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A collaboration exploring the importance of the Ojibway-Anishinabe
worldview, use of ceremony, and language in living a good life,
attaining true reconciliation, and resisting the notions of
indigenization and colonialization inherent in Western
institutions. Indigenization within the academy and the idea of
truth and reconciliation within Canada have been seen as the remedy
to correct the relationship between Indigenous Peoples and Canadian
society. While honourable, these actions are difficult to achieve
given the Western nature of institutions in Canada and the
collective memory of its citizens, and the burden of proof has
always been the responsibility of Anishinabeg. Authors Makwa Ogimaa
(Jerry Fontaine) and Ka-pi-ta-aht (Don McCaskill) tell their
di-bah-ji-mo-wi-nan (Stories of personal experience) to provide
insight into the cultural, political, social, and academic events
of the past fifty years of Ojibway-Anishinabe resistance in Canada.
They suggest that Ojibway-Anishinabe i-zhi-chi-gay-win zhigo
kayn-dah-so-win (Ways of doing and knowing) can provide an
alternative way of living and thriving in the world. This
distinctive worldview -- as well as Ojibway-Anishinabe values,
language, and ceremonial practices -- can provide an alternative to
Western political and academic institutions and peel away the
layers of colonialism, violence, and injustice, speaking truth and
leading to true reconciliation.
In his introduction, Don MacCaskill wrote modestly, 'I think I
became a naturalist'. He was, in fact, one of Scotland's foremost
naturalists and a remarkable wildlife photographer as well. In a
flashback to his early years in Kilmartin, a village in
Argyllshire, we learn of his awakening interest in man's
relationship with the wildlife all around him - why was it
necessary to kill it? And when accident, or fate, took him into a
career in forestry, an inborn love of trees, both in woodland and
forest, flourished and became his life. Photography came a little
later, mostly as a record of what he was discovering in the natural
world, but is of a remarkable quality in a time when modern aids to
getting that special photograph of mammal or bird did not exist.
This book is an account of his first year at Ardgarten, as a young
forester newly out of college. Full of enthusiasm and confidence,
he thought he knew everything and there was many an occasion when
he had to discover that he didn't! It is an honest and often
humorous account of forestry in the days after the Second World War
when the forest folk of that time, who often lived in isolated
communities 'far from the madding crowd', were genuinely interested
in the work they were doing. There were some fascinating characters
too! Trees are surely the supreme example of a life force stronger
than our own, wrote Don. Some, like the giant redwoods of North
America, live for thousands of years. Some, like our own oaks and
pines, may live for centuries. All, given the right conditions,
will regenerate their species and survive long into the future. Don
wrote, 'I love trees'. It was true - he couldn't help it.
The two volumes comprising Indian Education in Canada present the
first full-length discussion of this important subject since the
adoption in 1972 of a new federal policy moving toward Indian
control of Indian education. Volume 1 analyzes the education of
Indian children by whites since the arrival of the first Europeans
in Canada. Volume 2 is concerned with the wide-ranging changes that
have taken place since 1972.
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