Non-aboriginal Canadians need to wake up to the rising power of Aboriginal Peoples – by Anna Marie Tremonti (CBC The Current – November 13, 2014)

http://www.cbc.ca/thecurrent/

Aboriginal youth and a whole new generation of First Nations thinkers and leaders are speaking up but arguably non-aboriginal Canadians haven’t been listening. In a week when the news is dominated by the trauma of the brutal attack of another young aboriginal woman, we bring you a conversation about empowerment and greater expectations … in what John Ralston Saul calls “The Comeback”

“We are bringing this message for our future generations for our grandparents that went to residential schools for the children that were raped in residential schools. We bring this message forward for them.”

“Stay strong, we are all in this together. We will not fall. We will not end this. We are in this for the long hall with Chief Theresa Spence with all of our Chiefs. With all of those involved in the idle no more movement. We are in unity with the creator, with ceremony.”

Andrea Landry from Pays Plat First Nation in Ontario at Idle No More protest in Ottawa, January of 2013

The Idle No More protests and blockades of almost two years ago sent a clear message that Aboriginal people were fed up with the federal government. The grass-roots movement may have surprised some non-aboriginal Canadians.

But according to writer and philosopher John Ralston Saul, that’ s because they weren’t paying attention. His new book “The Comeback” tracks the century-long rise of indigenous peoples. And he believes that relationship is being transformed.

Kathryn Teneese is the chair of the Ktunaxa Nation Council. She was in Cranbrook, BC.

Hayden King is the director of the Centre for Indigenous Governance in the Faculty of Arts at Ryerson University.

For a 25 minute interview, click here: http://www.cbc.ca/thecurrent/episode/2014/11/13/non-aboriginal-canadians-need-to-wake-up-to-the-rising-power-of-aboriginal-peoples/