Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Welcome!

Me with short hair & looking serious as usual!
Hello and welcome! My name is Trevor Day, I have Indigenous, English & Chinese ancestry. My Indigenous ancestry is from St'uxwtews in Secwepemc territory. I acknowledge the Songhees & Esquimalt people whose traditional territory Camosun now sits on today. It is an honour to be a guest here in Victoria.


I'm a 2nd year student in the Indigenous studies program at Camosun and I came up with the idea of creating this blog as part of my Special Projects class. My inspiration for the blog came from my experience at school last fall semester. Because I only had classes two days a week, I found that I was losing touch with my classmates and the folks in the Aboriginal Education & Community Connections office. I thought that if someone started a blog that talked about what all our Indigenous students at Camosun are up to, someone like me could better keep in touch with what was going on in our community.

So that's what I'd like this space to be. A space to share what students are working on academically, and what's happening socially in our Indigenous Camosun community. And even though school will be finished in a few short weeks, this project is intended to last beyond the semester. If you are a spring & summer semester student interested in taking on the responsibility of contributing to the blog, email IndigenousStudents@gmail.com and we will set you up with an account. We also hope to have an honorarium system setup to give few dollars to those willing to keep the project alive.

For now, my classmate Dan Mack and I will be posting stories to this blog but we want to hear from all Indigenous students at Camosun. If there is something cool your class is doing, maybe you went to see a great Indigenous guest speaker or a local Aboriginal event, or maybe there is a personal reflection you have about being an Indigenous post-secondary student, we want to hear it!

That's all for now, enjoy what's left of the rest of the semester!
-Trevor Day

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

UBC MoA & Indigenous Graduate Symposium

2nd Year IST Students at the UBC Museum of Anthropology

On March 11th and 12th, the 2nd year cohort of Indigenous Studies students went over to UBC in Vancouver to visit the Museum of Anthropology and attend the Indigenous Graduate Student Symposium as part of our Indigenous Political Science class.

We had lots of fun cramming ourselves into small vehicles, sharing meals and even hotel'ing it for one night. Late Friday afternoon, after being guided through the museum by a very unlucky UBC 3rd year history student, we packed into a teachers lounge and discussed how it felt to witness indigenous cultures being stolen and sealed behind glass windows. What started as a quick check-in turned into a 90-minute exploration of the contentious ethics and philosophies behind the museum institution. It felt great to be able share mixed feelings of reverence & awe, sadness & anger.

Pushing on into the evening we held a round table discussion of the pro's & con's of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (as part of a previously postponed assignment) and FINALLY, at 8:30 were allowed to eat some food!

Welcoming @ Indigenous Graduate Student Symposium

On Saturday we got down to business and started the morning off with a keynote lecture from Margaret (Maggie) Kovach (author of Indigenous Methodologies), and then we jumped into a series of mini-lectures by grad students.

The lectures were very challenging because each speaker tried to explain their research in 15 minutes with time for one or two questions afterwards. In this format we were sometimes only able to get a vague idea of what each student was working on. In the morning sessions I attended, Dorothy Christian described how she threw out the first draft of her thesis because it sounded too academic and then she adopted an Indigenous methodology. Using the 4 R's (respect, relationship, relevance, & responsibility), she said she was able to incorporate more than just the intellectual aspect of her identity into her thesis, creating something more holistic and authentic for herself.

Donna Lester Smith asked four colleagues of hers "What does it mean to be an urban Aboriginal person today?" and then gave a disposable camera to each person, who was required to report back to her. In the session I attended, Donna showed a beautiful video montage of the photos her friends came up with set to some wonderful music. I wasn't clear on the connection of the video project to her research but the video was very inspiring.

The last morning session I attended was provocatively titled, Berries, Bison and Branches: Returning to Traditional Aboriginal Sustenance. Although Patricia Ann Cundy's presentation covered a lot, two things I'll mention are her framework and a great quote she received while out in community. Berries, to her, is a universal representation of indigenous peoples because many if not all indigenous peoples utilize some type of berry as a food source; bison is an analogy for the shattered remnants of indigenous cultures that have almost been driven to extinction by the effects of colonization; and branches represent the flow of indigenous knowledge and cultural systems out from one source - the earth.

One of the things Patricia said that really stuck out for me was something an elder said to her when she asked the elder to define "health." The elder said something to the effect of: "Health is defined by the number of drummers we have in our community." I found the power behind this statement to be very profound. It breaks down so many western constructs and assumptions. It says health is communal not individual. It says health is not only limited to the physical, but also the emotional and spiritual. It says health is cultural. It basically says that health is connected to everything and it should never be considered in isolation.

Lunch time!
After a great lunch, I actually skipped out on the afternoon sessions so I could sit down with a Secwepemc elder from my own territory named Jean William. I talked with Jean for about 45  minutes or so and learned about her dedication to her community as a language expert and sacred knowledge keeper. She even taught me how to properly pronounce my band name, St'uxwtews.

When I finished talking with Jean, the rest of the class came back from their afternoon sessions and we decided it was time to head for the ferry. Since I had planned to spend the night in Vancouver with my brother, we split up and I said goodbye to the group.

On behalf of our class I'd like to thank Todd Ormiston, Jacquie Green, Trevor Good and anyone else who helped make this trip a memorable experience for all who attended!

-Trevor