January - 2006
Achievement award winners will visit Vancouver
The National Aboriginal Achievement Awards will be handed out
in Vancouver on Jan. 27, and two people living in British Columbia
will be on the receiving end at the 13th annual achievement award
gala.
The community development award will be presented to Wendy
Grant-John for her efforts to bring economic and social development
opportunities to her Coast Salish community of Musqueam.
Grant-John is a three-term chief of her community, a former
Assembly of First Nations vice-chief for British Columbia, and
the former associate regional director-general for the department
of Indian and Northern Affairs. She now runs her own store.
Grant-John single-handedly spearheaded the revitalization
of Salish weaving, a tradition not practiced since the 19th century.
The weaving of textiles long held an important cultural and social
place among the Salish. Her involvement in the book, "Hands
of Our Ancestors" The revival of Salish Weaving at Musqueam,
was an important step in reclaiming this keystone of Salish culture.
Aside from overseeing the acquisition of the Celtic Shipyards
and the Fraser Arms Hotel-two significant community economic
development initiatives-Grant-John contributed to the foundation
of the Big Sisters Mentoring Program for First Nations Women;
the Wellness Council; and the Concerned Parents Group for the
Musqueam Nation for parents coping with childhood drug and alcohol
abuse.
In 2001 she was recognized for her contributions with the
YWCA Women of Distinction Award for Social Action. Two years
later she added an honorary doctorate of Law from Royal Roads
University to her list of accolades.
Taiaiake (Gerald) Alfred, scholar, author and a Mohawk living
in B.C., was chosen to receive an award in the education category.
Alfred has been renowned as a scholar and writer for years,
but his first steps into adulthood gave little indication of
his current career. Interested in seeing the world, he joined
the United States Marines as an 18-year-old and, serving as an
infantryman, began tours of duty to Asia and Central America.
Upon his return, he enrolled at Concordia University in Montreal
and began his journey into higher education. After leaving Montreal,
Alfred continued his studies at Cornell University in New York
where he completed his masters of arts and his doctorate. A prolific
author of hundreds of articles and three books on Indigenous
governance-including the groundbreaking Peace, Power, Righteousness:
An Indigenous Manifesto (1999)-Alfred is the founding director
of the Indigenous Governance Program at the University of Victoria,
the world's first graduate program to offer a masters of arts
and a PhD in Indigenous governance.
Three Alberta residents will bring home awards. Dr. Herb Belcourt
will receive an award in the housing category. Artist Jane Ash
Poitras will be recognized for her contributions in the area
of arts and culture. And broadcaster turned communications consultant
George Tuccaro will accept an award in the media and communications
category.
In 1970, Belcourt, who had already established himself as
a successful businessman, started a housing project to provide
decent, affordable housing to Metis families moving into Edmonton
and Calgary. That project grew into the CaNative Housing Corporation,
which, in addition to helping meet the housing needs of the people
it serves, also provides scholarships and bursaries to Metis
students. CaNative donated a house to be used as a residence
for Metis postgraduate students at the University of Alberta.
Adopted by a non-Aboriginal woman after the death of her mother
when she was five, Poitras grew up without any connection to
her Native roots. She renewed that connection in 1981 and shortly
thereafter decided to pursue a career as an artist.
Her mixed media works, which explore the impact of colonialism
and the strength of Aboriginal people, have earned her wide acclaim
and have been exhibited across North America and Europe.
Tuccaro spent 29 years as a broadcaster for CBC Radio North,
and also worked on television on CBC Northbeat. He is also a
singer/songwriter, comedian and popular emcee.
He established a booking agency in the Northwest Territories
to help promote northern performing artists, helped to organize
the annual Great Northern Arts Festival in Inuvik and volunteers
his times to support grieving families, visit hospitals, seniors
homes and prisons and hosts fundraising events.
Other 2006 award recipients include Saskatchewan Aboriginal
leader and activist Jim Sinclair, who will receive the Lifetime
Achievement Award, and lawyer and professor James (Sakej) Youngblood
Henderson, a member of the Chicksaw Nation and Cheyenne tribe
in Oklahoma who now calls Saskatchewan home, who will be recognized
for his contributions in the area of law and justice.
Nova Scotia's Andrea Dykstra, who recently earned her bachelor
of science, will accept the award in the youth category.
The award for public service will be presented to Tony Belcourt,
president of the Metis Nation of Ontario, while the business
and commerce award will go to Bernd Christmas, CEO of Membertou
First Nation in Nova Scotia. Elder Gladys Taylor Cook of Manitoba
will be recognized in the heritage and spirituality category.
The environment award will go to Elder Billy Day of the Northwest
Territories in recognition of his work to protect Inuvaluit culture,
rights and natural environment, while Olympic skier Shirley Firth
Larsson of the Northwest Territories will receive a National
Aboriginal Achievement Award in the sports category.
Quebec broadcaster Myra Cree who passed away in October, will
be named recipient of a National Aboriginal Achievement Award
in the media and communications category, the first time an achievement
award has been awarded posthumously.
Page 2
Students get some support from salmon stewardship bursary
The Pacific Salmon Foundation (PSF) announce two recepients of
$500 bursary awards for the 2005/2006 academic year. The awards
for the inaugural year for the Stewardship Community Bursary
went to Brenda Boye, a BCIT student from Surrey and Leonard Guno,
a Malaspina University-College student from New Aiyansh.
This bursary is awarded annually to a full-time, BC university
student who is an active volunteer in the aquatic stewardship
community. The spirit of the bursary is to reduce the financial
barriers to achieving success for aquatic stewardship volunteers
enrolled in education and training programs that support their
goal of a career in salmon recovery.
Guno is in his second year of the Resource Management Officer
Technician program. A full-time student, Guno has worked and
volunteered for the past five years with Nisga'a Fisheries, where
he is involved in the Nass River Fishwheel program, the Radio
Telemetry program, and chinook and coho studies.
Brenda Boye is a second year BCIT student in the Fish, Wildlife
and Recreation program. A full-time student, Boye is a volunteer
with the City of Surrey where she works doing riparian rehabilitation
along salmon bearing streams.
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