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Category Archives: Non-Status Indian Era

Archive Quarterly ~ Summer 24

15 Monday Jul 2024

Posted by Admin in aboriginal title, Non-Status Indian Era, Roadblock

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aboriginal rights, aboriginal title, Bonaparte, Cache Creek 1974, Indian Status, Indigenous Peoples, Indigenous-focused grad requirement, Jeannette Corbiere-Lavell, Kelowna Accord, Native Peoples Caravan, on-reserve housing, Transformative Change Agreement

Featuring:

A special investigation of the 1974 blockade of Highway 12, at Bonaparte, Secwepemc.

After Elder James Morgan’s house burned down, and there was no access to funds or building materials to rebuild it, the Chief and dozens of others held down a narrow strip of the main transportation artery between Lillooet and the Interior – to levy a $5-per-traveller toll, raising funds to rebuild themselves.

With new interviews and a compilation of reports from the time, the coverage leads into a wider background for the on-reserve housing crisis. With a deep dive into on-reserve housing development since the Peoples were displaced from their usual homes.

The Native Peoples’ Caravan

The people at Cache Creek were soon joined by members of the Ojibway Warriors Society, the American Indian Movement in Canada, and allied that worked quickly together to coordinate the Native Peoples’ Caravan to Ottawa that Fall.

“Tsilhqot’in Nation v. British Columbia”

Tracking the first ever Supreme Court of Canada Declaration of Aboriginal title lands.

– Excerpts from the court rulings; Interviews with the Tsilhqot’in neighbouring nationals whose recognition of Tsilhqot’in title long predates the existence of Canada; Book review: “Lha Yudit’ih We Always Find A Way – Bringing the Tsilhqot’in Title case home” by Lorraine Weir with Chief Roger William; Maps and Timeline.

Celebrating fifty years of Native Women’s Associations

Jeannette Corbiere-Lavell joins us to discuss her legendary case to regain Indian Status after sexist provisions in the Indian Act – and being sued by the Attorney General – withdrew it.

Grandmothers Healing Journey, Honouring the Grandmothers on the Fraser River, and those who lived and died without their rights or recognition, far from their homes, in the cities. Artists reac out in an exhibition at the New Westminster gallery at the Anvil Building.

Excerpts from the Indian Act, as its amendments impacted women and children’s right to Indian Status.

BC’s Indigenous-focused graduation requirement

One year into BC’s Indigenous-focused graduation requirement: a class profile with one course in Sto:lo that thrived. “That class had the perfect combination of sxwōxwiyám – stories from long ago, and sqwélqwel – news from today.”

More:

20 years since the Kelowna Accord: why didn’t it work? Committing to “Closing the gap” in housing,
health, economies and education, felled the federal government.

The Department of Indian Affairs (Minister of the Interior), describes the conditions of landlessness and displacement that have led to today’s crises, in its first Annual Report, 1874.

The “biggest demonstration in BC history” – Indigenous march on the Victoria Legislature, June 25, 1974.

44 pages 8.5×11 black and white

Honouring the indomitable spirit of Indigenous Peoples west of the Rocky Mountains.

Archive Quarterly ~ Summer 24

02.24.2024 ~ Today is a great day for history!

24 Saturday Feb 2024

Posted by Admin in aboriginal title, BC treaty process, Children, Comprehensive Claims - Policy and Protest, Government Commissions, Indian Residential School, Indigenous Declarations, Non-Status Indian Era, Reconciliation, UN Engagement, Uncategorized, Union of BC Indian Chiefs

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Archive Quarterly

Introducing:    Archive Quarterly

It’s The West Wasn’t Won’s own journal, like a news clipping service across the last two or three hundred years.

Did you know? This month marks a hundred years since the Allied Tribes of British Columbia petitioned to shut down the Indian Reserve Commission report.

If you didn’t, a subscription to Archive Quarterly will really help!

What was hidden from history is what’s needed now.

AQ shakes out the archives for primary sources on Indigenous land and British Columbia, sharing:

~ key extracts from archival artifacts

~ quotes and interviews on the issues as they were

~ relatable commentary and a few side-notes

~ images and timelines that connect past and present

The first April issue will be here in three weeks!

READ ON  for more info

TAKE A LINK  to the Archive Quarterly website to see more and click your Subscription

FOLLOW  AQ on Facebook  for updates 

Archive Quarterly is about it, the west wasn’t won!

BC history is lit from one side – showing settler progress to advantage, while rendering the Indigenous reality of that “progress” indiscernible.

This magazine aims to balance the view. As well as the written records, interviews with Elders reveal circumstances leading up to political movements, court actions and roadblocks, and conditions in their communities at the time.

Excerpts in the journal will be presented in full documents online, where they are accessible to download.

See the highlights from the first issues this year!

Get your subscription now and you can start sharing.

Print subscriptions will hit the mailboxes in the middle of March, and the first issue of AQ will be in bookstores before April.

When you buy a $44 print subscription, you’ll be the first to receive each issue by mail and get a digital copy in your inbox as well.

That’s right, Archive Quarterly comes out four times a year, in April, July, October, and January. It’s $15 in stores.

Digital subscriptions for the year are just $18, and you can share AQ with your contacts.

Subscribe to print or digital here: AQ Subscribe

You can also donate to AQ to become a founding sponsor – thanks!

Group and bulk print subs available, just drop us a line.

If you just can’t afford the subscription, get in touch and we’ll get you in.

By subscribing to AQ today, you’ll be helping to get work done.

Special Issues

Did you know? The ongoing denial of Aboriginal land title – and the tiny size of First Nations reserves – contributes directly to child apprehensions from young Aboriginal families. The situation can’t change without land to build on and live in.

Special Issues are on the way for AQ, focusing on Aboriginal Title, the Non-Status Indian era, Roadblocks, and more. The Special series dives deep and provides historical overviews and insight, and the development takes time and research and communications.

AQ’s online digital archive

It keeps growing, as old docs are scanned and processed and uploaded. The physical archive costs money for storage, and the digital archive costs money for web space.

The magazine comes out of a collection kept up by Electromagnetic Print – EMP, a book label founded to print voices seldom heard in the media, especially the voices of native sovereigntists.

Thank you very much for reading and have a great day!

Kerry Coast, Publisher

Electromagnetic Print

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