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Unsettling Canada
Unsettling Canada: A National Wake-up Call | Arthur Manuel
20 posts | 5 read | 6 to read
As the son of George Manuel, who served as president of the National Indian Brotherhood and founded the World Council of Indigenous Peoples in the 1970s, Arthur Manuel was born into the struggle. From his unique and personal perspective, as a Secwepemc leader and an Indigenous activist who has played a prominent role on the international stage, Arthur Manuel describes the victories and failures, the hopes and the fears of a generation of activists fighting for Aboriginal title and rights in Canada. Unsettling Canada chronicles the modern struggle for Indigenous rights covering fifty years of struggle over a wide range of historical, national, and recent international breakthroughs.
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review
Lindy
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Pickpick

Excellent overview of Indigenous political & economic struggles over land rights. Sometimes while listening to this audiobook I would feel so frustrated about the way successive Canadian governments continue to ignore treaty agreements, Supreme Court judgements & our own constitution that I would either pace the floor or take a break. Narrator Darrell Dennis is Secwepemc, as is author Arthur Manuel; I appreciate hearing correct pronunciation.

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Lindy
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The first obstacle in defining our new one-to-one relationship with Canada will be the very heavy debt from the seizure and economic exploitation of our lands for 150 years since Confederation. This debt is enormous. I suspect that one of the main reasons that the Canadian government refuses to acknowledge our Section 35 rights is that it would leave it open to paying a percentage of the astronomical wealth that has been taken out of our lands.

Singout Absolutely. So much is about the stolen land. 3y
36 likes1 comment
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Lindy
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[On the 10 years spent drafting the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples]: Even referring to us as “Indigenous Peoples” was a battle with the [United Nations member] states‘ representatives, who wanted us referred to as Indigenous populations. That term would have kept us outside of the UN‘s basic rights covenants, which offers protections to all of the world‘s “peoples.”

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Lindy
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Went out of town for the day. #audiobook journey

LeahBergen Lovely! 😊 3y
Cathythoughts Gorgeous country 3y
Lindy @LeahBergen This was on Highway 33, also known as the Grizzly Trail, near Barrhead 3y
Lindy @Cathythoughts It‘s the landscape where I grew up. 😊 Aspen parkland, which is north of the prairies and south of the boreal forest. 3y
51 likes1 stack add4 comments
review
Singout
Pickpick

An excellent personal narrative, interwoven with a lot of info about policies and structures, both Canadian and global, and how they have impacted Indigenous people in Canada. Manuel starts in the 60s, sometimes with some flashbacks, using his own story as an activist to explain complex colonial policies and structures and creative acts of resistance.Lots that I knew snippets about hang together more clearly now.
#Nonfiction2021 #NativeAuthor

Riveted_Reader_Melissa Sounds good…stacking 3y
6 likes1 stack add1 comment
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Singout

Indigenous peoples need to understand that the fundamental issue is our land, and the natural wealth that it produces. Our biggest strength is in the economic uncertainty that our legal, constitutional, and political actions create for the status quo. Canada and the provinces have gotten used to the colonial privilege of having the final say on resource development in our Aboriginal and treaty territories. This must be changed.

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Singout
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The Hague conference started out well with a majority appearing to hold fast to the principle of prior and informed consent of Indigenous peoples. This stance was not purely altruistic. The world had taken note that while Indigenous territories take up one third of the Earth‘s surface, they contain two thirds of the planet‘s biodiversity. Removing Indigenous consent would open the door to Wild West industrial development.

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Singout

For both the Canadians and the Americans, the trees were simply a commodity to be extracted. For our people, the forest included the salmon streams, the cultural sites, and the hunting and gathering sites. We supported ecologically culturally sustainable logging, but not the sort of destructive logging that continues to be carried out in our forests. I was not going to allow our proprietary interest in the forests to be reduced to cents per foot.

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Singout

The hardest part of being chief is confronting the real destitution among community members. I was most shaken by those people who were asking for mercy from a really uncaring and unfeeling society. And there is nothing you could do. You could blame them for not doing enough to help themselves, but you know that they are not going to get anywhere unless there‘s a major change in our society.

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Singout

It is another sad commentary on our place in the world that what struck me most about Spy Hill [jail] was how superior the food was to what they served us at residential school...Even then I understood instinctively that the simple injustice of feeding Indian kids food below the standards that you‘d feed jail inmates was a symbol of and very much part of the vast system that placed my people at the bottom of the heap in Canadian society.

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Augustdana
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So yesterday was Canada Day, and I have recently been reflecting on my history degree and realizing that there are a lot of gaps. I‘ve been reading more books by Indigenous authors the last few years, but obviously I need to do better. Here is a list from the Edmonton Public Library on how to help decolonize our minds. https://epl.bibliocommons.com/list/share/69130658/1142145167

review
xicanti
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Pickpick

Another must-read for all residents of Canada. Arthur Manuel lays out his personal history of Indigenous activism on the national and provincial levels, with particular attention paid to the Canadian legal system's failings and to the environmental impact of the atrocities committed against Indigenous peoples. It's a heavy but necessary call for justice and change.

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xicanti
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I twisted my ankle this morning. Boooooooo. Guess I'll get some reading done today.

cobwebmoth Oh no! Hope it feels better soon! 6y
xicanti @cobwebmoth it's not TOO swollen, so I've got my fingers crossed it's okay by tomorrow or Monday. 6y
AmyG Feel better. 6y
See All 6 Comments
xicanti @AmyG it's already a lot better. Whew! 6y
silentrequiem Oh no! 6y
xicanti @silentrequiem thankfully, it wasn't a serious twist. I've still gotta be careful when I sit cross-legged, but I can walk and take stairs no problem. 6y
29 likes6 comments
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xicanti
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Gonna do a little #bookandbeer once I tear myself away from the hockey game.

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xicanti
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My Sunday morning involves nonfiction and leftover fried rice.

42 likes2 stack adds
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xicanti
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Important nonfiction + delicious drink.

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xicanti
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I went WILD on my first library run in ages.

Mindelan Loved Ladycastle! 7y
xicanti @Mindelan I'm excited they had it on the shelf! 7y
35 likes2 comments
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Moonpa
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#canuckswithbooks
My first book package will be sent out today! I'm excited to get started!
#canadagoespostal

Book_in_hands 🇨🇦🙎🏼 7y
30 likes1 comment
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tournevis
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Guess what is getting mailed Monday morning!

#canadagoespostal #canuckswithbooks

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tournevis
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Hey, fellow #littens living in Canada!

#CanadaGoesPostal has started and I'm in #CanucksWithBooks. Anybody else? Please say hi!

👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋

Moonpa Hi! I'm in this group and I wasn't following you - I am now! 7y
tournevis Hi! 👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋 7y
StephanieMarie Me too!! 😊 7y
tournevis @StephanieMarie 👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋 7y
21 likes4 comments