Worldviews of Indigenous Peoples in Canada – TEACH Journal


Initially revealed September 2024

By JoAnne Formanek Gustafson

A couple of months in the past, I participated in an interview about my expertise rising up in Treaty 3 territory. As ordinary, speaking about my life introduced me again to childhood moments with my mother, siblings, and prolonged maternal household. The tales are partially composed of my very own reminiscences, peppered with feedback provided by assorted members of the family. I don’t know the way correct the main points are, however the connections are actual and that’s what actually issues. The day of that interview additionally marked the start of this text.

Over the previous 15 years, I’ve had many discussions about what it means to be Anishinaabe. I’ve talked to different Anishinaabeg and different Indigenous peoples, my family members throughout Treaty 3 and past, and neighborhood members at house, close by, and throughout Turtle Island (North America). I’ve discovered from many educated individuals, in Western establishments and at neighborhood gatherings, with Anishinaabe from throughout the province and from pals in my kitchen.

The one approach I can share what I’ve discovered is to share my story. It begins on New Yr’s Eve, then branches out in several instructions, linking to essential teachings I’ve obtained through the years. These teachings have helped me put my very own experiences right into a conceptual framework that is smart, permitting me to see the Anishinaabe worldview alongside Western values. It feels proper to speak about this right here.

Miigwech bizindawiyeg / Thanks for listening to me.

* * *

It’s New Yr’s Eve, 2023, the top of a protracted, onerous 12 months. My associate, who had been sick for nearly a 12 months, left on his (spirit) journey in June and weeks later I used to be recognized with breast most cancers. I’ve three grownup youngsters, two grandchildren, and a canine. It has been so much to cope with.

On this New Yr’s night, I felt compelled to make a sacred hearth as a part of the ceremony I carry to carry area for my associate. My accountability is to do what I can to help his journey into the spirit world. Tonight, this features a hearth, together with choices of meals and asemaa (tobacco), which carries prayers. By following these teachings, I honour this beloved one and the continuation of his journey whereas additionally nurturing my very own therapeutic and wellness. I’m grateful for what I’ve discovered; though “bangii eta go ninitaa” (I solely know just a little bit), I’m comforted by doing what I can. I do know that Data Keepers are on the market to assist me once I’m able to ask.

The sacred hearth teachings I maintain got here from Judy Da Silva of Asubpeeschoseewagong (Grassy Narrows), a neighborhood positioned within the coronary heart of Treaty 3 territory. Whereas many Data Keepers reserve the position of keeper of the sacred hearth for males, Da Silva believes that ladies should additionally carry these teachings with the intention to take away boundaries that forestall them from accessing the essential ceremonies that strengthen the communities they—we—are constructing.

An activist with many years of expertise, Da Silva works inside her neighborhood to assist girls develop and carry the cultural practices and teachings of the Anishinaabe as instruments for therapeutic, wellness, and advocacy. Da Silva is aware of that sustaining the ties to the land, the medicines, the spirits, and one another is crucial to empowering communities, constructing the capability of ladies to guide, and supporting the religious, cultural, and bodily wants of her neighborhood. She exhibits us how Anishinaabeg (and different Indigenous peoples) can draw on the energy of our observe—constructed on 1000’s of years of residing on this land—to hold us via and past the struggles of the previous few hundred years.

I’m in awe of her, and but in particular person she is comfortingly welcoming and compassionate, humble and educated. Girls from many communities attend gatherings the place she shares what she is aware of, inviting others to take up their very own management after they’re able to step up. Girls like Da Silva empower us to be our greatest, comforting our fears about whether or not we all know sufficient to assist others; she assures us that we’re sufficient and that we solely have to preserve exhibiting as much as proceed to study. Judy Da Silva helps girls to take up management.

I’ll return to my childhood now. My title is JoAnne Formanek Gustafson. I’m Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) on my mom’s aspect, a member of Couchiching First Nation, positioned on the southern border of Treaty 3 territory on Wet Lake close to the place the lake flows into the Wet River. My father is Canadian-born, a baby of first-generation Polish Canadians. I had little or no contact with my dad or his household rising up, so my experiences and values got here virtually totally from my maternal household.

Like many Anishinaabeg (Ojibwe individuals), my maternal grandparents had been an enormous a part of the lives of my two siblings and me. They typically confirmed up at our home on the town with luggage of groceries; my mother was a single mom and relied on their assist to feed and dress us. After I was virtually seven years outdated, my siblings and I moved in with our grandparents for 5 – 6 years.

My grandparents’ home was positioned on the fringe of the reserve. We had solely two neighbours which included three different youngsters, all of them cousins. Summer time or winter, we spent most of our time taking part in exterior, working alongside the lakeshore via water or snow, or over the ice. We wore trails via the bush that carried landmarks we alone knew. Chilly climate was no deterrent—in winter we trekked throughout the lake with our toboggan in tow and peanut butter and jam sandwiches in our pockets.

We noticed the primary buds of spring, heard the frogs and crickets singing through the lengthy summer time days and evenings, and walked on “icebergs” throughout ice-out in spring. We discovered steadiness by leaping from rock to rock alongside the shore, and improved our flexibility by avoiding the branches that whipped at faces as we ran alongside the paths. Carrots had been plucked from the backyard and cleaned on pants earlier than we bit into the crisp, scrumptious flesh; alternately, handfuls of blueberries straight from bush to mouth quenched thirst and starvation. We had been on the land as a lot as we could possibly be. The land was our trainer.

Summer time season introduced many guests. My grandparents’ home was on the “canoe channel” that runs northwest/southeast alongside the western shore of Wet Lake, protected against tough climate and waves by a sequence of islands that additionally offers a resting place for travellers. There have been two First Nations communities positioned alongside this channel, in order a baby I regularly noticed Anishinaabeg paddle as much as the shore on their option to city.

My grandparents, fluent audio system of Anishinaabemowin (Ojibwe language, typically known as merely “the language”), would meet the guests as they landed and typically offered a experience to city just a few kilometres away. However they at all times began with a go to, talking with these family members and pals within the language, their shared laughter mixing with the musical move of the phrases.

I longed to know what they had been speaking about, and infrequently requested, however they might solely smile again, kindness exhibiting of their crinkled-up eyes and the always-present laughter. Now I do know that many of those older of us didn’t communicate Zhaaganaashiimowin (English) however they did acknowledge my curiosity nonetheless; a curious little one seems about the identical in any language. Like my grandparents, these individuals had been conditioned by the Indian Residential Faculties to not educate the younger individuals Anishinaabe language or ceremonies. They knew the hurt that the youngsters would expertise in the event that they practiced their tradition.

I ponder now how they felt protecting this a secret from us. Did my eagerness remind them of their very own experiences within the colleges? I’ve heard many Elders talk about how troublesome and the way painful it was to cover cultural information and practices from their youngsters and grandchildren, nevertheless, they knew this was the one option to shield them. I’ve discovered that we’ve all been impacted by the deep trauma that many generations of Anishinaabeg endured.

However I’ve strayed from the story—let me return.

Eagerness to study by no means left me, and in maturity I’ve had many alternatives to study the language and teachings denied me as a baby. By this I’ve discovered self-acceptance in my id as Anishinaabekwe (Anishinaabe girl), resulting in a sense of belonging inside my relationships with different Anishinaabeg.

Discovering academics and Data Keepers has helped me look again at my life and experiences and see the reference to the lands, the water, and all different residing issues in another way, in a approach that is smart to me. I’ve developed my very own understanding of how the Anishinaabeg (together with different Indigenous peoples around the globe) see themselves inside all that exists (all our relationships) and the way this shapes our values concerning the obligations we’ve got towards the land, the water, and the methods we as people act upon the earth.

This idea of worldview is the main target of a lesson plan that I lately created for TEACH’s Treaty 3 mission. It invitations college students to pause and think about how Anishinaabeg language and tradition creates a approach of seeing the world that’s completely different from mainstream Western worldviews in a Canadian and North American context. This essential, foundational understanding will put together college students to re-examine common misconceptions and myths as they start to contemplate the complexities that exist within the relationship between Indigenous peoples and Canada, inside the confines of treaties in addition to the Indian Act.

Educators differ in their very own information and expertise. As Justice Murray Sinclair defined in a 2015 interview, “for generations … public colleges have fed them misinformation about Aboriginal individuals.” It’s essential that educators actively search studying alternatives about Canada’s historical past with First Nations, Métis, and the Inuit, taking time to grasp the character of Indigenous beliefs, cultural practices, and languages.

Anishinaabe tradition and teachings differ from neighborhood to neighborhood, which is why it’s essential to search out studying alternatives near house. Creating lasting relationships with particular person Data Holders, Elders, and organizations will let you put together your classroom (and your coronary heart) to deliver Indigenous peoples into it. I encourage you to make this a private aim.

Lastly, I’ve a easy piece of recommendation for you. Unlearning and re-learning could be an emotional course of for non-Indigenous individuals. It’s possible you’ll expertise moments of grief and disgrace as you study. As tempting as it might be to debrief with an Indigenous colleague or useful resource particular person, that is one thing to strategy with warning, whereas making use of a trauma-informed lens. Keep in mind that Indigenous Data Keepers and Elders are already extending themselves to contribute to training. They’ve undoubtedly been impacted by private and intergenerational trauma. They’ll require time to take care of their very own wants and shouldn’t be anticipated or requested to hold the emotional load for an additional particular person.

Don’t despair—nice studying alternatives exist that may aid you work via these emotions. Many training unions and faculty boards provide workshops which can be designed to help you thru this course of and aid you perceive your personal emotional responses. You’ll cross via this discomfort and are available out with new views and expertise. I want you nicely on this studying journey and encourage you to be mild and curious, affected person and beneficiant.

Gigawaabamin miinawaa—I’ll see you once more someday!


JoAnne Formanek Gustafson has labored in a wide range of instructional roles, together with instructional assistant and school teacher, and at present works as an elementary faculty educator. She is an anti-racism advocate who encourages individuals to undertake practices that help and empower those that expertise oppression. Joanne is a member of Couchiching First Nation.

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