The Unist’ot’en Clan of the Wet’suwet’en Nation have been defending their traditional territories from Pipelines for nearly a decade and the fight is not over.
Indigenous Women on the Front Lines Speak
The Unist’ot’en Clan of the Wet’suwet’en Nation have been defending their traditional territories from Pipelines for nearly a decade and the fight is not over.
Some time has passed dear lovelies since we last shared an update. Wulf flies East to join beyon in Mass. in a week to begin a whirlwind 6 weeks making the long awaited book, Voices: Indigenous Women on the Front Lines Speak. It’s been nearly a year and a half journey so far and there are many more days to come.
Let us set aside the catch up for now and go to where this project began and a place we return to. For now we want to talk about the place where one Wulfgang and one beyon became friends just over 2 years ago. We’d like to talk about the Unist’ot’en Clan, their territory Talbits Kwa and the work of Freda and her family.
Eight years ago Freda Huson, spokeswoman for her family, the Hereditary Leadership of the Unist’ot’en Clan of the
Wet’suwet’en Nation, moved back onto her traditional territories to live full time. The Wet’suwet’en of her generation
were voicing growing concerns to their elders, concerns regarding the rapid destruction of their territories and the unceasing devastations of colonialism upon their families. Following the direction of her father, Elders and the voices of her generation Freda set out to defend the Unist’ot’en Yintah, Talbits Kwa, from the emerging threat of pipelines.
Many have heard of the Unist’ot’en Camp; a site of resistance, of asserting Indigenous Sovereignty, of defeating pipelines, turning away the RCMP and defying colonial aspirations.
What the Unist’ot’en yintah Talbits Kwah also is, is Freda’s home. Freda and the matriarchs of her family have created a place within their territory where people can come from all over the world to drink directly from the ancient waters of the river Wedzinkwa. They have created a place of healing for their people, where ancestors and councilors can guide the people on paths of coming back to healthy living. Where youth come to pick berries, hunt and trap and learn new old ways of being in relation to all life. What the Unist’ot’en are in the process of doing is making the impossible possible by living in ways that make anti-racist and anti-colonial futures possible.
They are bringing their people home to the land and responding to the many crises faced by the Wet’suwet’en living on reserves; responding in ways that exist outside of the state, outside of capitalist ‘solutions’ that only mean further
exploitation and dependency.
While the Unist’ot’en and their supporters have successfully stopped industry, such as the Enbridge pipeline from entering their territory, the work of defending land, water and life is far from done. Coastal Gas Link and Pacific Trails Pipeline still lie in waiting to enter illegally onto territories never ceded by the Unist’ot’en to the equally illegal occupier canada. Moving forward into Healing the Land and Healing the People means growing support for Indigenous lead movements and resistance across all lands and waters. The Unist’ot’en need the ongoing support of all peoples living on the unceded lands of Turtle Island to resource the work they are doing; the work to revitalize their culture, bring their peoples back to the land to heal and the work Freda and her family are doing to teach and support other Indigenous communities defending their lands.
Undoing the many violences of 150 years of colonialism is the most crucial work of out time and we are all needed and all capable of rising to the occasion.
There are many ways you can support the work of Freda and the Unist’ot’en:
Volunteer your time on the land.
Hold a fundraiser or make a donation.
Sign up in September to become a monthly contributor! (coming soon contact unistotendonor@gmail.com for more info!)
Canada 150 is a celebration of Indigenous genocide
The Scream, on the cover, The Subjugation of Truth, by Kent Monkman.
by Pamela Palmater, Now Toronto, March 29, 2017
For many Indigenous peoples on Turtle Island (North
America), it’s difficult to imagine Prime Minister Justin Trudeau – who
has said that “no relationship is more important to Canada than the one
with Indigenous peoples”- celebrating the last 150 years of brutal
colonization and the foundation of what is now known as Canada.
This year, the federal government plans to spend half a billion
dollars on events marking Canada’s 150th anniversary. Meanwhile,
essential social services for First Nations people to alleviate
crisis-level socio-economic conditions go chronically underfunded. Not
only is Canada refusing to share the bounty of its own piracy; it’s
using that same bounty to celebrate its good fortune. Arguably, every
firework, hot dog and piece of birthday cake in Canada’s 150th
celebration will be paid for by the genocide of Indigenous peoples and
cultures.
Many places are struggling with the nation’s genocidal origins.
In Halifax, the school board voted to change the name of Cornwallis
Junior High because its namesake, Edward Cornwallis, was responsible for
putting bounties on the scalps of Mi’kmaw people, causing many deaths.
Likewise, in Toronto, Ryerson University has come under scrutiny for
its namesake, Egerton Ryerson, a strong supporter of residential
schools, where thousands of Indigenous children died violent, torturous
deaths.
Even the “Famous Five” women long celebrated as champions of women’s
rights have had their hero status questioned because of their support
for sterilization of Indigenous women. Celebrating genocide is not what
most would consider a modern Canadian value.
While use of the term “genocide” to describe Canada’s treatment of
Indigenous peoples has created a great deal of debate, there has always
been a recognition that, at minimum, Canada was guilty of “cultural
genocide,” even if individuals couldn’t bring themselves to accept more
sinister intentions.
Former prime minister Paul Martin told the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission (TRC) that it was time to call the residential schools policy
what it was: “cultural genocide.”
Supreme Court of Canada Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin weighed in
on Canada’s dismal human rights record, saying that residential schools
were attempts to commit “cultural genocide” against Indigenous peoples.
While these comments were made before the TRC report was tabled in
late 2015, they did raise questions in the public sphere about how to
recognize genocide when it’s not part of something like the Holocaust or
the war in Rwanda.
Despite the sensitive nature of making the claim of genocide, the TRC
went further after investigating the historical record, stating that
the totality of policies toward Indigenous peoples amounted to cultural,
biological and physical genocide.
The difficult part about public discourse related to genocide is that the majority of Canadians don’t have all the facts.
Most mistakenly believe genocide only occurs when millions of people
are killed in concentration camps. They’re not taught in school about
the real history of the atrocities committed against Indigenous peoples
that over time resulted in millions dying. Some universities teach
genocide studies without any mention of the lethal colonization process
in Canada.
The real history, however, shows that even after signing peace
treaties with First Nations, laws were enacted in Canada offering
bounties for scalps of Indigenous men, women and children. The treaty
negotiation process itself was conducted under conditions of starvation
or threats of violence. While some argue that these acts were committed
pre-Confederation, it must be kept in mind that they are in fact how
Canada became Canada.
“Indian policy” was based on acquiring Indigenous lands and resources
and reducing financial obligations to Indigenous peoples. The primary
methodology was either assimilation or elimination. These acts included
confining Indigenous peoples to tiny reserves and forbidding them to
hunt, fish or provide for their families, forcing them to live on
unhealthy and insufficient rations that caused ill health and
starvation.
It didn’t stop there. Other genocidal acts included the forced
sterilization of Indigenous women and little girls and the mass theft
from families of Indigenous children, many of whom were physically and
sexually assaulted, experimented on, tortured and starved at residential
schools – leading to the deaths of thousands.
This is how Canada cleared the land for farms, mining, oil extraction
and development. It simply would not be the wealthy country it is, one
of the best countries in the world to live and raise a family, were it
not for the removal of Indigenous peoples from the source of Canada’s
wealth.
The real crime, however, is not only Canada’s failure to take steps to right the wrongs of the past.
Today, more Indigenous children are taken from their families – now
put into foster care – than at the height of the residential schools
cruelty. The over-incarceration of Indigenous men, women and children
continues at alarming rates. Even though Indigenous people represent
only 4 per cent of the population, some prisons contain nearly 100 per
cent Indigenous inmates.
The federal government and law enforcement agencies have allowed the
crisis of murdered and missing Indigenous women and girls to continue
with little intervention – suggesting complicity in the deaths.
The prime minister spoke at National Aboriginal Day ceremonies in
2016 about “the importance of reconciliation and the process of
truth-telling” in healing Canada’s relationship with Indigenous peoples.
He has no right to speak about reconciliation before he takes the
necessary steps to make amends. Canada has no right to ask any one of us
to talk about moving forward until the prime minister and all premiers
take responsibility for what their institutions have done – and continue
to do – to Indigenous peoples. No amount of token showcasing of
Indigenous art, songs or dances in Canada’s 150th celebration will stop
the intergenerational pain and suffering, suicides, police abuse,
sub-standard health care, housing and water, or the extinction of the
majority of Indigenous languages.
Perhaps Canada should humble itself, step back, cancel its plans and
undertake the hard work necessary to make amends for its legacy. Then we
could all celebrate the original treaty vision of mutual respect,
prosperity and protection envisioned by our ancestors. Until then, I’ll
pass on the cake.
Pamela Palmater is a Mi’kmaw citizen member of Eel River Bar
First Nation. She has been practising Indigenous law for 18 years and is
currently an associate professor and the Chair in Indigenous Governance
at Ryerson University.
According to the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and
Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, genocide is defined in Article II
as acts “committed with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a
national, ethnical, racial or religious group.” Described by the UN as
an “odious scourge” (repulsive evil causing great suffering), genocide
can be committed in any one of following ways: killing members of the
group; causing serious bodily or mental harm; inflicting conditions of
life meant to bring about their destruction; preventing births within
the groups; and/or forcibly transferring the children of the group to
another group.
Brave, generous creatures,
We
have somethings of a most exciting nature to share with you all.
Four of our wonderful loves have offered
additional prizes that you can win with the purchase of a 2Spirit Warrior
Society Raffle Ticket. Tickets are $5
each and a name will be drawn for each prize in the raffle.
Every buck raised through this raffle will
go directly to 2Spirit Indigenous Warriors throwing down on the ground against
the Dakota Access Pipeline. We are in
direct communication with this crew as it is made up of some of the people we
love dearly. Times are desperate with the raid yesterday and arrest of 76 Water Protectors and ongoing raids today at Sacred Stone. The
2Spirit Warrior Society are gearing up to mobilize and we are pushing to meet
our fundraising goals in order to ensure they have a reliable ride for arctic
conditions to make it to court dates, actions and reach medical aid when needed.
From this need, love and solidarity have
come these incredible gifts from queer artists across Turtle Island.
Artist Nick Berger, (they/them) is an artist and musician living on occupied
Pocomtuc Territories in so-called greenfield massachusetts who has donated a 6″ hoop
custom embroidery of anything you want!
You can check out more of their work here <3
bubzee is an octopus from the west, who
reaches into dreams with her many arms and pulls free from them the thick globs
of paint stuck to the innards of our eyelids that she looks at when she is
dreaming. bubzee offers 3 pretty patches
as gifts for you to win through the raffle.
Bug Crü, a queer metis artist,
illustrator and tattooist living on un-ceded and occupied Coast Salish
territories has contributed a print, ((Ø)),
to help raise funds for the 2Spirit Warrior Society.
Check out their work here: http://centipedes.tumblr.com/info
Ruby Doom
draws and tattoos on Pocomtuc territory and there is an original drawing by her
own hand among the treasures that the luck of the draw may provide to you.
Ruby Dooms art lives in digital land here.
So dear feral ones, in the spirit of
mutual aid and all that is still wild and ungovernable upon the body of the
earth, support the 2 Spirit Warrior Society and all the artists, healers and
makers who have contributed their labours.
Please contribute financially if you
can by entering the raffle and share our updates broadly with your family,
friends, co-workers, co-conspirators, lovers, bio fams…
xo
top photo by wulfgang zapf on Kaska Dene territory, bottom photo stolen from the internets found with no attribution and edited.
https://www.voicesfrontlines.com/brave-generous-creatures-we-have-somethings-of/
Solidarity With Two Spirit Warrior Society
At Standing Rock and across the expansive, multi-state, length of the Dakota Access Pipeline, Water Protectors are risking everything to lay down their medicine, send up their prayers and place their bodies in the way of the Black Snake. This struggle continues, the Black Snake has not yet been defeated.
Among these Water Protectors are our 2Spirit comrades who have been throwing down since the beginning, who commit to continue the fight on the ground to protect, land, water, air and all the creatures of our Mother Earth.
Recently two very close friends of ours, St’at’imc and Anishinape Water Protectors, have reached out for support and much needed resources.
These 2 Water Protectors have been central to the establishment of a 2Spirit Warrior Society throwing down in the struggle against DAPL. It was established so that 2Spirit Water Protectors who are not Pacifists nor their apologists, can be true to themselves among people with shared experiences while coordinating for themselves and in collaboration with other camps involved at Standing Rock. Unsurprisingly the 2Spirit crew does not receive a lot of visibility, which as we know is not always safe and desirable, and thus a lot of the resources do not make it to them.
In response to this call from our loved ones we have committed to coordinate support from afar and so have reached out further to our Queer and 2Spirit network of Land Defender friends in so-called Vancouver, Oakland California, NY, Seattle and Great Falls MA to create a small core of coordinators across turtle island in solidarity.
Our friends have communicated that they need a 4×4 truck with a trailer. This will help them move materials, get their crew to actions and get their crew to their court dates.
They have also asked for a Yurt so that they have adequate shelter to hold it down.
We are currently coordinating with friends to source, purchase and deliver these needed items. What we need from you is the funds to make all this possible.
If you have any questions please direct them to: twospirit2016@gmail.com
Hello Lovelies,
As autumn settles in deep and we approach the darkest day and longest night of the year we’re happy to have found time to share with you all.
Amidst the cold the fires of resistance are burning bright and fucking hot all over Turtle Island.
We continue to feed those fires.
About two weeks ago deer beyon traveled south and east to bring supporters to Standing Rock. Beyon has joined water protectors and is throwing down and supporting the fight for water, land and life in solidarity with the Sioux Nation. After, she is on her way to their other home in so called Massachusetts to work on the illustrations for the book.
Here on Lekwungen Territory, Wulfie, has been fighting the eventual demoviction from their home, and is joining with a growing movement in the city against displacement connecting processes of ongoing colonialism, homelessness and gentrification. Work continues here to support front lines through raising funds, care work and solidarity actions.
If you are not able to make it to Standing Rock yourself and are wondering how you can support Indigenous Land Defenders here’s an update on what some of our friends, the incredible Women and Two-Spirit Land Defenders we are working with on the Voices Project, are up to.
Queen Sacheen and her partner Crow have been holding it down with the Red Warrior Camp for well over a month now… going on two! If you are able to send this Grandma, Medicine Maker, Media Ninja and Front Line Warrior a little love this December it would be hugely appreciated. Best gift idea we can think of 🙂
You can sign up to support Sacheen with a monthly donation here!
Our deer love Goot-Ges is gathering resources for spring time land defense while continuing her work protecting the Oceans from Fracked Gas export, raising babies and finishing a book.
You can support her work by purchasing any photography print or purchasing any art by Goot-Ges from our storenvy.
We’ll update y’all on more ways to support Indigenous Resistance and the Protection of Land and Waters in the coming days. And encourage your fams and friends to give big because warriors on the front lines are throwing down for all of us and our future generations!
Lots of love darlings.
Wulfie and beyon.
xoxo
UNBC Livestream | University of Northern British Columbia
Watch the live stream of a panel discussion with Freda Huson, Helen Knot and Goot-Ges! 2pm today!
Several
Indigenous Activists from the West were arrested. At this point Crow, Sacheen and Kanahus have been released. However West Coast warriors are still in need of legal funds.
Please e-transfer to hwalia8@gmail.com [as requested by family
members and legal counsel]. We need to raise 2000 USD = 3000$ CDN
immediately.
More
information and updates below
*
Read update from Kanahus below *
Today
eighty water protectors were violently arrested near Dakota Pipeline construction
sites. As written by Red Warrior Camp “You are trespassing on Native
Land. You are protecting the destruction of our sacred sites. Put down your
guns, turn in your badges. Understand the indestructible spirit of indigenous
people walking with prayers and sacrifice of our ancestors for sacred
water.”
Four
of those arrested are well known West Coast land defenders and members of the
Secwepemc Women’s Warrior Society, Ancestral Pride and West Coast Women
Warriors Media Cooperative: Kanahus Manuel, Queen Sacheen, James Joe Crow and
Rose Stiffarm.
***
IMMEDIATE LEGAL FUNDS ARE NEEDED! ***
Please
e-transfer to hwalia8@gmail.com
[as requested by family members and legal counsel]. We need to raise 2000 USD
= 3000$ CDN immediately.
Legal
is needed ongoing for all water protectors: https://www.generosity.com/…/red-warrior-camp-legal-fund-no… andhttps://fundrazr.com/campaigns/d19fAf
ALSO
SUPPORT BY CALLING AND DEMANDING RELEASE:
The Morton County Sheriff’s dep’t: (701)
667-3330 or (701)667-3405
Jail: 1-701-667-3318
or 701-328-9921
WORDS
FROM KANAHUS:
“Things
are very disorganized at the jail, because they arrested 80+ people today.
Earlier in the day they did not even have a list of all the people they had
in custody. In a cell with 30 women and there are others in other cells. Sacheen Seitcham
and Joe James Crow are also among those arrested as is cinematographer Rose
Stiffarm. we were doing a peaceful prayer march through fields. Construction
has been happening in important areas and some people chained themselves to machinery.
The riot police put paper/cloth bags over the heads of those defenders. The
people in the prayer march were away from the construction zone and just in a
field when the riot police swarmed the field, they pepper sprayed people,
threw underage girls on the ground and swept and arrested all the people on
the field. Again, that was not supposed to happen, we were all in a peaceful
prayer march away from construction. It was local, state and federal police
that descended on them and arrested.”
The supervisor said they will all be charged with “criminal
trespass” and “inciting a riot”.”
On
August 4th we rolled up to YUCT
NE SENXIYMETKEW on unceded Secwepemc territory to join
the gathering organized by the Secwepemc Womens Warrior Society to mark the
2-year anniversary of the Mount
Polley Disaster.
Around
the sacred fire Sacheen of Ancestral Pride and Chrissy of the
West Coast Women’s Warrior Society led a workshop discussing how allies can throw down, supporters prepared wild
salmon, elders shared stories and we joined a dozen kids playing in the nearby
woods so their mamas could complete the skill shares they were leading and
start the blockade.
Under
the direction of Secwepemc Women, Elders and organizer Harsha Wallia a blockade
was set up at the entrance to the road leading to Mount Polley. Workers
were permitted to leave and no one was permitted to enter. We joined in
with kids on our shoulders while Kanahus of the Secwepecm Women’s Warrior
Society approached vehicles to inform them they were breaking Secwepemc law and
supporters stood strong in soft blockade. Despite the assault committed by one of the mine-workers on land defenders and
the injury of Sacheen, the Sewepecm Womens Warrior Society
with their allies including Ancestral Pride, Downtown Eastside Power of Women,
Native Youth Movement and No One Is Illegal, successfully shut down the mine
for hours.
That
evening a thunderstorm rolled in, lightning struck setting fire to a nearby power line and the
temporary camp was packed up so folks could return home. It was as if creator was telling us it was time to leave. We stuck around
the William’s Lake area for a couple nights as Sacheen attempted to file a police report and was met with some
fucked up, typical and boring as hell racist bullshit from the RCMP.
We
returned to Lekwungen Territory only to jump back on the ferry the very next
day to throw down with Sacheen, Kanahus and Chrissy on Musqueam
Territory. On August 9th a solid crew successfully occupied
the offices of Imperial Metals until cops stormed in, beat the shit out of our
friends and arrested four of us: beyon and our friends Julie Anne and Noah among
them. While some of us headed to the cop shop to do jail
support Kanahus, Sacheen and other West Coast Warrior Women went and occupied
the offices of the BC Mining Association.
The
following evening Sacheen and Kanahus hosted a debrief delivered to a packed
room. At this event Sacheen’s father, Tytun (Shane) Pointe honoured those
arrested, there was a blanketing ceremony for Julie Anne, beyon, Noah and David, thanking them for their work
supporting his daughter and affirmed they now shared the same canoe.
The
creeks, rivers, lakes and ocean are all connected. The poisons being discharged
into Hazeltine Creek by Imperial Metals flow through the connected waterways.
The salmon which return to the rivers from the oceans must pass through the
toxins never cleaned up by Imperial Metals. This is not just an Indigenous
issue, we all live downstream. The destruction of the land by mining is violence
and enough is enough.
Two
full years after the catastrophic breach of Mount Polley’s Tailings Pond,
Imperial Metals continues to operate illegally destroying the land and
endangering the lives of all the surrounding people.
Support
the work of Indigenous Women to shut down Imperial Metals.
Xo
beyon and Wulfie
https://www.voicesfrontlines.com/on-august-4th-we-rolled-up-to-yuct-ne-senxiymetkew/
Time does not make its way through our lives in a linear movement and so we begin our updates with the winding down of the work on the Youth Art Mural. The mural painting was part of the Unist’ot’en’s first Youth Art Camp and we took a rare quiet opportunity to visit Molly Wickham and her family at their home on Gitemden Territory.
The territories of the Gitemden Clan of the Wet’suwet’en located next to that of the Unist’ot’en’s unceded Yintah of Talbits Kwa. Past sprawling lakes, fields of wild medicines, tangles of berries and painful clear cuts we made our way to Lhudis Bin meaning “The Lake Way Out There,” where Molly and her partner Cody with their two kids, Liam and Lily have made their home at the request of their Elders.
Lhudis Bin, the lake way out there, is located at the center of the Casyex House Territory, the Grizzly Bear House. It is a place where the Elders and the Ancestors once lived, where the earth hides caches and the hills grow medicine, the lake is home to Chard and the lands nourish Bear, Moose, Dear and Coyote. The waters of this lake are fed by the Nanika river, where Molly and her family get their drinking water from, which flows from the glacier of nearby Nanika Mountain. Nanika Mountain holds within her mineral deposits at risk of industrial extraction. If Nanika mountain were to be mined it would turn Lhudis Bin into a tailings pond. (The term “pond” can be a little misleading, as the structures can grow to be the size of Central Park.) Lhudis Bin is connected to Wetzin Bin, which drains into Wetzin’kwa, where Freda and everyone at the Unist’ot’en camp get their drinking water, which is connected to the Bulkley and eventually to the Skeena and on to the sea.
Molly, Cody and their son Liam began living on their territory and in close relationship to the land as defenders and caretakers in 2012. This has ensured that a proposed ‘sling site’, where materials and workers for the proposed pipelines on Unist’ot’en territory would be brought in, has not been established. Returning to their territory has not only created the possibility for the land to heal from years of colonial devastation through logging it has also made it possible for the growth of the Life School.
The Life School is an initiative of grass roots Indigenous families raising their children decolonized, in relationship to the land, and learning their own histories of resistance instead of the assimilation fed to youth in colonial public education institutions. Seasonally these families come together to offer support to one another, share skills, put away food and connect their children with other kids like them.
“Really we’re just living Indigenous lives, we’re
living an Indigenous existence and that’s the education that we want to be
giving our kids. We want to be able to
be out on the land with our kids and teaching them in an experiential way according to our own tradition.” -Molly Wickham
If you are interested in supporting Molly and the Life School’s work they are always in need of both monetary donations, assistance with grants, and support approaching businesses for in kind donations in order to make their seasonal gatherings possible.
You can learn more about their work at the Cedars R.I.S.E Society.
Donations and offers of support can be made to ror.wickham@gmail.com
And cheques can be sent via snail mail to Box 3664 Smithers BC V0J 2N0
If you have questions feel free to contact us.
xo beyon and wulfgang <3
https://www.voicesfrontlines.com/time-does-not-make-its-way-through-our-lives-in-a/