Canada

'We cannot look to mainstream Canada to support us': Indigenous writers urge communities to reclaim own voices

Anger, frustration and calls for change continue to pour out of Canada's Indigenous community over a recent editorial that championed the idea of cultural appropriation, setting off a swift and passionate debate about the issue.

Writers, activists in aboriginal communities frustrated and fed up with cultural appropriation debate

Trevor Greyeyes is the owner and editor of First Nations Voice, an Indigenous newspaper based in Winnipeg. (CBC)

Anger, frustration and calls for change continue to pour out of Canada's Indigenous community over a recent editorial that championed the idea of cultural appropriation, setting off a swift and passionate debate about the issue.

"That's fine if people ask, 'Why can't Indigenous people take a joke?' Yeah, we can take a joke, but at the same time, we're standing up for ourselves," says Trevor Greyeyes, the owner and editor of First Nations Voice, an Indigenous newspaper based in Winnipeg.

"This is our moment, this is our time, where we're standing up with our voices and saying, if you want to hear it, hear it from us; you don't have to hear it from a third party."

Greyeyes says he's appalled not only at the original editorial in the Writers' Union of Canada's magazine, which he says denied the reality of cultural appropriation, but by the response of some high-profile media personalities, who took to Twitter to pledge money for an "appropriation prize."

"The disappointing thing is that for the people in power, this is a joke," Greyeyes said. "I know for them it comes down to, 'I should have freedom of speech.' But what's at issue is how much the Indigenous voice has always been denied in the past, and this is continuation of that theme."

'Space to be heard'

Indigenous authors say it's OK to write about other cultures, as long as it's based on respect, relationships and accountability. But, they say, cultural appropriation robs Indigenous people of their own voice.

UBC professor Daniel Justice holds the Canada Research Chair in Indigenous literature and expressive culture. (UBC)

They hope the current controversy — and the resulting conversation around it — will lead to meaningful change.

"There are still a lot of Indigenous writers who just don't have the space to be heard and who are saying really important things that we all need to be hearing," said Daniel Justice, a University of British Columbia professor who holds the Canada Research Chair in Indigenous literature and expressive culture.

"So, we're thinking about ways we can shift the ground and open up more space for a wider range of representations and voices."

We really have to look after our own first. We cannot look to mainstream Canada to support us.- Daniel Justice, UBC professor

"I think there is … a lot of real joy and enthusiasm in our community as well, with Indigenous writers and Indigenous creators seeing how much support there is," he said. "But [we're] also realizing that we really have to look after our own first. We cannot look to mainstream Canada to support us."

Editor Hal Niedzviecki resigned after setting off a wave of public criticism over an editorial he wrote for a special issue of the quarterly Writers' Union of Canada magazine devoted to Indigenous writing.

He opened the piece — entitled "Winning the Appropriation Prize" — by saying he didn't "believe in cultural appropriation" and encouraged writers to "write what they don't know."

Several other high-profile journalists and media executives —  including Steve Ladurantaye, managing editor of CBC's The National — tweeted messages of support saying they would donate money toward the establishment of that prize. Many have since apologized on Twitter.

At a CBC staff meeting on Monday, Heather Conway, head of CBC's English services, said some employees have expressed their anger and concerns over the issue to their supervisors.

"We've all been trying to make change, and events like this are, in some ways, all the more disappointing because of that. It's always hard to deal with a setback," she said. "These incidents and our response to them serve to remind us this is a journey, and we clearly have some distance to travel."

In a statement, CBC spokesperson Chuck Thompson said Ladurantaye has acknowledged "he exercised poor judgment … recognizing his tweet was insensitive and inappropriate." He's reaching out to staff and the Indigenous community and has enrolled in cultural sensitivity training.

Beyond apologies

But some Indigenous advocates say apologies are not enough.

Change has to be more than just superficial. It has to be more than just a little bit of red-washing and throwing a few Indigenous people in there.- Niigaan Sinclair, writer

"Apologies are good, but we get apologies all the time as Indigenous people, and nothing really changes," says Niigaan Sinclair, a writer and the acting head of Native studies at the University of Manitoba.

"I see everyday Canadians changing, but I don't see people in power changing very much.

Niigaan Sinclair is an author and the acting head of Native studies at the University of Manitoba. (CBC)

"Smart and active Indigenous people are saying, 'Enough is enough.' We saw the treatment of our parents and grandparents. We witnessed that, and we will never let that happen to us.".

Justice agrees, saying he believes the debate shows it's time for a significant shift across Canada's mainstream media.

"If they actually want to be relevant, if they want to have any possibility of surviving into the future, change has to be more than just superficial. It has to be more than just a little bit of red-washing and throwing a few Indigenous people in there … I think it is time.

"I think if the mainstream media doesn't change, we'll change it for them."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Karen Pauls

National reporter

Karen Pauls covers Manitoba stories for CBC national news. She has worked across Canada, U.S. and Europe, and in CBC bureaus in Washington, London and Berlin. Some of her awards include the New York Festivals for coverage of the Greyhound bus beheading and a Quirks & Quarks question show, and from the Radio Television Digital News Association for stories about asylum seekers, the Michif language, the Humboldt Broncos bus tragedy, live elections and royal wedding shows. In 2007, Karen received the Canadian Association of Journalist’s Dateline Hong Kong Fellowship and did a radio documentary on the 10th anniversary of the deadly avian flu outbreak. Story tips at karen.pauls@cbc.ca.

With files from Cameron MacIntosh and Brett Purdy