Treaties Week presentation by member of Métis and Mi'kmaq First Nation.

Image Credit
TVC22
Translate video
To translate this video to French or another language:
  1. Start playing the video
  2. Click CC at bottom right
  3. Click the gear icon to its right
  4. Click Subtitles/CC
  5. Click Auto-translate
  6. Select language you want

Treaties Week presentation by member of Métis and Mi'kmaq First Nation.

From November 1st to November 7th, the province of Ontario observed Treaties Recognition Week, an annual event designed to educate Ontarians and honor the importance of treaties in our history as a nation, and to create a better understanding between indigenous communities and not Indigenous people across Canada.

TVC22 Journalist Bruce de la Cruz was able to attend a lecture and presentation given by Archie Martin, a member of the Métis Nation, and Miꞌkmaq Nation. The lecture emphasized the importance of treaties and how they directly affected his people and his family. 

Archie goes through the timeline of treaties in Canada and North America, starting from when European settlers first arrived, all the way to 11 treaties that were signed post-confederation between the Crown and various Indigenous peoples. 

He brings up lesser known facts on the topic as well, such as how the Dutch played a vital role in some of the treaties that took place in New York.

With him, Archie brought along many artifacts of his people, that the crowd were able to take a closer look at after the presentation was over. 

Archie, who hails from New Brunswick and has lived in Rigaud, Quebec for the past 50 years, has been giving presentations and doing workshops with his wife Pierrette for the past 19 years. Travelling across Quebec, the Maritimes, and Eastern Ontario, these workshops serve as a platform for the two of them to educate and inform people of First Nation and Metis history and culture in an interactive way.

Comments

We encourage comments which further the dialogue about the stories we post. Comments will be moderated and posted if they follow these guidelines:

  • be respectful
  • substantiate your opinion
  • do not violate Canadian laws including but not limited to libel and slander, copyright
  • do not post hateful and abusive commentary or any comment which demeans or disrespects others.

The Community Media Portal reserves the right to reject any comments which do not adhere to these minimum standards.

Add new comment

CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.
Video Upload Date: November 10, 2021

TVC22 is an independent not-for-profit organization founded in 1990 as a community TV station.  The mission of TVC22 is to highlight the Clarence-Rockland and surrounding community through the production and dissemination of TV projects that speak to the concerns of the local population while encouraging community involvement in the different stages of production.

Ontario
-
Clarence-Rockland

Recent Media