SA国际影视传媒

Skip to content

Guest comment: Coun. Stacie Smith will SA国际影视传媒榗ontinue being the tide of changeSA国际影视传媒

EditorSA国际影视传媒檚 note: Yellowknife Coun. Stacie Smith delivered a powerful members statement at the June 14 regular council meeting. The message came following the finding of 215 unmarked graves of former residential school students in Kamloops in May.
25537369_web1_210618-YEL-smith-smith_1
City councillor Stacie Smith stands with her son Aiden Smith at the Dene Nation commemorative march June 4. Her other son Jaxon stands behind them. Simon Whitehouse/NNSL photo

EditorSA国际影视传媒檚 note: Yellowknife Coun. Stacie Smith delivered a powerful members statement at the June 14 regular council meeting. The message came following the finding of 215 unmarked graves of former residential school students in Kamloops in May.

In light of recent events, I feel itSA国际影视传媒檚 imperative as an Indigenous citizen, as a Yellowknifer and as a political champion, that I speak truth.

When I took this role as city councillor, my hope was to bring representation for my people. In a city heavily populated by Indigenous peoples, it was dumbfounding that we had not been represented at the municipal level of governance for over 20 years.

Upon being elected, it was suggested by a member of the community that I should wear Indigenous jewelry during all council meetings to show that I was Indigenous.

As if my skin color wasnSA国际影视传媒檛 enough. As if my heritage wasnSA国际影视传媒檛 enough. My greatest fear was being viewed as the token Indian. But I have shown since then, that ISA国际影视传媒檓 so much more.

I have fought for Indigenous relations, social issues in culture in my three years on council, and I will continue to advocate. In a time where weSA国际影视传媒檙e being told to trust our government, thereSA国际影视传媒檚 much hesitation from the Indigenous community because we have only been lied to, and the truth has been buried, figuratively, and literally.

I was once given a response to a question I had long wanted answered: Why do white people dislike us? Why do they become defensive when we discuss truths? I could never understand until an Elder explained to me in the simplest of terms. She looked at me without hesitation and said, SA国际影视传媒淚tSA国际影视传媒檚 because weSA国际影视传媒檙e still here.SA国际影视传媒

The 215 have awakened a nation from complacency. It hits us harder because we are discussing the mass murder of children. The number that keeps rising. It shakes us to our core that this has happened in our front yard. In a country that is globally viewed as safe, kind and tolerant. But for Indigenous people we have suffered at the hands of this country.

Indians. Indigenous. Red skin. No matter how you paint us, it cannot take away from what we truly are: First Nations. We are the First peoples, the stewards of this land. But as First Nations we are treated as second class citizens.

Take a good look at our downtown. Take a good look at reservations. Child services. The genocide of my people continues in front of our eyes. It just has a different name. But the intention is the same: to alienate, to shame, to strip of us our dignity.

As an Indigenous person, itSA国际影视传媒檚 embedded into me to be resilient. When ISA国际影视传媒檓 beaten down, hold my head high and withstand the blows. I can tell you right now, itSA国际影视传媒檚 exhausting being resilient. But I draw strength knowing ISA国际影视传媒檓 not alone. I draw strength knowing I can make a difference for our next generation.

So I will continue being the tide of change.

I will continue raising those uncomfortable conversations until those conversations no longer become uncomfortable. ISA国际影视传媒檓 a mother of two young boys, 12 and eight years old, and they are both status.

My eldest is passing white and unless he chooses to showcase his status card, he will pass through life with less racism towards his Indigenous origins. He will have a greater chance at education, employment, in an unbiased world. However, my youngest wonSA国际影视传媒檛 be so lucky. My youngest who is darker than I will struggle.

He will be judged by his appearance. At first glance, his upbringing will be questioned whether he comes from a broken home, if his parents are alcoholics, if heSA国际影视传媒檚 neglected. Both of my children will have different outlooks on life. But for both and teaching them when I was taught, resilience, kindness, hope, and the power of laughter

For some 215 will be a number that you will slowly forget as you slide back into your societal based complacency. But for many, this will impact the way in which you view Canada, our government and the church. And you will want change, you will want answers and you will join the fight weSA国际影视传媒檝e been fighting since the beginning.

I thank all of my fellow councillors for being supportive, for the recognition of the lost souls. We have so many survivors but they all have stories and the stories that we donSA国际影视传媒檛 get to hear are those that are lost in those 215 and the number is only rising

I am Stacy Arden Smith and ISA国际影视传媒檓 of the Tlicho people. ISA国际影视传媒檓 of the Nunatukavut people. And ISA国际影视传媒檓 of English origin. Mahsi.





(or

SA国际影视传媒

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }