Happy new year! Bliadhna mhath ùr!
Ring in the new year with the Red Hot Chilli Pipers, Mary Ann Kennedy, Tide Lines, The Rankin Sisters, Daimh, and more!
Happy new year! Bliadhna mhath ùr!
Ring in the new year with the Red Hot Chilli Pipers, Mary Ann Kennedy, Tide Lines, The Rankin Sisters, Daimh, and more!
What were your fave albums of 2020?? Here are some of ours! Presented in no particular order, with rough guidelines in place of rules.
A few quick thank you's from your MD (Kate) to round out a strange year!
* Thank you to our amazing community of musicians and supporters for another music-filled year
* Thank you to our exceptional Board of Directors for their hard work and input
* THANK YOU to each and every CFUR staffer for taking the challenges in stride
* And a big, big THANK YOU to our station manager, Ian Gregg, for doing the hard work day in and day out.
Thanks for all the music and see you in 2021!
Merry Christmas! Nollaig Chridheil! Tune in for today's show to hear Rita MacNeil, Tide Lines, Coig, The Barra MacNeils, Mary Ann Kennedy and Rachel Walker and more!
All the best of the holidays to you.
Countdown to Christmas continues with tunes from Julie Fowlis, The Mason Family, The Rovers, and Lasairfhíona Ní Chonaola among many others! Tune in for more!
Danny Bell and His Disappointments’ new album Songs for the Town is released! Get it on vinyl and CD here. Album and video art were done by Silky Hen Design
Both COVID-19 and cold weather have had a large impact on Fort St. James. The Cold Weather Shelter is actively responding and could use your help.
Any financial donations by check are welcome. Please make them out to Key Resource Centre and send them to:
Box 244
Fort Saint James, BC
V0J 1P0
Donations of warm clothes, new undergarments (including socks), and Christmas gifts are in low supply. These can be mailed to:
Box 244
Fort Saint James
V0J 1P0
or call (250)-996-8933 if you would like to deliver them to 360 Stuart Drive.
By Courtney Hayhurst
Around the world, and in North America in particular, Indigenous rights, needs, and voices are being heard louder and stronger than ever before. In Prince George this has been noticed happening in many aspects of the community, but most recently Prince George has been making strides within the school district. Not only has the education curriculum expanded to include more local Indigenous topics, but the past few months has seen incredible conversations between members of Lheidli T’enneh, Mcleod Lake Indian Band, and SD57.
Lheidli T’enneh members and the Dayi (Chief) started conversations with SD57 to propose that a seat on the school board be reserved for local members of the Lheidli T’enneh. September of this year, 2020, saw this proposal expanded with support of Mcleod Lake Indian Band, which resulted in the proposal of two new additional seats within the school board to be reserved for their representatives. These discussions have led to full, unanimous support from every current board member approving of these changes. Now, all that waits is receiving approval from the Provincial government.
In an interview, Lheidli T’enneh Dayi, Clayton Pountney, offers his perspective on the importance of education in Indigenous communities, and what this might mean for Prince George, the Province, and Indigenous people. Dayi Pountney remarks not just on the importance of inclusive education for indigenous youth, but also about the importance of building communities and working together.
Beverly Best, Manager of Aboriginal Student Engagement at UNBC and member of Stellat’en First Nation, also offers her perspective on issues of education and inclusion in a separate interview. Beverly talks about how this request is not just about education, and that it is also about inclusion; inclusion of indigenous history, people, and culture, and making room for indigenous needs and voices to be heard, and valued, as equal to all others.
In education, Indigenous perspectives, history, and teachings have been excluded for many years through racist laws, bills, and residential schools. In the article “Characteristics of Indigenous Healing Strategies in Canada” published in 2019 in the JBI Database of Systematic Reviews and Implementation Reports, author Ziwa Yu states that Indigenous people have had their teachings, cultures, and languages attacked by these racist institutions and societal structures, which left many “... with a confused cultural identity that is compounded with shame, self-hatred and powerlessness”. According to the article “Beyond Recovery: Colonization, Health and Healing for Indigenous People in Canada” published in2009 in the International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction, authors Lavalee and Poole argue that the colonial practices that have (and still do) occur in Canada such as the 60’s scoop, child welfare, and land reclamations “...contribute to denigration of identity, cultural genocide, grief, anger, hopelessness and helplessness. All of these factors are linked to suicide, mental health and recovery”.
Research has been produced by academics to try to understand what impacts these colonial practices from the past have on Indigenous people now. From these studies, it has been found “...that being Native meant you are somehow less than and do not deserve good things” (Lavallee and Poole), and that those who fully identify as Indigenous often feel as if they “...do not fit societies’ stereotypical view of what an Indian looks like” (Lavalee and Poole), which serves to further degrade their identities.
Healing from these traumas is difficult, not just for an individual, but at an institutional level as well. Academics argue that “In order for healing to occur, Indigenous peoples need to be involved in retelling the colonial history and acknowledging the impact of historical trauma” (Yu), but in order for this to occur, there must be participation and buy-in from municipal, provincial, and federal bodies. These organizations need to acknowledge and validate the “... Indigenous cultural activities characterized by an ongoing connection to the past, based on specific beliefs, values and practices that go back to the time prior to European contact” (Yu), while still taking into consideration that “... the pathway to healing is inherently variable and highly relevant to personal agency and individual readiness” (Yu).
Indigenous healing is a broad, complex, and difficult topic to tackle. Not only are there difficulties in personal healing journeys regarding mental health and identity, but institutions and entire communities also have to combat how to support each individual journey to healing as well. In Prince George, part of the way the community has facilitated these difficulties is by building connections between communities and bringing Indigenous voices and perspectives into positions of power. An example of this is the potential addition of Indigenous seats to the SD57 school board.
For both Dayi Pountney and Beverly Best, education is not only important to the indigenous members in the community. In their opinions, building these connections, including indigenous members, voices, stories, and teachings into education and its governing body helps to build a more inclusive, holistic, and knowledgeable community. Including local Indigenous perspectives into a position on the school board allows for struggles surrounding identity to start being healed through the sharing of their histories and perspectives to all members of the community.
Listen to the interviews with DayiClayton Pountney and Beverly Best below to learn more about what it means to be represented and included in the community.
Bibliography:
Lavallee, Lynn F and Jennifer Poole. “Beyond Recovery: Colonization, Health and Healing for Indigenous People in Canada”. International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction, vol. 8, no. 2, 2009, pp. 271-281.
Yu, Ziwa. “Characteristics of Indigenous Healing Strategies in Canada”. JBI Database of Systematic Reviews and Implementation Reports, vol. 17, no. 9, 2019, pp. 1933-1940.
Tie-dyed trends go out of fashion. Good music is forever.
Thanks to the Community Radio Fund of Canada, our creators have been able to keep on recording from home. Van Allen's Fashionable Belt is one of our newest home-recorded shows, chock-a-block full of studio-worthy content.
Airs Saturdays @ 11am, Mondays @ 5pm.
Our Theme Song Retro continues with today's show. Tune in for Cliar, Manran, Capercaillie, and the Campbells of Greepe...and much more!