Blog 2 - The Turtle Island News
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Powless continues successful run adding NAIG gold medal to collection

By Sam Laskaris Writer Six Nations’ Darcy Powless managed to do it again. During the past couple of years Powless has been involved with numerous championship squads or clubs that have managed to earn some hardware at prestigious competitions. Powless’ most recent addition to his medal collection occurred this past Saturday. He was an assistant coach with the Ontario boys’ under-19 lacrosse squad that captured the gold medal at the North American Indigenous Games (NAIG), which were primarily held in Halifax. Ontario downed British Columbia 11-9 in the championship final. “It was a really good game,” Powless said. “It was back and forth for the whole game.” Powless had originally agreed to serve as the head coach for Ontario’s team at NAIG. But these latest multi-sport Games in Nova Scotia...

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Ohsweken squad to compete at national fastball championships

By Sam Laskaris Writer The Ohsweken Redmen have a rather hectic August coming up. For starters, the local men’s squad will be participating at this year’s Canadian Native Fastball Championships, which will be staged Aug. 4-6 in Calgary. The Ohsweken squad had placed second in the senior men’s category at the 2022 national tournament held in Prince George, B.C. The local team also participated and placed second at the 2019 Canadian championships, when it was called the Ontario Smoke. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, both the 2020 and 2021 national tournaments were cancelled. Darrell Anderson, who will manage the local team in Calgary, is obviously hoping this is the year his charges can go a step further and win the national tourney. But he realizes that will be no easy...

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Rivermen split first two playoff contests versus Merchants

By Sam Laskaris Writer The Six Nations Rivermen opened their 2023 playoff schedule with back-to-back games this past Friday and Saturday. And the Rivermen, the local Senior B men’s lacrosse squad, had drastically different results in those two outings. For starters, the Six Nations squad hit the road Friday and squared off against the host Brooklin Merchants. The Rivermen muscled their way to a convincing 14-7 victory in that match, which was held at the Luther Vipond Memorial Arena. Members of the Six Nations club, however, certainly did not like the way things transpired the following night. The Merchants downed the Rivermen in Game 2 of their best-of-five Ontario Series Lacrosse (OSL) semi-final series 8-3. Despite only scoring a season-low of three goals in Saturday’s outing, held at the Iroquois...

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Six Nations Police had their hands full when a transport truck overturned

Six Nations Police had their hands full when a transport truck overturned at Fifth Line turning onto Chiefswood Road Monday (July 17) holding up traffic for most of the day. (Photo by Jim C. Powless)...

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‘Heartless’: Miller criticizes Manitoba government’s decision not to search landfill

By Kelly Geraldine Malone THE CANADIAN PRESS The federal minister of Crown-Indigenous relations is criticizing Manitoba’s government for standing in the way of a search for the remains of two slain Indigenous women believed to be in a landfill, as others say the jurisdictional battle is leaving the victims’ families and the City of Winnipeg in limbo. “We are willing to play a role, a very important role in this,’ Marc Miller said Wednesday at the Assembly of First Nations general meeting in Halifax. “But the reality of where we’re working is that the government of Canada can’t nationalize the garbage dump or the waste disposal system of the City of Winnipeg.’’ Dozens of protesters have blocked the main road of the Brady Road landfill demanding a search of a...

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Forensic audit not about casting blame, but addressing concerns, says committee chair

By Shari Narine, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter The Assembly of First Nations has moved one step closer to conducting a possible 10-year forensic audit. Chiefs on the second day of the AFN’s annual general assembly in Halifax July 12 voted in favour of an emergency resolution titled “Review of the past 10 years of Assembly of First Nations/National Indian Brotherhood audits’’. It allows the Chiefs Committee on Charter Renewal to begin the work to prove that an independent audit of the advocacy organization is required. Setting a scope for such an audit became necessary, said committee chair Khelsilem, because of a “lot of accusations, innuendo, different kinds of conversations’’ around the financial matters of the AFN. Before being ousted as national chief on June 28, RoseAnne Archibald had called for...

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Six Nations Elected Council administration plan updated

By Lynda Powless Editor A plan, almost four years in the making, detailing changes to band administrative services is coming together with current and future projects aimed at closing the gaps in services on Six Nations. Darren Jamieson, CEO of Six Nations Elected Council (SNEC) updated SNEC at its General Finance meeting Monday (July 17th). Jamieson has made the updated plan his priority for the past almost four years of the current council’s term. He says it shows changes to what SNEC considered community priorities like restructuring staff and departments to “optimize responsiveness” as well as movements in housing, infrastructure and more. His report included a 10-year succession plan and financial plan. Jamieson plans to pass the plan on to the community at this council’s first General Assembly. It will...

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Rain doesn’t dampen spirits at 96th annual Border Crossing

By Lisa Eisse Writer NIAGARA FALLS ONT – Not even hate speech or rain could stop the 96th annual Jay Treaty Border Crossing celebrations Saturday (July 16) marking Indigenous rights to cross the international border freely. The annual event began with a parade across the Rainbow Bridge from Niagara Falls NY to Niagara Falls, Ont., and moved northwards. The border crossing is organized annually by the Indian Defense League of America (IDLA) in commemoration of the Jay Treaty of 1794 marking Indigenous rights to continue to cross the border uninhibited. Not even incidents of hate speech prevented parade participants from making their way across the bridge. Event organizer and IDLA president Shirley Squire told Turtle Island News there were a few people who made hateful comments as the parade participants walked...

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The Feather Report – Black & White and Red All Over

Black & White and Red All Over Photos by Carl Pascoe & Rachel A. Powless By Rachel A. Powless Feather Reporter When Carl & I began our journey to become bird banders we studied, absorbed, and shared our knowledge as much as we could about our feathered friends. We were quickly informed about three birds that could slice through our skin with razor-like swiftness. The Northern Cardinal is a year-round local bird. The Common Grackle is considered a partial migrator spending winter throughout the southern US then migrates north as early as March. Enter the Rose-breasted Grosbeak. This songbird is a Neo-tropical species who spends winters in southern Mexico, the Caribbean, Central America & parts of northern South America. He has a voice like a Vienna Choir School Boy. Ornithologists...

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Find the women!

It all comes down to one question. What if it was your mother? Across the country residents, politicians, Indigenous communities are all calling for the same thing. Search Winnipeg’s landfill sites! The bodies of three Indigenous women, all victims of an alleged serial killer, are believed to be buried in Winnipeg’s Prairie Green Landfill and Brady landfill after the partial remains of another missing Indigenous woman Rebecca Contois were found in June at the Brady landfill. Winnipeg Police said they believe the remains of three more missing Indigenous women Morgan Harris and Marcedes Myran, also believed to have been the victims of an alleged serial killer, and an unidentified woman, now named Buffalo Woman by Indigenous leaders, are in Winnipeg’s Prairie Green Landfill. For months the argument has continued on...

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Six Nations Fall Fair to get $70,000 injection

Six Nations’ 154th annual Fall Fair got a boost to help run the much loved fair amid skyrocketing inflation. The Six Nations Agricultural Society (SNAG) asked Six Nations Elected Council (SNEC) for $60,000 in June and were told the finance department would look into it. The fair board returned to SNEC’s General Finance Committee meeting on July 17 to reiterate their needs, including 24-hour security and to help fund the midway, which was projected to cost more than $100,000. SNEC agreed to fund $70,000 from the Ontario First Nation Limited Partnership to help the fair run smoothly. “Due to the price increases this year, everything has gone sky high, but we’ve secured the midway rides and the balance is to be paid,” she said. “I think if you notice it...

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PHD student looking at First Nations autism programs

Six Nations may help Indigenous families nationwide deliver culturally appropriate autism programming. Grant Bruno, a parent of two autistic boys and a member of Nipisihkopahk (Samson Cree Nation), and a PhD student at the University of Alberta is studying autism within First Nations communities in Alberta and wants to expand his study to Six Nations. He came to Six Nations Elected Council’s (SNEC) General Council meeting on June 27 seeking approval of his application to the Ethics Committee to work with Child and Family Services, families and children who have autism. “Currently there is a severe lack of research on autism and Indigenous people in Canada,” he said. “I’ve been working with families and really seeing what’s happening, it’s seen as gifted in my community and I’m sure it’s the...

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Six Nations well represented at North American Indigenous Games

By Sam Laskaris Writer Dozens of Six Nations athletes are among those chasing some hardware at this year’s North American Indigenous Games (NAIG). In a news release the Six Nations communications department sent out it was revealed that a total of 49 local athletes are participating in the Games, which began this past Friday and continue until July 23. About 5,000 athletes, coach and team staff are taking part in the Games, which are primarily being held in the Nova Scotia capital of Halifax. Millbrook First Nation and Dartmouth are the two others centres that will be hosting some of the action. A total of 16 sports will be contested at the Games. Six Nations chief Mark B. Hill is thrilled to the local contingent is a rather large one....

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Sam Laskaris – BEHIND THE ACTION – Six Nations Rivermen

By Sam Laskaris Writer That time of the year that all athletes live to play for has arrived for the Six Nations Rivermen. Yes, the playoffs are here. The local Senior B men’s lacrosse squad played its final regular season contest of its 2023 campaign this past Friday. The Rivermen were downed 11-9 in overtime by the visiting Brooklin Merchants in a match staged at the Six Nations Sports and Cultural Memorial Centre. Six Nations ended up with an 8-6-2 record, presumably good for fourth place in the standings of its six-team Ontario Series Lacrosse (OSL) loop. We say presumably because ever since the OSL regular season concluded on the weekend, a lot has been going on behind the scenes. None of the four OSL playoff-bound clubs had announced their...

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Cultural sharing key part of North American Indigenous Games as sacred fire lit

By Michael Tutton The Canadian Press HALIFAX — Organizers of the North American Indigenous Games ignited a sacred fire on Saturday, saying the rekindling of First Nations culture is at the heart of the sports competition. “We set the goal at these games to have 50 per cent culture and 50 per cent sport, so we’re infusing cultural aspects into all aspects of the games themselves,” said games president George (Tex) Marshall in an interview after the ceremony. Recommended reads for you: Cultural sharing key part of North American Indigenous Games as sacred fire lit North American Indigenous Games officially open in Halifax as prime minister attends The 2023 version of the games is taking place at venues in Halifax, referred to as Kjipuktuk, along with events at Millbook First...

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Mixed results for Six Nations junior lacrosse squads

By Sam Laskaris Writer Six Nations’ three junior lacrosse teams had varying playoff results in the past week. The Six Nations Rebels, the local Junior B club, had the most success. That’s because the Rebels, who had finished with a perfect 20-0-0 regular season mark, managed to win their second round of the post-season. The Six Nations side downed the host Guelph Regals 10-7 on Sunday. With that victory the Rebels managed to capture their best-of-five Western Conference semi-final series in four games. The Rebels will now square off against the St. Catharines Athletics in a best-of-five conference final series, expected to commence in the next couple of days. Meanwhile, the Six Nations Arrows, a Junior A team, had their 2023 campaign come to an end on Monday when they...

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Growing number of youth are experiencing `eco anxiety’; experts say despair can be turned into meaningful action

 By Rachel Morgan  Local Journalism Initiative Reporter THE POINTER As graduating president of her high school’s environment club, Anita Wong knows a lot about individual acts to promote sustainability. Throughout her four years participating with the club, the Mississauga teen has helped make important changes at her school. The group has held workshops on upcycling, set up compostable cutlery for all school events and most recently opened a thrift store for a circular micro-economy. But while Wong leads such efforts, she knows the actions of youth won’t have large-scale impact unless governments and businesses move away from the fossil fuel industry. The constant nagging concern_which can turn into a prevailing fear that more and more young people are weighed down by_is hard for many older generations to understand. Those born...

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Shipping frenzy threatens Indigenous food security

 Matteo Cimellaro  Local Journalism Initiative Reporter Arctic shipping and the noise and environmental pollution left in its wake are driving narwhals and other animals farther away from those who depend on them. Lisa Koperqualuk points to the Inuit community of Mittimatalik (Pond Inlet), a northern Baffin Island hamlet with a population of around 1,500, as an example of how shipping has affected Inuit Nunangat, the Inuit homeland stretching through Russia, Alaska, Canada and Greenland. Over the past decade, the number of ships has increased in Mittimatalik’s waters. The increase of ships includes shipping vessels transporting iron from the Mary River Mine on Baffin Island 160 kilometres south of the community, as well as cruise and cargo ships, carrying both tourists and supplies to the North. It’s caused narwhals to veer...

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Canada’s Indigenous women forcibly sterilized decades after other rich countries stopped

By Maria Cheng THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TORONTO (AP)- Decades after many other rich countries stopped forcibly sterilizing Indigenous women, numerous activists, doctors, politicians and at least five class-action lawsuits allege the practice has not ended in Canada. A Senate report last year concluded “this horrific practice is not confined to the past, but clearly is continuing today.” In May, a doctor was penalized for forcibly sterilizing an Indigenous woman in 2019. Indigenous leaders say the country has yet to fully reckon with its troubled colonial past, or put a stop to a decades-long practice that is considered genocide. There are no solid estimates on how many women are being sterilized against their will, but Indigenous experts say they regularly hear complaints about it. Sen. Yvonne Boyer, whose office is collecting...

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