4.7 • 12.9K Ratings
🗓️ 5 August 2021
⏱️ 30 minutes
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The discovery of hundreds of unmarked graves at former Canadian residential schools have has led to a crisis of identity for the country as it comes to terms with the trauma of the past. For many, these discoveries fit into a pattern of discrimination and demographic replacement with the arrival of European settlers which could be described as genocide. In this episode, Dan speaks to Tracey Bear and Jim Miller about what happened to the indigenous people of Canada at the schools and what this means for modern Canadians if their country is, in fact, the product of Genocide?
Tracy Bear Nehiyaw iskwêw is a Cree woman from Montreal Lake First Nation in northern Saskatchewan and the Director of the Indigenous Women’s Resilience Project. She is one of the key authors of Indigenous Canada is a 12-lesson Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) from the Faculty of Native Studies that explores Indigenous histories and contemporary issues in Canada. You can learn more about the course here.
Jim Miller is a historian at the University of Saskatchewan. Dr. Miller is a nationally recognized historian who has studied the relationship between Canada's indigenous population and colonial settlers for decades including on the subjects of residential schools, so-called Indian treaties and law as it pertains to the indigenous people of Canada.
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0:00.0 | Hi everybody welcome to Dan Snow's History It. |
0:03.0 | Regular listness this pod will be aware that as well as being a Brit, I'm Jules Sussan Ship |
0:06.4 | I'm also a Canadian proud passport holder of that wonderful country. |
0:09.9 | I was born in London England so it sounded like it. |
0:12.2 | I was raised predominantly in the UK but my Canadian mum or mum ensured that we spent as |
0:18.4 | much time as possible in Canada. |
0:19.7 | We were shipped off there every summer to stay in my grandparents farm where we went in |
0:23.7 | with Christmas. It was important enough to my mum to endure a flight with three kids |
0:28.8 | under a 10. |
0:30.3 | Before personal screens folks. |
0:32.4 | Yeah that's what we're talking about here. |
0:34.5 | Before adequate in flight entertainment. |
0:36.8 | I mean I've got no idea how she coped. |
0:40.4 | After those horrific seven hour flights came to an end I'll never get landing in the |
0:45.2 | Lester B. Piss and their port in Toronto and opening those doors and smelling the Canadian |
0:49.4 | smells and the warm air in the summer the cold air in the winter. |
0:52.4 | I'm feeling like I was coming home a different home. |
0:55.4 | I was lucky enough to have two homes. |
0:57.5 | We then get my old grandpa station wagon and we drive up Dufferin Street north to Toronto |
1:02.1 | to the family farm that's been the family for a couple generations. |
1:05.6 | On the intersection of Major McKenzie and Dufferin there were rolling fields but a woodland |
1:10.6 | bit of arable. |
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