Blog

  • Dakota academic says FBI contacted her about “controversial” lecture

    Waziyatawin

    Minnesota Public Radio reported yesterday that Dakota academic Waziyatawin (aka Angela Cavender-Wilson) says she “received a call this week from the FBI to discuss remarks she made in November at Winona State University.”

    An associate professor and holder of the Indigenous Peoples Research Chair with the University of Victoria’s Indigenous Governance Program, Waziyatawin was invited to the campus by WSU professors. According to the MPR report, she told students it was time for Indigenous people to abandon symbolic demonstrations:

    “We’re going to need to take a different kind of action. All of you are going to have to figure out your role. For Dakota people, I know we’re going to need to recover our land base, by any means necessary.”

    It was that last bit of Malcolm X-esque phraseology that evidently attracted the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s attention. According to MPR, the UVic professor denied the comment implied a call to violence and was more about “removing people from their comfort zone.”

    Did the professor cross the line? Or state the obvious? To decide for yourself, check out audio of the lecture in question, plus a Q&A, by visiting the MPR site.

    UPDATE: An article in the Jan. 11 Victoria Times Colonist (a name Waziyatawin must love) quotes the professor as saying: “”The FBI agent informed me he was closing the case after listening to the original presentation as it was clear I had not made the statement that a young, white male student had complained about.” Read the rest of the interview for her full remarks and the 20+ comments, many of them unhappy with the prof.

  • Researchers to explore success of Aboriginal women in science, tech, engineering and math studies

    According to Montana State University, the National Science Foundation in the US has funded a study into possible success factors for Native American women studying in the so-called ‘STEM’ fields— science, technology, engineering and mathematics:

    “Native Americans, particularly female Native Americans, are under-represented in the fields and [researchers Jessi L. Smith Ph.D. and Anneke Metz] hope to provide insights on how Native women going into the fields can stay and become successful.”

  • Mission Improbable

    Mission Improbable
    Mission Improbable

    A few years ago, someone sent me figures downloaded from a Canadian website. Those figures identified the amount of year-end bonuses paid out to Indian Affairs bureaucrats. If I remember correctly, the data also included the program or branch where these employees were doing such remarkable work to earn millions of dollars in bonuses. You know, work they did in “land claims” or “education”.

    Your mission – if you choose to accept it – is to find out who compiles such figures?  Tell us where we might find these figures for ourselves (via the Internet). It’s not a mission impossible; just a Mission Improbable.

    What do you get in return? The bottomless thanks of a grateful nation (Mohawk, of course) and a ride on my personal jet (as soon as I get a job at Indian Affairs and can afford one).

    Good luck. This message will self-destruct in…. (Mission Impossible Theme)

  • Aboriginal youth: “social time bomb” for 2011?

    Senior members of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives have issued their political predictions for 2011 on rabble.ca, and young Aboriginal people factor prominently for the director of CCPA’s Manitoba office. Here is part of what she had to say:

    … the prospects for many Aboriginal youth today are bleak. Far too many drop out of school and join inner city gangs because it represents hope and belonging in a world of limited options. We have all the research we need to show the current government approach to the problem — criminalizing Aboriginals, or offering them short-term training to feed the low-wage market — isn’t working. … It’s time to ensure they have the tools they need to succeed, or we face a social time bomb that was — and is — wholly preventable.

    In terms of where this “bomb” might explode, I have to assume she means the Prairies, and I hope the chiefs, councillors, mayors and premiers across the West heed these words constructively.

  • How three Navajo 20-somethings got their $600 film into prestigious Sundance festival

    Here’s an amazing story you just gotta love, courtesy of the Navajo Times:

    By the time Donavan Seschillie, Jake Hoyungowa and Deidra Peaches finished making “The Rocket Boy,” they didn’t have $50 left for the fee to apply for the Sundance Film Festival. … [But now] the trio from Flagstaff can boast of being the youngest Native filmmakers to premiere a film at this year’s festival, to be held Jan. 20-30 in Park City, Utah.

    More details available on the film at the Newspaper Rock blog and the National Museum of the American Indian blog. Check out the trailer:

    (Thanks to @nikkealexis and @theguvna505 for originally tweeting this.)