Aboriginal People Essay

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    The Aboriginal Crisis

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    The Aboriginal Crisis: This is not a party problem; this is a Canadian problem Lack of health care, widespread poverty, employment barriers, high suicide rates, drug abuse, segregation, and lack of drinkable water. These are conditions commonly used to describe developing countries, yet they describe a majority of Canada’s Aboriginal reserves. For a country who have cities on several, notable “Most Livable” lists, these conditions seem foreign. Varying political parties have tried to blame…

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    Canadian aboriginals have experienced an increase in racial discrimination as racial tensions have become amplified in Canada from the persisting effects of the relocation of the indigenous people in 1953. This paper will explore the lasting effects of forced relocation the indigenous people in regards to the Blauner Hypothesis and the deconstruction of the productive family unit. More then 40% of indigenous people are unemployed and experience much higher rates of suicide, alcoholism, and drug…

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    Deepa Mehta is a famous film Director which is born in India and she has done philosophy from University of New Delhi which later she migrated to Canada .She has started her professional career from Canada only. She started making many films on different social issues in Canada .She some awards too because of amazing works on social justice. The Fire and Water Distinct Image Fire: Male Domination and Patriarchy Here I want to focused on the two by Deepa Mehta which Both the movies Fire…

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    by First Nations peoples” (Langston and Chaulk 177). The reclamation of identity is prominent throughout the play and both Billingham’s as well as Langston and Chaulk’s articles allow for a further understanding of the text. Langston and Chaulk promote the idea in which “Highway argues that such theatre, like the women’s hockey league, is capable of stoking pride, community, reform, and the reclamation of tradition, and not only for Canada’s First Nations, but for colonized peoples around the…

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    The Survivors Speak

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    were forced to go to residential schools, most of the schools were hundred miles from their home and they suffered physical and sexual abuse there. Most of the Indigenous people addicted to drugs and alcohol in order to get rid of the horrible memories and this habit affected several generations. Nowadays, many Indigenous people suffer the discrimination and poor living conditions. With the help from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, their living conditions get better and their…

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    A review of “The original sin of white privilege” Margaret Wente’s article from The Globe and Mail that published on May 27, 2017, “The original sin of white privilege,” successfully informs people about the information of white privilege in Canada. Wente seems to be disagreeing with white privilege curriculum and providing some information implies that the white privilege curriculum is outdated, confusing, and unnecessary. Although author Margaret Wente focus on the group of reader, provides…

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    Canadian Course Reflection

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    to the interesting facts about the native people of this land. Even though the Europeans settled Canada and urbanized it, to me the most interesting facts I learned in this course was being given the opportunity to be able to see the natives eyes through the textbook readings in A Few Acnes of Snow. In my opinion, this course is really important for anyone wanting to become a Canadian teacher, or they are a Native of Canada, Canadian citizens (people who live in…

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    Residential schools were a very terrible time in Canada’s history, negatively affecting over 150, 000 young Indigenous people between the ages of 4-16 (Green 2012). At the time the government believed that if they taught the natives their ways, native traditions would diminish as time crept by. Many Indigenous children in this period of time would never have normal lives (Residential school essay 2012). Residential schools are religious government funded schools, in which the main purpose of…

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    During the 1880s, the Canadian federal government felt so threatened by the Indigenous inhabitants that they started a cultural genocide by establishing Residential schools with the intent to destroy the Indigenous culture. The negative impact of these institutions continues to affect the Indigenous community till now. In response, the government of Canada, in cooperation with the FNMI community, initiated the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement (IRSSA). The procedures implemented by…

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    young Indigenous men and women coping mechanism which lead to many of the indigenous men committing offences and being sent away to prisons and left mothers to care for the children on their own. As the years went by, and more and more indigenous people were left to grow up in single family home while living in poverty. Many indigenous…

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