Newsletter 2013 Spring/Summer - Indian Residential School
Transcription
Newsletter 2013 Spring/Summer - Indian Residential School
irsss.ca Indian Residential School Survivor Society Spring/Summer 2013 Inside This Issue: 2-3 IRSS vs. TRC vs. RC 8 PNE Map for TRC Event 4 Our Services and Resources 9 Membership Form 5 How to Achieve Counsel- 10 ling Services & Hands Helping Hands Aboriginal Youth Internship Andrea Medley 6 Truth and Reconciliation 11 Events Elders Voice: Andrew Yellowback 7 Truth and Reconciliation 12 Commission (TRC) Reconciliation Poster IRSSS RHSW’s and Contact Info Visit us @ www.irsss.ca 1 Indian Residential School Support Organizations At A Glance About The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada has a mandate to learn the truth about what happened in the residential schools and to inform all Canadians about what happened in the schools. The Commission will document the truth of what happened by relying on records held by those who operated and funded the schools, testimony from officials of the institutions that operated the schools, and experiences reported by survivors, their families, communities and anyone personally affected by the residential school experience and its subsequent impacts. The Commission hopes to guide and inspire First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples and Canadians in a process of truth and healing leading toward reconciliation and renewed relationships based on mutual understanding and respect. The Commission views reconciliation as an ongoing individual and collective process that will require participation from all those affected by the residential school experience. This includes First Nations, Inuit, and Métis former students, their families, communities, religious groups, former Indian Residential School employees, government, and the people of Canada. The Indian Residential School Survivors Society began in 1994 as a working committee of the First Nations Summit. As of March 2002, the organization formally became the Indian Residential School Survivors Society. Indian Residential School Survivors Society The mandate of the IRSSS is to assist aboriginal peoples in British Columbia to recognize and be holistically empowered from the generational effects of Indian residential schools by conducting research, promoting awareness, establishing partnerships and advocating for justice and healing. We do this by assisting with Healing, Education, Counselling, Traditional Healing, Support Groups, Criminal and Civil Court Support & Referrals Reconciliation Canada is the vision of Chief Dr. Robert Joseph, Gwawaenuk Tribal Elder. This charitable project is a collaboration between the Indian Residential School Survivors Society (IRSSS) and Tides Canada Initiatives Society (TCI). In the spirit of Nam’wiyut (we are all one), the initiatives of Reconciliation Canada create opportunity for Canadians, Aboriginal peoples and all Canadians, to learn about the impacts of residential schooling, heal together by sharing knowledge and experience, and develop strategies for moving forward in a mutually positive manner. Reconciliation Canada firmly believes collective sharing and understanding will pave the way forward for a stronger and united Canada. Our goal is to revitalize cross-cultural relationships by hosting reconciliation dialogue workshops across British Columbia that educate participants about the legacy of residential schools, followed by a series of cultural events and celebrations during Reconciliation Week in Vancouver, B.C., on September 17, 21, and 22, 2013 Visit us @ www.irsss.ca 2 Contact Information Purpose Prepare a complete historical record on the policies and operations of residential schools. Complete a public report including recommendations to the parties of the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement. Establish a national research centre that will be a lasting resource about the IRS legacy. Supports survivors through crisis counselling, court support, and providing information and referrals Head Office 1500-360 Main Street Winnipeg, Manitoba R3C 3Z3 Telephone: (204) 984-5885 Toll Free: 1-888-872-5554 (1-888-TRC-5554) Fax: (204) 984-5915 Email: [email protected] 413 West Esplanade North Vancouver, BC Assists communities to help survivors through partnerships, training & educational workshops V7M 1A6 Raises awareness of residential school issues Toll Free: 1-800-721-0066 Supports and conducts research Fax: (604) 985-0023 Advocate for justice and healing in both traditional and non-Aboriginal forms Email: reception @irsss.ca Deliver a safe learning opportunity for a diversity of faith, cultures and organizations to gain an understanding of one another’s shared history beginning with the stories of Aboriginal people and the Indian residential school system Engage people from every level of society in open and honest dialogues about reconciliation and the unique contributions our diverse histories and experiences offer in building resilient communities Telephone: (604) 985-4464 Suite 206 – 1999 Marine Drive North Vancouver, BC V7P 3J3 Telephone: (604 )770-4434 [email protected] Catalyze a new way forward in the relationships between Aboriginal peoples and Canadians that facilitates a better, stronger Canada for all Visit us @ www.irsss.ca 3 More about our Services and Resources We provide emotional support to Indian Residential School (IRS) students/ survivors and those impacted through intergeneration’s. These services are offered before, during and after hearings, at Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) events, as well as at commemorative events. At IRSSS we are here to help and support with: Preparing for hearing(s) Giving emotional support the Survivors as they go through the hearing process or giving a statement/testimoney . Assisting with self-care preparation Providing referrals to mental health and wellness service providers Offering support and advocacy for justice and healing Delivering grief/loss sessions Counseling and Art Therapy Coordinating services of Elders and/or Traditional Healers Specific services determined by the needs of the Survivor (or family) Dialogue, traditional ceremonies, prayers or traditional healings We have Resolution Health Support Workers and Cultural Support Workers available in Vancouver, Surrey, Chilliwack, Kamloops, Williams Lake and Terrace. Our workers are safe, confidential, respectful and non-judgemental. For more information or assistance, please call our toll free number: 1-800-721-0066 Visit us @ www.irsss.ca 4 Health Canada For professional counseling and transportation (when services are not local) please contact Health Canada. They will review eligible services available for you under the Health Support Program. For BC Region:1-877-477-0775 For Yukon: 1-800-464-8106 For Alberta: 1-888-495-6588 Or visit: www.healthcanada.gc.ca/irs For immediate emotional support/assistance: 1-866-925-4419 Hands Helping Hands: Homelessness Partnering Strategy Project By Danielle Wilson-Brown The Hands Helping Hands program has been going great! The transition from Bonnie Henry as the community response worker to me was very smooth. I am very excited to be back at the IRSSS. I am Tsimshian and Haisla from the Gitxaala Nation. I am studying to be a counselling psychologist at UBC and currently at the Vancouver College of Counselor Training to receive my certificate in Youth and Family work and diploma of Professional Counselling. We are keeping quite busy in the New Year. I applied for and received a small grant for Leadership Capacity Training for Aboriginal Youth. I decided to hold a small youth and elder dialogue event about social and systemic issues that the two generations have been dealing with. This was on March 22nd at the Aboriginal Friendship centre. Thank you to all the youth and elders that attended. We had a great time with our Monthly Food Giveaway on the 31st of July. Our team assembled over a 160 lunches that we handed out at Oppenheimer Park. This month, we are partnering with Mission Possible to hand out our Monthly Lunch Giveaway on the 28th of August. I have also maintained partnerships with other organizations such as Vancouver Native Housing Society, Vancouver Native Health Society, Cedar Project, Mission Possible, Aboriginal Mother Centre, and various youth groups. I believe that by collaborating with other organizations, we can better meet the needs of those who are homeless or at risk of being homeless. I am also planning an event called Lugwaant’is, which means Celebrate in my language, Sm’algyax (Tsimshian territory). Please contact me with any questions or if you’re interested in participating. Visit us @ www.irsss.ca 5 Upcoming Reconciliation Week Events A sacred fire will be lit to symbolize Lighting the Flame of Reconciliation the commencement of Reconciliation Week Monday September 16, 2013 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Ambleside Park, End of 13th Street, off Marine Drive All Nations Canoe Gathering False Creek, Vancouver Tuesday, September 17, 2013 Noon to 2:00p.m. Watch as beautiful cedar dugout canoes paddle into False Creek from Kits Point to Science World and are welcomed in a traditional ceremony to the Coast Salish lands. Reconciliation Canada’s All Nations Canoe Gathering is unlike any event Vancouver Sunday, September 22, 2013 Downtown Vancouver, 4 km 8:30a.m. to 1:30p.m. The Walk for Reconciliation is designed to transform and renew the very essence of relationships among Aboriginal peoples and all Canadians. It sounds so simple, but just the act of gathering and walking and sharing our stories can join us all in a shared commitment to creating a new way forward in our relationships with each other. It’s time to move past apologies and politics and money. It’s time to move forward. Together. Visit us @ www.irsss.ca 6 Visit us @ www.irsss.ca 7 Pacifi c Natio nal Ex hibiti on Map Visit us @ www.irsss.ca 8 Indian Residential School Survivors Society Membership Form Full Name: ________________________ Date Submitted: ____________________ Address: __________________________ Nation/Band: _______________________ Phone: ____________________________ Email: ____________________________ Type of Membership (Please choose the boxes that apply) Residential School Survivor Intergenerational Survivor Day Scholar Day School Associate Member Honorary Member Other Youth Associate and Honorary Members can attend and speak at meetings but may not vote or hold positions at the Society. Please mail, fax, or email completed membership form to: 413 West Esplanade, North Vancouver, BC V7M 1A6 Email: [email protected] or Fax: 604.985.0023 Any information you provide will be kept strictly confidential Visit us @ www.irsss.ca 9 The Aboriginal Youth Internship & IRSSS My name is Andrea Medley, and I am from the Haida nation of Old Massett on Haida Gwaii. I have a background in health sciences, and I have come to work with the IRSSS through the Aboriginal Youth Internship Program (AYIP). The AYIP is a 12 month internship program that begins in September, and ends in August. In this year, interns spend 9 months a government Ministry, and 3 months with an Aboriginal Organization. I spent my Ministry placement at the Ministry of Health, at the Aboriginal Healthy Living Branch, in the area of health governance, and now, here I am, at the IRSSS, helping out with the Educational Legacy Project. The Educational Legacy Project serves to further develop the www.irsr.ca website. The project is funded by Vancouver Foundation. It is designed to help educators teach their students about the history and impacts of the Indian Residential Schools by developing accurate, balanced, and engaging lesson plans and resources to supplement curriculums. The development of curriculum is being guided by an Advisory Committee, which is built from partnerships with a variety of educational institutions. The project is now led by Devi Goberdhan and Naomi Williams, and I have been assisting, through involvement in meetings with the Advisory Committee, as well as reviewing website materials and assisting in the design process. The main updates with the project have been: the hiring of web designer, to provide a cutting edge design for the new content; working with UBC to create a day of learning for teachers on residential school during an upcoming Pro-D day and; participating in a panel at SFU in regards to their Week of Reconciliation this upcoming September. We are currently working with our web designer to map out the site, and our next steps are to bring together the Advisory Committee and professors who specialize in Indigenous Studies to further develop the website’s content. Visit us @ www.irsss.ca 10 Elders Voice Andrew Yellowback What does reconciliation mean to me? Our philosophy surrounding our relationship with the Creator is a principle that is the focus of our Aboriginal life. As Aboriginal people, our First Nations have hundreds of different words in our own languages signifying what we mean when we say Creator. We realize we make no gains without the Great Spirit in our lives. Neither I, nor anything we do, will work without our Creator. Being Aboriginal and being spiritual has the same meaning. Spirituality is our gift from the Great One. As an Aboriginal man, woman, or youth, we will return to the traditional and spiritual values that have guided our ancestors for the past generations. We will look with new eyes on the powers of our ceremonies and religious ways, for they are important to the very survival of our people. We have survived and are going to grow and flourish spiritually. We will fulfill our teachings and the purpose that the Creator has given us with dignity. Each day, we will pray and ask for guidance. We will commit to walk the Red Road, or whatever the spiritual way is called in our own culture. We will walk this road with dedication. That’s what Reconciliation means to me. Visit us @ www.irsss.ca 11 Indian Residential School Survivors Society MAIN OFFICE-NEW LOCATION REGIONAL OFFICES Kamloops Office: 413 West Esplanade North Vancouver, BC V7M 1A6 Office: 604-985-4464 Fax: 604-985-0023 Toll Free: 1-800-721-0066 Email: [email protected] www.irsss.ca 123 Palm St. Kamloops, BC, V2B 8J7 Office: 250-376-1252 Fax: 250-376-1253 Toll Free: 1-877-778-5356 RHSW: Roberta Moses RHSW: Janice Knighton RHSW: Frank Wallace Admin Team: Williams Lake Office: Executive Director: Office Manager: Workshop Coordinator: Office Assistant: Cindy Tom-Lindley Grace Cameron Angela White Christine Johnson 59-1st Ave S. Williams Lake, BC , V2G 1H4 Office: 250-392-4466 Fax: 250-392-4466 Toll Free: 1-877-563-4472 RHSW Team: Supervisor: Scheduler: RHSW/Art Therapist: RHSW: RHSW: RHSW: RHSW: RHSW: RHSW: Maxine Windsor Melanie Vivier Adeline Brown Devi Goberdhan Bonnie Henry Vera Jones Ross Muehlfarth Naomi Williams Terry Windsor RHSW/Therapist: RHSW: Shirley David Maise Wright Terrace Office: Homelessness Partnering Strategy Project: #204 - 3228 Kalum St. Terrace, BC, V8G 2N1 Office: 250-635-4498 Fax: 250-635-4498 Toll Free: 1-877-335-4499 Community Response Coordinator: Danielle Wilson-Brown Supervisor: Sandra Greene RHSW: RHSW: Arlene Roberts Johnathan Whonnock IRSSS Elders Support Coordinator: Maxine Windsor Cultural Support Fort St. James: Hazelton: South Hazelton: Port Alberni: Surrey: Vancouver: Penticton: Lytton: Betsy Dennis Mark Louis Sadie Howard Ben David Alannah Atley Charles Chapman Marylou Louie Charon Spinks Vancouver: Vancouver: Vancouver: Vancouver: Vancouver: Vancouver: Vancouver: Visit us @ www.irsss.ca Andy Yellowback Brenda Wesley Michael Kelly Sam George Theresa Campbell Glen Williams Sadie McPhee 12