Assembly of First Nations must chart a new course, national chief hopefuls tell forum
Sheila North and Katherine Whitecloud, both from Manitoba, joined by two other candidates at event
The two Manitobans vying to become national chief of the Assembly of First Nations shared their reasons for running at a forum Wednesday night on Brokenhead Ojibway Nation.
Sheila North and Katherine Whitecloud were two of four candidates who spoke at the forum at South Beach Casino, organized by the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs.
"It's about the messaging and direction I am receiving from ancestors and the knowledge holders and the elders," said Whitecloud, who is running for the first time.
Whitecloud said she decided to take a run at national chief on direction from her elders. She previously served as the Manitoba regional chief of the Assembly of First Nations and is a former executive director of AMC.
North is the current Grand Chief of Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak. She is not seeking a second term, so she can focus on her campaign for national chief.
"When you are called to lead and when it is your time, it's your obligation," said North, who is also making her first bid for the position of national chief.
Both women said they've been hearing from chiefs across Canada that it is time for a new direction at the AFN.
"The feeling of the leadership is that the AFN is becoming and behaving like a government representative," said Whitecloud. "The original intent of the AFN was to be an advocacy, lobby group, to open the doors, to create the field to create the space for our leaders to be able to do what they need to do with the Queen's representatives."
First Nations are getting stronger, said North, which puts the onus on the AFN to step up and stand with them.
"Canada has to get on board and understand that our communities and our chiefs and leaders and citizens are more that than ready to take back control of our own lives," said North. "That is where we are heading and that is where this national organization needs to head."
"The AFN is essentially a liaison that is supposed to be opening doors for our chiefs," said Dumas. "The individual chiefs are the rights holders and and they're the ones that have the authority and autonomy on behalf of their citizens."
He said he would like to see the successful candidate continue to bolster First Nations' sovereignty and push treaty rights.
"I believe the current government is getting a better understanding on how we need to move forward," said Dumas. "In order to move forward in a constructive way, we need to come together again."
All chiefs from across Canada will gather next week in Vancouver and cast their ballots for national chief.