Blog 2 - The Turtle Island News
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Six Nations Elected council hands out awards

Six Nations Elected Council (SNEC) handed out a number of awards Saturday honouring community members for their work and volunterism. SNEC held its Annual Awards Banquet at The Gathering Place Saturday (Feb., 10), honouring a retired police chief, teacher and others their outstanding contributions to the community. The Wilma General Memorial Award is presented annually to a Six Nations community member(s) who embodies the spirit of volunteerism and works tirelessly for the betterment of families in the community. This year’s recipients were Lana Henhawk and Dorothy Russell-Patterson. Russell-Patterson as well as a strong community volunteer also has worked as the Six Nations Election Officer. SNEC awarded this year’s Community Treasurers awards to Natasha Longboat and Glenn Lickers. The award goes to individuals have shown exceptional stewardship in and around the...

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SN Ontario Works trying to be more accessible

Six Nations Ontario Works department is working to make assistance and employment more accessible while also looking into better options for the future. Sandy Porter, director of Ontario Works at Six Nations gave his monthly report to Six Nations Elected Council at its Political Liaison meeting on February 12 and said 589 members received Ontario Works in December about 300 of those single people, which is slightly more than months past, but he’s not concerned about the small rise. He’s working toward the future as clients and assistance in general. “When I look back there’s not a lot of change from month to month,” he said. “I’m looking at different parts of, or what it means to deliver social assistance within the 65 agreement, so what we have to do,...

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Six Nations teens to compete at lacrosse tournament in California

By Sam Laskaris Writer Six Nations will be well represented at a prestigious box lacrosse tournament that will begin this Saturday in California. The recently formed Haudenosaunee Jr. Selects Women’s Lacrosse program has entered two teams in the United States Box Lacrosse Winter Nationals, a tournament also known as USBOXLA. The event, which is being held in the city of Irvine, commences Saturday and continues until Monday. The Haudenosaunee program is entering a squad in the five-team girls’ high school division. This grouping is for players born between 2005-2007. Six Nations members that will compete on this club are Sofia Smith, Kallyn Martin, Teegan Jonathan, Kendyl Pollack and Rayleigh Kicksnoway. The Haudenosaunee Jr. Selects will also have a club in the girls’ junior varsity category, for those born between 2008-2010....

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Six Nations boxer captures Silver Gloves national championship

By Sam Laskaris Writer She didn’t have much competition. But Beth Smoke, a Six Nations member who lives in Sanborn, N.Y., is now a two-time American national boxing champion. Smoke, who is 13, took top honours in the girls’ intermediate heavyweight category, at the 2024 Silver Gloves National Championship, which concluded on Feb. 3 in the Missouri city of Independence. The intermediate division is for those aged 13 and 14. And those in the heavyweight grouping must weigh 176 pounds or over. Smoke had to beat just one other competitor, from Arkansas, to claim the national title. The majority of participants at the national meet had to qualify to take part. But there were no other intermediate heavyweight entrants at Smoke’s western New York local competition or her regional qualifier,...

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Snipers beat defending league champions for their first victory of the season

By Sam Laskaris Writer It took a lot longer than what they would have preferred. But the Six Nations Snipers finally managed to win an Arena Lacrosse League (ALL) game this season. The Snipers registered their first W of the current campaign this past Saturday when they downed the Toronto Monarchs, the defending league champs, 13-8 in a match held at the Iroquois Lacrosse Arena (ILA). The Six Nations squad had lost its first seven outings this season. Snipers’ head coach Darcy Powless had an inkling that something positive would happen for his charges early on Saturday. “Maybe it was because we were playing at home again,” said Powless, who also doubles as the Snipers’ general manager. “It just seemed like a happy group of guys in the dressing room...

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Unique vendors at 64th annual All Native Basketball Tournament

By Seth Forward, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter PRINCE RUPERT- For vendors at the All Native Basketball Tournament, the week-long tournament is about more than just selling products. Some have been coming for decades, while others are operating a stand for the first time in 2024. But all say the positive energy and strong camaraderie is what sets this tournament apart. Marlene Smith has made the annual trip to Prince Rupert from the Kitseguecla First Nation near Hazelton for 30 years now, selling Indigenous jewellery. Her favourite aspect of the tournament is reconnecting with old friends, though after the pandemic, many have not made it back. “I used to meet all my old friends here before, and most of them passed away due to COVID,’’ Smith said. “Most of them are...

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Metis speedskater hopes to represent Canada at 2026 Winter Olympics

By Sam Laskaris Local Journalism Initiative Reporter Alison Desmarais aspires to become an Olympian. The Metis Nation of Alberta member competes with the Canadian national NextGen (developmental) team in long track speedskating.She’s in her second season and trains in Calgary. Desmarais was a member of the Canadian national NextGen(developmental) short track squad from 2018 to 2020, but that group trains in Montreal. “I don’t speak French so the move to Montreal was really hard for me. And after a year I just decided I wanted to move back to Calgary,’’ she said. She was halfway through her studies at the University of Calgary, Desmarais explained, so it made sense to move back to western Canada. Desmarais, who is 26, believes she is making giant strides in long track speedskating, which...

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Indigenous leaders laud beautiful, happy Supreme Court ruling on child welfare jurisdiction

 By Shari Narine  Local Journalism Initiative Reporter The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that the federal government was within its constitutional right to pass jurisdiction to Indigenous communities for the care of their children and families through a federal statute. “I’d be lying if I said that I wasn’t worried about (the Feb. 9 judgement) all week. I made sure we did ceremony this week to make sure that it went in our favour,” said Assembly of First Nations National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak. In a 92-page unanimous decision penned by the entire panel of eight Supreme Court justices, which included Odanak First Nation member Justice Michelle O’Bonsawin, Canada’s highest court said C-92, An Act respecting First Nations, Inuit and Metis children, youth and families, “as a whole is constitutionally...

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 First Nations group criticizes federal fish policies, conflict of interest in B.C.

OTTAWA-An Indigenous-led group is criticizing what it says is the “gross mismanagement” of aquaculture in British Columbia by the Fisheries Department, as it calls for a separation of its regulatory and promotional responsibilities. The First Nations Wild Salmon Alliance says the department is mired in conflict of interest stemming from its dual role, which the group’s chairman Bob Chamberlin described as like “marking your own homework.” Chamberlin says the group wants the department to stick to its primary obligation of looking after the environment and fisheries, and to implement “a truly independent” scientific body to help inform government decisions affecting marine life in B.C. A spokeswoman for the Department of Fisheries and Oceans says in a statement that scientific integrity guides and shapes how it generates advice to inform decision...

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Fisheries minister leaning toward suspending this year’s Maritime baby eel fishery

HALIFAX- Canada’s fisheries minister says she wants to shut down this year’s lucrative baby eel fishery with only weeks to go before the season opens in the Maritimes. But Diane Lebouthillier says she won’t make a final decision until she consults with licence holders and First Nations. Lebouthillier sent a letter today to commercial fishers saying the fishery should be shut down because illegal fishing in the past four years has led to a growing pattern of harassment, threats and violence on rivers in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. As well, the letter says the poaching is jeopardizing conservation measures aimed at saving the threatened species. The minster says these problems can be solved with new regulations covering Indigenous fishers, licensing, exporting and the tracking of legally caught baby eels,...

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UNDER THE NORTHERN SKY  Valentine’s Day And The Power Of Love

By Xavier Kataquapit www.underthenorthernsky.com We celebrate Valentines Day with wishes for those we are romantically interested in or in general for good greetings to family and friends. However, the history of this day which is celebrated on February 14 is very different. Everyone grows up with the annual traditions that their parents followed without question. It is more strange to follow long standing European traditions when you come from an Indigenous background. We simply followed traditions like Valentine’s Day like the rest of the Canada because we were told so and no one ever wondered why. Early on it was viewed as a Christian holy day but over the past few generations it seems to have lost it’s Christian significance. My parents were born in the James Bay wilderness and...

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Tory MP says he’ll apologize to First Nation for ‘grossly disrespectful’ comments

By Alessia Passafiume THE CANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA- A Conservative MP says he’ll apologize after facing demands that he retract comments he made last week about First Nations burning down water treatment plants because they’re frustrated with the Liberals. The office of Saskatchewan MP Kevin Waugh said Monday he has offered to meet with the chief of Piapot First Nation, along with elders, and tour the community. Chief Mark Fox issued a statement on the weekend saying they rejected Waugh’s comments as “grossly disrespectful,” calling for a formal apology and retraction of his “baseless claims.” Waugh made the comments during debate on a First Nations water bill last week, leading to swift pushback from First Nations and the minister of Indigenous services. “In my home province of Saskatchewan, I have seen...

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Less than one month left to submit claim for drinking water compensation

 By Shari Narine  Local Journalism Initiative Reporter With less than one month left for claims to be submitted for compensation under the First Nations Drinking Water Class Action Settlement, class counsel Darian Baskatawang says that as of the end of January, close to 90 per cent of the anticipated 160,000 claims had been received. “It’s important to note that the class size is an estimation,” said Baskatawang, associate with Olthuis, Kleer, Townshend LLP. “Our estimate of 160,000 individual class members was based on the best actuarial data at the time.” Baskatawang says proactive measures, including a communications campaign and inclusion of band council confirmation lists, has allowed them to reach 140,000 claimants as of Jan. 31. A joint order issued February 2023 by the Federal Court and the Manitoba Court of...

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Manitoba First Nations leaders applaud Supreme Court affirming Indigenous jurisdiction over child welfare

 By Dave Baxter  Local Journalism Initiative Reporter First Nations leaders are applauding last week’s Supreme Court decision that affirms Indigenous nations should have jurisdiction over child and family services (CFS) laws and policies in their communities. “The Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs (AMC) recognizes that this decision is positive for First Nations who are developing laws under this framework, with the goal of protecting their children,” AMC Grand Chief Cathy Merrick said in a media release reacting to a decision handed down by the Supreme Court of Canada last Friday to dismiss an appeal launched by the government of Quebec. Quebec’s appeal was centered around Bill C-92: An Act Respecting First Nations, Metis, and Inuit children, youth and families, which the Trudeau government enacted into law in 2020. The law affirmed...

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Opioid crisis and homlessness focus of Blackfoot Nation discussion

By Theodora Macleod LETHBRIDGE, ALBERTA-Community members from across Blackfoot Nation gathered on Friday at the Sandman Hotel to discuss the ongoing challenges of the opioid crisis and issues of homelessness. Hosted by the Sik-ooh-kotoki (Lethbridge) Friendship centre, it was a communing of hearts and minds featuring professor and knowledge keeper, Leroy Little Bear, Dr. Esther Tailfeather, and over 100 frontline workers, people experiencing addiction, people in recovery, and loved ones of those who have been lost to drugs. Gathered in a circle at the centre of the conference room, attendees shared their stories and answers to the question posed by Little Bear “What would you say to the Prime Minister and an opioid expert if you were sitting across from them?” Some said they’d have to bite back anger, while...

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Tla’amin Nation set to reclaim village of tisk?at 151 years after it was taken: `It’s like a long lost relative’

By Abby Francis Local Journalism Initiative Reporter For the Tla’amin Nation, the loss of their village site tisk?at has been like “a missing limb” for the community, according to Dillon Johnson. Their home and salmon fishing site was stolen and sold by “British Columbia” 151 years ago at a time when the community’s population was decimated by disease. For the next seven generations, Tla’amin people were separated from tisk?at. People were moved onto reserves, salmon runs were all but wiped out by construction of a new dam, and a paper mill began operating on the site. “I’ve always heard the Elders speaking about it, how you know, that this is tisk?at and our people lived there,” said Johnson, an executive council member for Tla’amin. “The way I’ve always kind of...

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‘Done being patient’: Treaty 4 First Nations suing Ottawa over $5 annuity payments

 By Jeremy Simes THE CANADIAN PRESS REGINA- Chief Lynn Acoose says she’s taking a step elders and past Indigenous leaders in her community have long been reluctant to. The chief of Zagime Anishinabek, home to several First Nations in southeastern Saskatchewan, has filed a proposed class-action lawsuit against the federal government. The suit alleges Ottawa has not kept its end of the bargain over annuity payments after signing Treaty 4 nearly 150 years ago. Chief Derek Nepinak of Minegoziibe Anishinabe in west-central Manitoba is also a plaintiff in the lawsuit, filed this month in Federal Court. Chief Murray Clearsky of Waywayseecappo First Nation filed in January a similar proposed class-action against Ottawa in Manitoba Court of King’s Bench. “We are doing something our elders have counselled us against,” Acoose said in...

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Indigenous chief champions harmony: Record immigration numbers welcomed with open arms

By Michael Staples  Local Journalism Initiative Reporter A  staunch defender of Indigenous rights and culture in Canada says he’s not worried that a record number of immigrants are making their way into the country. Instead, Chief Allan Polchies Jr. of the New Brunswick-based Sitansisk (St. Mary’s) First Nation is embracing newcomers and applauding them for a willingness to learn about Aboriginal customs and for their overall commitment to make a better society. “It  increased immigration  certainly doesn’t appear to be a problem,” Polchies told New Canadian Media. “Indigenous Canadians, typically, stand behind immigrants.” According to Statistics Canada, an estimated population of 2.2 million non-permanent residents now outnumbers the 1.8 million Indigenous people enumerated during the 2021 Census. Polchies, who became the first LGBTQ2AI+ chief in Atlantic Canada in 2018, said...

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Supreme Court upholds Ottawa’s Indigenous child welfare law, denies Quebec’s appeal

By Alessia Passafiume THE CANADIAN PRESS OTTAWA- Indigenous communities and leaders across the country cheered Friday as the Supreme Court of Canada upheld the federal government’s child welfare law, affirming that First Nations, Metis and Inuit have sole authority over the protection of their children. The unanimous decision is a setback for the Quebec government, which won a victory in 2022 when the Court of Appeal found that parts of the act overstepped federal jurisdiction. Indigenous leaders lauded the high court’s findings as dozens of the very children at the heart of the decision ran rampant around an Ottawa conference room. “Our peoples have compromised enough,” said Assembly of First Nations Quebec-Labrador regional chief Ghislain Picard. A group of children wearing ribbon skirts, kokum scarves and ribbon shirts sat in...

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Winter roads are in a state of emergency: NAN

By Mike Stimpson  Local Journalism Initiative Reporter THUNDER BAY- Nishnawbe Aski Nation (NAN) chiefs declared a “winter roads state of emergency” in the concluding statement for their 2024 Chiefs Winter Assembly. The communique, released Thursday at the end of the three-day summit, also declared a “health state of emergency.” The mild winter has given Ontario’s northern remote communities little to no winter road season so far, Grand Chief Alvin Fiddler said. As a result, those communities haven’t received essential supplies that normally come in during winter road season. “The heavy tankers that deliver gas, they haven’t even been able to go up to any of our communities,” he told Dougall Media. What can’t be trucked in will have to be flown in, “and that’s way more expensive,” he said. NAN...

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