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Mass celebrants pray for peace at Oka
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Sacred Heart Church (10821-96th st.) was crammed with both Native and non-Native people last week as they celebrated a mass to pray for a peaceful end to the Oka crisis.
The audience at the Sept. 5 mass was predominantly non-Native and middle-aged or older but it indicated there's a lot of support for Native people.
Priests with leather vestments over white robes and several Natives in ceremonial dress mixed with the crow.
Former chief to lead boycott of province's largest tourist attractions
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A former Siksika Nation chief has declared he will lead "a network of boycotts" against five of the province's largest tourism revenue makers.
Roy Littlechief told a small gathering of supporters and media at a Sept. 7 conference is "appalled by the gate, jealousy and revenge being shown" by politicians towards Canadian Indians.
Born With A Tooth arrested
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Lonefighters Society leader Milton Born With A Tooth was arrested in Calgary Wednesday on two weapons-related charges. He was attending a meeting of the Alberta Wilderness Association.
We has been charged with possession of a weapon and pointing a firearm at another person.
Born With A Tooth made his first court appearance Thursday at Lethbridge provincial court and was remanded in custody.
Desmeules re-elected
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Larry Desmeules has been reelected to another three-year term at the helm of the Metis Nation of Alberta.
Desmeules garnered 1,234 votes or about 37 per cent of the votes cast, beating out seven other contenders for the top post including former MAA president Sam Sinclair.
Desmeules said he was pleased with the campaign, which was "based on issues. Participation was greater," which showed greater voter interest, he said.
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Little Hunter chief standing firm
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The chief on the Little Hunter band says his members won't budge from plans to occupy Crown land in west-central Alberta unless government officials prove their land claim invalid.
"If Rostad and Fjordbotten expect us to move off the land once we move onto it, they better have the documentation proving us wrong in one hand and the eviction papers in the other when they come to kick us off," said hereditary chief Garnet Desjarlais in a recent interview.
Leader was prepared for shoot-out
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He held before him a letter from Mohawk Warriors he received after traveling to Montreal looking for support for his Lonefighters Society.
The letter to Milton Born With A Tooth read in part. "You know in your hearts and minds you are right...don't ever surrender."
Born With A Tooth is the leader of the Lonefighters Society. He is determined to shut down work on the Oldman River dam that Lonefighters say threatens the existence of the Peigan Nation, 30 km south of Fort Macleod.
Respecting elders' advice paid off for Alexander
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Alexander reserve has a population of about 700 people, but the little community enjoyed a full week of activities last November during National Addictions Awareness week.
"We started organizing early and we had participation from the secretaries, nurses, the NNADAP worker and the entire health center staff," said Dora Courteoreille, program director for health services. Band councilors Victoria Arcand and Harvey Burnstick also attended meetings and helped in every way.
Awareness week united Saskatchewan reserve
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"Last year's National Addiction Awareness Week activities united our peel for those few days at least, regardless of political background," says Joe Severight, co-ordinator of the drug and alcohol abuse program with the Cote Band in Saskatchewan.
"We found out, too, we have a lot of local resources like the doctor, the police and (band) members who are willing to share their own personal stories," he adds.
Booze not welcome at Black Lake
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"Each of us has our own reasons for being here," states Billy Bouvier. "We all have had incidents back home where drugs or alcohol touched our lives in some way and we want to make a statement booze is going to stop coming into our village."