Anishinawbe Blog

January 25, 2010

Sincerity vs. Disingenuousness

Filed under: Personal — Tags: , , , , , , — Bob Goulais @ 7:18 am

I’ve worked with quite a number of politicians over the years. During that time, I’ve met hundreds of them. I’m convinced, perhaps rather naively, that they all mean well. However, aside from the need for your vote and your money, they are all quite different. Some are brilliant while others are merely able. There are a few that seem so overwhelmed with their responsibility or their own ego, they are downright dim-witted.

For me, I can break down any politician into two categories. Category one: caring and sincere. Category two: disingenuous.

It’s those in category one that keep me motivated and willing to put in the hours throughout the campaign and election day. It’s those individuals in category two that fuels scepticism, even in me.

George Smitherman is a brash man. He’ll offer you a firm handshake and a smile but you’d better get down to business. That doesn’t mean he’s not a kind man either. The last time I seen him, he went out of his way to initiate a quick pleasant conversation with me on Bay Street.

Phil Fontaine is one of the most misunderstood people in politics. Honestly, he is one of the kindest, most sincere, giving person I’ve had the pleasure of knowing. I think I still owe him $20 bucks. But Phil’s detractors unfairly paint him as some sort of villain. That’s the furthest from the truth.

Both Phil Fontaine and George Smitherman have two completely different styles and personalities, but are still in category one: they are both caring and sincere.

John Beaucage, my former boss – is untouchable in this category. Kind, caring and sincere and means it.

I’ve recently moved into the riding of Thornhill, which is going to be an intense battleground when a federal election is called later this year. This is a perfect example of sincerity vs. disingenuousness.

Dr. Karen Mock, Liberal candidate for Thornhill

Dr. Karen Mock, Liberal candidate for Thornhill

KAREN MOCK

– is among the most sincere, visionary people I’ve come to know. Her smile, handshake and words mean a lot. She’ll take as much time as she can, just to get to know you and your issues. She polished but personable. I don’t expect these qualities to change in the near future.

Karen is a tireless advocate for anti-racism, human rights and diversity. She was Executive Director of the Canadian Race Relations Foundation as well as the National Director of League for Human Rights of B’nai Brith Canada. She knows her stuff.

When asked about aboriginal issues, she knows them like the back of her hand. She knows about the growing socio-economic void. She knows, first hand, about racism faced by aboriginal people.

She is the personification of category one: kind, sincere and caring. To see her at work is to be inspired.

PETER KENT – is the Minister of State of Foreign Affairs for the Americas. He is the former anchor, reporter and correspondent for Global TV News in Toronto. He is polished and, I have to admit, a natural politician. However, having met him on more than a few occasions – he seems rehearsed – but not in an impressive way. It’s like his personality comes from years of TV practice.

A few months back, Jasmine, who just turned twelve, asked him about aboriginal issues at annual Thornhill Village Festival. He barely gave her the time of day and his response was not adequate, even for her. He was obviously not prepared to answer questions on aboriginal issues without a formal briefing from staff complete with prepared questions and answers.

Peter Kent is the personification of category two. On the surface he seems completely disingenuous – with a wink, smile and quick handshake to boot. Just enough to get the donation out of you and send you on your way.

But you can’t expect too much sincerity from the Harper Conservatives. We’ve all heard the words that folks like Harper use when the cameras aren’t on. To borrow a line from Michael Ignatieff, “there have always been two Harpers. The real Harper comes out when he thinks he can’t be heard.”

At least they are not the same kind of words used by Mike Harris, the king of the Conservative disingenuous. “those Fucking Indians…” If John Beaucage is at one end of the sincerity spectrum – Mike Harris is at the absolute other end.

However, not all conservatives are in category two. Tony Clement, the Minister of Industry is one of the hardest working, most genuine politicians I know. I’m happy to call him a friend. He always considers the public good in a positive, productive way.

I truly look forward to the next federal election and working with Dr. Karen Mock in Thornhill. I’ll also do my best to support Anthony Rota back home in Nipissing. Both are excellent examples of caring politicians who are most definitely cabinet material when the Liberals eventually take office. They are the reasons I continue to support the Liberal party and have hope for souls of politicians everywhere.

January 22, 2010

Right to Play takes hockey north

Filed under: Personal — Tags: , , , , — Bob Goulais @ 8:36 am

Group, province offer program for community plagued by teen suicides

Representatives from Right to Play, provincial government and Moose Cree First Nation appear at Hockey Hall of Fame on Jan. 21, 2010.  TONY BOCK/TORONTO STAR

Representatives from Right to Play, provincial government and Moose Cree First Nation appear at Hockey Hall of Fame on Jan. 21, 2010. TONY BOCK/TORONTO STAR

 

By Tanya Talaga
Toronto Star

A sports organization known for its mission to build self-esteem in children from impoverished and war-torn nations is coming to a northern Ontario aboriginal community struggling with a teen suicide crisis.

Right to Play, an international humanitarian body operating in 23 countries, is bringing hockey to the Moose Cree First Nation, adjacent to the town of Moosonee, on the James Bay coast.

This is the first time Right to Play, which has sports programs in countries such as Lebanon and Burundi, has come to Canada. Instructors will use hockey to teach kids life and leadership skills.

If successful, the joint Ontario government and Right to Play program will spread to reserves across the north.

Using sports to boost the self-confidence of First Nations teens was the brain-child of hockey dad Brad Duguid, Ontario’s former aboriginal affairs minister. Last Monday, Duguid was promoted to minister of infrastructure and energy.

“These young people deserve more than they are getting right now,” Duguid said at a news conference Thursday at the Hockey Hall of Fame. “This is the fastest-growing young population in our province and our country.”

Duguid said he realizes hockey will not solve all the social ills plaguing First Nations teens. Improving the education system and job creation in the north will take time, he said. “As the time passes, we are just losing far too many of these young, vibrant people,” he said. “We have to do something.”

The program is looking for corporate and private donors to help cover the $1.6 million cost for hockey equipment, infrastructure and maintenance. The Ontario government is committing funds, but has not revealed how much.

A Star investigation last month revealed there were 13 teen suicides in the isolated communities in the James Bay area in 2009. All the teens died by hanging. Another 80 tried to take their own lives. Just Wednesday, the provincial government announced it will free up $470,000 in emergency funds to send four suicide prevention workers to help. Nishnawbe Aski Nation Grand Chief Stan Beardy said First Nations teens are taking their lives at a frightening rate.

“What I see here today gives me great encouragement,” Beardy said of the hockey plan.

“It is something tangible, something my young people can relate to.”

January 21, 2010

New Partnership Promotes Life-Skills For Aboriginal Youth

Filed under: Personal — Tags: , , , , , — Bob Goulais @ 5:58 pm

 

Back Row: Chief Norm Hardisty of Moose Cree First Nation, Robert Witchel of Right to Play, Brad Duguid – Minister of Energy and Infrastructure, Chris Bentley – Minister of Aboriginal Affairs, Grand Chief Stan Beardy of Nishnawbe Aski Nation. Front Row: Darlene Isaac, Aurora Delaney, Olympic and World Champion Sami Jo Small and Adrian Delaney.

Today, the Government of Ontario and Right To Play announced a new partnership that will promote a healthy and active lifestyle for Aboriginal youth through sport and recreation. 

Promoting Life-skills for Aboriginal Youth (P.L.A.Y.) is a pilot project being developed by Right To Play. The first community to benefit from the program will be Moose Cree First Nation. 

The program uses sport and recreation to develop leadership skills and provide youth with opportunities that may not otherwise be available in their community. It is based on similar sport and play programs run by Right To Play.

Right To Play is a humanitarian organization that uses sport and play programs to improve health and develop life skills for children and communities in 23 countries around the world.

January 19, 2010

Diabetes trends not slowing

Diabetes kills.

It’s a disease that kills everyday and it’s been so apparent for so long.  It affects First Nations people far more than it affects non-native people. It affects far more First Nations women than any other demographic.

A study published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal illustrates the alarming numbers of First Nations people with diabetes. It examined 8275 aboriginal people in Saskatchewan between 1980 and 2005. It compared the trends with 82,306 non-native people over the same time period.

The study found that in 2005, 20 per cent of women and 16 per cent of men living in First Nations communities had Type-2 diabetes. That was an increase in 9.5 percent of women and 4.9 per cent in men. These trends are not about the slow down.

It also found that the root causes of diabetes among First Nations are not necessarily genetic or hereditary. It is environmental. It was about the food we eat and the lack of exercise and care we have for our bodies.

In my short lifetime, I’ve seen the disease ravage the bodies of many of my friends, family, Elders and even not-so-Elders. I’ve seen feet amputated, legs amputated and numerous people go blind. I’ve known many people forced to go on dialysis in order to live.

I’ve also seen them die.

I wrote recently about Helen Bobiwash. The certified management accountant from Sudbury took up the sport of triathlon to improve her own health with the hopes of staving off the onset of diabetes which runs in her family. Her mom Alice died of diabetes complications at the ripe age of 73. However, it was back in 2002, that Alice had to bury her son due to complications from diabetes. Rodney Bobiwash was only 42 when he passed on to the Spirit World.

I had only known him briefly and had the pleasure of hanging out with him on occasion when I lived and worked in Toronto back in the late 90s.

Rodney was a class-act. A vibrant young leader who garnered the respect of so many, both on the urban reserve and in the wider First Nation community. He was a tireless advocate of anti-racism and First Nations rights. He was vocal against hate speech. He stood up for human rights and was even an adjudicator for the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal.

Most of all he was a teacher who taught me something new in every one of our few talks together. He was a teacher of so many people like me.

But I never knew the affliction that he endured. Apparently he put on a brave face. He faced incredible hardship, even pain as he took on the disease. He was taken from us far too early.

Today, I have diabetes. I’m approaching my 40s. Damn it… and I missed taking my pills again this morning. I’m not a very good diabetic at all. I’ve got to start looking after myself because, no matter how hard my Loved ones try, only I can do this for myself.

We all need to heed the message of good health, especially our Anishinaabe women. As Anishinaabe men, it’s our traditional role to protect our women and children. Given these latest facts, we all need to do more to prevent diabetes and promote better health in our families and in our communities.

Unlike Helen Bobiwash, I won’t be climbing in for a cold swim, followed by a bike ride and a 10 km run anytime soon. But I will strive to listen to the doctor, exercise and take my pills everyday – so help me God.

So help me, Rodney.

January 14, 2010

Random Musings

  • I appreciated the splash of colour provided to Facebook earlier this week.  The status updates of bra colour can be considered either risqué or TMI, depending on who’s providing the update.  I agree with one column I read last week, that the exercise was more of a means of subtle flirting with the opposite sex, rather than a legitimate means of raising the awareness of breast cancer.  Case in point:  how many women updated us how they were wearing their hair and what their shoe-size was in an effort to confuse men?
     
  • Speaking of breast cancer, I seen a great ad this morning.  (see above).  It showed some photos, first of a woman cupping her breast, a mammogram of a cancerous tumour, a small coniferous seed on the tip of a surgically-gloved finger, a women, and some children.  The text read:  “This is the breast.  This is the tumour.  This is the seed implanted in the breast to kill the tumour and help give the patient a better life.  This is the patient.  These are her children.  That’s why it matters.”  The ad prefers to the use of small “seeds” of Palladium-103, a radioactive isotope of palladium which is proving to be a successful means of treating various forms of cancer.  Excellent example of research and innovation.  Consider supporting the Sunnybrook Foundation.  www.sunnybrookfoundation.ca

  • My morning prayers went out to the people of Haiti who are faced with unimaginable horror.  According to the Metro:  “Dazed survivors wandered past dead bodies in rubble-strewn streets Wednesday, crying for loved ones, and rescuers desperately searched collapsed buildings as fear rose that the death toll from Haiti’s devastating earthquake could reach into the tens of thousands.”  I can’t imagine what the people of Haiti are going through.  Today, I asked the Creator to look after them and for a strong outpouring of compassion and support.  There is no question, this impoverished nation needs help – international aid, volunteers and donations.  www.unicef.ca/disaster  www.worldvision.com  www.redcross.ca/helpnow  www.humanitariancoalition.ca  Please give as I will be.
  • Strangely enough, I usually do my morning prayers in the shower.  Must be a connection to the water or something.  I usually offer tobacco mid-morning when I go down to buy my first Coke Zero of the day.  Weird, eh?  I’m a 21st Century Indian.
  • I was groped repeatedly in the subway this morning.  Some woman’s bag was continually rubbing up against my buttocks.  I liked it.
     
  • For some reason I was thinking of the little shots of fluoride we used to get in grade school.  Remember those?  The bubble-gum flavoured liquid was administered by the public health unit in those stubby, flimsy disposable cups.  That led me to think about Constable Halsall, the local OPP public education officer and Father Greg Humbart, who did missionary work in Peru.  I was also thinking of my friend Ian MacPhee who moved to PEI and my school-yard friend Carrie-Ann Lambert, who I haven’t seen since grade six.  I wonder what they are doing?  It’s strange how electrical impulses can pull together random packets of stored data from the hippocampus.
     
  • I’m enjoying how NBC is falling apart over the late night controversy.  Conan O’Brien is holding his ground, refusing to move from his 11:35 p.m. time-slot to make room for the flailing Jay Leno.  Rightfully so.  Conan was given the job of hosting The Tonight Show fairly, and earned the spot by patiently putting in his time with NBC.  He was offered numerous chances to advance with other networks, namely FOX.  So when Leno’s 10 p.m. disaster of a show was cancelled, NBC brass tried to bring him back to late night.  Now Conan won’t budge.  It’s all great comedy fodder for other late night hosts.  I really enjoyed Jimmy Kimmel’s prosthetic Leno chin and grey wig the other night.  “Let it be known I’m taking over all the shows on late-night,” Kimmel said, as Leno.  If I watch late night TV, I’m more of a Letterman fan than anything.  I enjoy Kimmel and occasionally Stephen Colbert.  But I admire Conan for the stance he’s taking.

January 11, 2010

Olympic torch carries diabetic message

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , — Bob Goulais @ 8:08 am

 

Helen Bobiwash carried the Olympic torch during a relay event at Mississauga First Nation on January 2, 2010.

Helen Bobiwash carried the Olympic torch during an event at Mississauga First Nation on January 2, 2010.

The Olympic torch relay means different things to different people.  Some First Nation communities embraced the torch as it passed through their community.  Some communities used the torch relay to hold protests.  Others use the opportunity to highlight messages that are much more personal.

For Helen Bobiwash, the Olympic torch is a beacon on hope for herself, her family and her community.  The opportunity to carry the torch was an opportunity to spread the message of awareness of physical fitness and type-2 diabetes.

“Coming from a family with a whole lot of diabetes, I realized that I didn’t want my son to grow up worrying about me like I did my mom,” said Bobiwash, a member of Thessalon First Nation.  “While my mother was alive, I worried a lot about her heath and the toll that diabetes was taking on her.”

Bobiwash, a 42 year-old, strategic consultant and finance-whiz, carried the flame on January 2 in Mississauga First Nation.  She was one of 12,000 people across Canada to carry the flame during the Olympic torch relay.

Although Bobiwash does not have diabetes, the disease has affected her intimately.

Helen’s mom, Alice, lived with the complications from diabetes until she passed away at the age of 73.  With the loss of her mom and with the passing of her brother, Rodney, at the young age of 42, Helen became motivated to change her life.

“I wanted my son to grow up with a healthy mom,” said Bobiwash, the proud mother of five year-old Mzhiikenh.  “The only way that I knew that I could make a difference with my health was through physical activity.”

Helen, admits she wasn’t exactly the typical athletic type.  In 2007, Helen was overweight and was recovering from a car accident when her mother died. She realized quickly that she couldn’t continue living like she had been for so long. She needed to make a change.

Helen took up the sport of triathlon –a gruelling multi-sport race that combines swimming, cycling and running.  It is a demanding sport that requires endurance and speed, as well as a great deal of determination.  It is not for the faint-hearted.

“I decided to go for it and see if I could challenge myself.  I started training using some advice from the YMCA.  I also found a local triathlon clinic and joined a team,” she said.

She has competed in 14 triathlons, mainly in local events all across Ontario.  She’s hoping to challenge herself further by doing more cycling events this summer, and perhaps competing in Olympic distance in the triathlon (1.5 km swim, 40 km ride, 10 km run) as early as 2011.

And she’s motivated.

“If a 40 year old overweight mom can turn their life around with physical activity to stave off diabetes, a lot of other people can,” concluded Bobiwash.

The 2010 Olympic Winter Games are set to begin with the opening ceremony and lighting of the game caldron in Vancouver on February 12.

For Helen Bobiwash, her new-found passion for physical fitness and her new outlook on life with her son is symbolized in the Olympic flame. 

The Olympic flame is a flame of hope, a symbol of achievement and doing your best.

It’s a flame that will never be extinguished in our lifetime, and can be passed on one-person at a time.

 ———————–

Bob Goulais, of Nipissing First Nation, is the author of the Anishinawbe Blog.  He writes about politics, culture, spirituality and other stuff.  He has type-2 diabetes.  www.bobgoulais.com

January 8, 2010

Another racist video from northwestern Ontario

Filed under: Personal — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Bob Goulais @ 7:39 am

Yet another cell-phone amateur video has surfaced from northwestern Ontario that features, not only lateral violence against First Nations, but the racist face of malicious youth.

The videos depicts First Nations people, some poor and homeless in Kenora, and also features a video of an inebriated man being arrested by Kenora police.

The video is tasteless and shows the underlying racism of the youth videographers and quite possibly, their hatred of their First Nations neighbours.  The videographers feel superior to their filmed subjects.  Plain and simple, the video is meant to degrade all First Nations people and humiliate and ridicule some innocent, vulnerable people.

The video was obviously made by youth as it features one of their stars, a teenage skateboarder doing tricks.  The people taking the video seem to be known to the community, due to the reactions they get from seemly normal folks on the streets of Kenora and outside the local shopping centre.  (They are ‘flipped the bird’ twice during the course of the short video.)

It brings to mind the Fort Frances video.  It was almost two years ago when a half-a-dozen, equally bright girls from a local hockey team, decided in their wisdom to upload their parody of sacred Anishinaabe dancing to YouTube.  The underage girls, drunk as skunks, were forming their version of pow-wow dancing for the world to see.

But this is much more personal for those people depicted in the video.

These people may very well be at lowest points of their lives.  Some are dealing with the demons of addictions – others are poor and homeless.  They needn’t be ridiculed or filmed without their permission.

But it isn’t just the homeless.  Some are just people walking down the street or hanging out together.

One Anishinaabe man is simply enjoying a bag of popcorn for God’s sakes.  But because he’s Anishinaabek, he is being ridiculed for no apparent reason.  That easily could have been me.  Would the video be so funny if it was a middle-aged white man was walking, content and carefree, eating his popcorn snack?  I don’t think so.

This leads me to believe that they weren’t targeting the homeless, they were targeting First Nation people.

This is infuriating.

There isn’t any question, we are dealing with racism.  Even the name of the Youtube member “like9jews” may be anti-semetic.

The authorities need to find the producer of this video and their cohorts and investigate them for any hate crimes.  Have these people gone further in their hate for First Nations people?  Should they be exposed so the community knows who they are and can protect themselves from this type of lateral violence.

It’s when racism become overt, like in the case of these YouTube videos, that it becomes concerning.  When does lateral violence become actual violence?  In addition to their cell phone, do they have firearms in their truck?  It is these types of people that will, more often than not, commit hate crimes.

The local First Nations should step in and take the producers to court, no matter their age, to hold them accountable for the hurt they are causing these individuals who are depicted and the pain they are causing the broader Anishinaabe community.

Racism is a learned behaviour and it isn’t taught at school.  Let me place the blame where it belongs – the parents.  Perhaps these parents need to know where their kids are and what they’re doing – just like the parents of the infamous Fort Frances girls.  However, these youth appear a little older than the teenie-bopper racists.

As I stated two years ago, this is a symptom and a greater problem in the Kenora and Fort Frances areas.  First Nations are subject to racism quite often.  To their credit, the local Council and First Nations governments have taken steps to raise awareness and counter these types of situations.  But there is a still a lot of work to do.

Racism is no longer socially accepted and very often lies dormant.  But it manifests itself in contemporary stereotypes, ignorance.  Believe me, I will get many e-mails and responses in defence of youth, the videographers and their parents.  Many will deflect the issue and even accuse me of racism.  All are symptoms of underlying, dormant racism.

It’s in those private conversations, at home, with their spouses and children, at the dinner table or before bed, where the real racism will show it’s ugly head.

January 5, 2010

Time to Tax Wealthiest Canadians

Yesterday, the first official work day of 2010, most of Canada’s top CEOs made the average annual wage in Canada by lunch-time.  According to the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, the average salary in for Canada’s 100 highest paid CEOs was $7.8 million.

Meanwhile, the average annual income for a First Nations person in Canada was less than $20,000.00. Still, many more – without any source of income – are battling the bitter cold, homeless in Canada’s urban centres. We’re not talking about couch-surfing homeless. We’re talking about people sleeping in crowded shelters, cardboard shanties or in sleeping bags over sewer grates.

There is something seriously wrong with this picture.

The government needs to take steps to tax the highest paid earners – Canada’s wealthy elite.  It is a travesty that richest 1% of families also now pay a lower tax rate than the poorest 10%. Canada’s tax system is seriously out of balance.

The wealthy need to be taxed and those resources need to be mobilized immediately to eliminate poverty, beginning with children and First Nations people.

Corporations turning substantial profits also need to be taxed. There are still many corporations are turning health profits despite the global recession.

Inheritances need to be taxed at a greater rate. Capital gains and investment income also need to be taxed more substantially.

Finally, Canada’s poorest people need breaks from taxes. This includes maintaining First Nations’ right to tax exemption. First Nations, as sovereign people and governments, have always maintained they are exempt from imposed taxes from settler governments. In fact, First Nations governments need to fully mobilize an effort to tax government and resource companies who have benefited from their traditional territory for so long. First Nations are only beginning to develop taxation laws and generate taxation revenue of their own.

DISCLAIMER: The opinions expressed in the Anishinawbe Blog is solely the personal opinion of the author and does not reflect, in any manner, the opinions and position of his employer, community, family or associates.

NOTICE: The Anishinawbe Blog is copyright (c) 2009 BobGoulais.com, Nipissing First Nation, Ontario Canada. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, distribution, electronic transmission or unauthorized use, without the expressed permission of the author, is strictly prohibited.

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