
 
These communities also require peacemaking programs and parenting circles to bring children into awareness of justice mechanisms. UBCIC wants an end to duplication of services, but First Nations must increase dialogue about troubling and sensitive issues like Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, HIV/AIDS prevention, and other preventable conditions.
 
Reconnecting children to healing environments and providing professional delivery of justice programs and services stems from the development of the First Nation Education Steering Committee (FNESC).
 
Additional social measures include encouragement of First Nations to participate as jurors. Provision of information about programs and individual rights must occur in newly conceived and funded programs and services, to begin increasing the capacity of First Nations justice.
 
First Nation justice workers often serve multi-dimensional roles in a revolving door justice system. They need positive linkages and networks to organizations to establish communications and linkages for input on things like outreach services and probation services, especially for remote communities.
 
The most important underlying long term strategy for social justice includes First Nation Early Childhood Development.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

CBSA watching cross-border travel by air, automobile, and marine

 Faith St. John is communications  manager  for the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) on the west coast. Faith said training underway imminently for Canadian border guards to be deployed in the fall (with the Beretta Storm 9mm handgun) to fulfill the announcement of the federal government this winter. In Budget 2006, the Government of Canada provided $101 million over two years to begin the process of arming CBSA officers and eliminating work-alone sites.

 The total funding earmarked for the Arming of CBSA officers and doubling up officers at work alone sites is $1 billion over 10 years. Ongoing annual funding totals $126.3 million. This initiative will establish an armed presence at Canadian land and marine Ports of Entry by arming and training 4,400 existing officers, including those performing enforcement functions in-land; Hire 400 new officers, who will be trained and armed, to address all work-alone situations; (when fully implemented, the total of armed officers [existing + new] will be of 4,800).

The CBSA is on track with its plans to begin arming the officers. "We are currently working with the RCMP to develop a comprehensive arming training program tailored to the duties, responsibilities and work environment of CBSA officers." Many policies will have to be developed and revised. The policies currently under discussion include, but are not limited to: the use of force and the use of sidearms; the wearing of protective and defensive equipment; the safe transportation and storage of sidearms and other defensive tools; and the reporting and investigation of use of force incidents.

"Throughout the implementation process, we are consulting with key stakeholders, including union officials," said St. John. The arming of border services officers and the elimination of work-alone sites will provide greater protection to CBSA officers at the border, and to those engaged in specialized enforcement activities within Canada. Security at the border will be increased since CBSA officers will be trained and equipped to intervene and deal with situations where they are not currently in a position to respond.

"The introduction of sidearms will provide an additional tool for officers to protect themselves, their colleagues and the travelling public. The CBSA is committed to ensuring that this initiative is implemented properly, safely, and without undue delay," said Derek Mellon, CBSA media liaison in Ottawa. 

Armed officers will be able to respond to a broader range of situations before involving police response The first group of armed officers will be in the field by August 2007. By March 2008, between 250 and 300 officers will be fully trained and carrying arms. "We are currently reviewing and examining opportunities to compress the initial estimated timeframe of the initiative," said Faith.

In addition to sidearms, Faith also discussed dealing with the longest unprotected border in the world, and was forthcoming about the improved design of the NEXUS  program. The CBSA worked with US Customs and Border Protection (US CBP) to design a program to expedite border clearance processes for low risk, pre-approved travellers into Canada and the United States.  A NEXUS card is an approved alternative to the US passport requirements.
 
St. John said the NEXUS program uses advanced technology to verify a person's identify - NEXUS Air uses iris biometrics and NEXUS Highway uses digital fingerprints to verify that the person presenting themselves for entry is the same one who has been pre-approved to enter Canada and the United States. The usual procedures still apply around declarations and duty, "except you are approved to take a faster route through customs," a Nexus route.
 
The three seperate programs:  NEXUS Air, NEXUS Highway, and NEXUS Marine have recently been amalgmated into one program - NEXUS. The Nexus system applies now on the highways, the marine entries (done via  telephone approval), and the original Nexus air service, which began in Vancouver. The cost is $80 CDN or $50 US for five years  and is open to Canadian and US citizens and permanent residents.
 
Air mode was orignally in Vancouver  and is now available at Toronto's Pearson Airport.  It will be coming soon to: Montréal-Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport, Ottawa Macdonald-Cartier International Airport, Edmonton International Airport, Calgary International Airport, Winnipeg International Airport, and Halifax International Airport.
 
Nexus is offered at airports where they have US pre-clearance, clearing US customs in Canada before departing to the USA. Nexus has come to be considered the best alternative to passports and everybody is agreed it will work, "It was a joint initiative so of course we consulted closely."  For more information on NEXUS, or to become a member, visit 
www.nexus.gc.ca