{"id":3746,"date":"1966-02-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1966-02-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-1966-vol-47-no-2-canadas-native-people\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:21:06","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:21:06","slug":"february-1966-vol-47-no-2-canadas-native-people","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-1966-vol-47-no-2-canadas-native-people\/","title":{"rendered":"February 1966 &#8211; VOL. 47, No. 2 &#8211; Canada&#8217;s Native People"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Canada is the homeland of the Indians                     and Eskimos. They had no communication with the great centres                     of developing civilization abroad. They looked no farther                     than the land in which they lived for fulfilment of all their                     needs. Everything they possessed came as the result of their                     own labour and the ingenuity of their own devices.<\/p>\n<p> These are real people, not fruits of the imagination of                     strip artists, movie writers and book authors. They are not                     men and women in chorus-girl costumes whose destiny it is                     to entertain us, but people seeking what people everywhere                     seek &#8211; home, health and happiness.<\/p>\n<p>The task of adjusting their Stone Age civilization to confrontation                     by the twentieth century has moved so slowly as to be called                     a &#8220;national disgrace&#8221; by a national association devoted to                     native welfare.<\/p>\n<p>After a set-back due to the introduction of diseases from                     Europe, the Indian population of about 205,000 is now increasing                     at roughly twice the rate of the general population. There                     are about 12,000 Eskimos in the Northwest Territories and                     Northern Quebec. At the present rate of increase the Eskimo                     population will double within twenty years.<\/p>\n<p>The majority of these native people stand neither in one                     world nor the other. They are enmeshed in the old culture                     while trying to take advantage of the new way of life introduced                     from abroad. They are freedom-loving people, resenting dependency.                     Their economic problems are as serious as those facing the                     newly emerging nations in Africa.<\/p>\n<p>The facts about the need of our native people have been                     brought out by the Indian-Eskimo Association of Canada. This                     is a citizens&#8217; organization which came into being in 1958                     as a Commission of the Canadian Association for Adult Education.                     It was incorporated in 1960 with the declared purpose of ensuring                     that Indians and Eskimos, and the descendants of a union between                     the Indian people and Europeans, be given opportunity for                     progress and fulfilment equal to that afforded other Canadians.                     It believes that the native people should be able to move                     into the mainstream of Canadian economic, social and political                     life with dignity and without loss of identity.<\/p>\n<h3>Aboriginal way of life<\/h3>\n<p>We must not depreciate the knowledge and techniques made                     use of by Canada&#8217;s first people. Stone tools were at the foundation                     of their native economic life, and, said Diamond Jenness in                     his book <em>The Indians of Canada <\/em>(National Museum of                     Canada, Queen&#8217;s Printer, Ottawa, 1960): &#8220;Some of their arrowheads,                     knife-blades, and animal figures rival the best work of the                     pre-historic Egyptians.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The Iroquoian natives used a system of currency of wampum,                     manufactured by New England coastal tribes from shells. Trees                     were hardly dented by stone axes, so clearing of land for                     agriculture was done by fire. The sod was turned over with                     digging sticks fitted with blades of shell, and the crop was                     gathered by hand and transported in baskets. Clock time, by                     which today&#8217;s urban life is regulated and largely dominated,                     was unknown to these native people, whose only clock was the                     sun, their only calendar the seasons.<\/p>\n<p>Such was the material state of Canadian people when the                     first settlers from across the ocean arrived. But they had                     graces amid their hardships. Every tribe was founded on groups                     of families closely united by ties of kinship; their religion                     included the belief in protecting spirits who assisted them                     in life&#8217;s crises; neither rank nor wealth gave title to arrogance;                     their chiefs dressed in the same way as commoners, except                     at ceremonies, and ate the same food as the ordinary people.<\/p>\n<h3>The Canadian Indians<\/h3>\n<p>If life in an Indian community seems to be dull and uninspiring                     it is not because the Indians are dull or uninspired. It is                     because the newcomers have taken away the Indian&#8217;s satisfying                     way of life without replacing it.<\/p>\n<p>The Indians were not pagans. The Ven. Archdeacon S.H. Middleton,                     who died in 1964 after half a century of service to the Indians                     in Southern Alberta, wrote in his book Indian Chiefs Ancient                     and Modern (Herald, Lethbridge, 1953): &#8220;In the long ago the                     Indian centred everything upon his religion and religious                     observances. His religion entered into every phase of his                     life: planting, harvesting, feasting, recreation, hunting,                     warfare; in short, all his interests were intimately bound                     up with religion.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>William Wuttunee, the National Indian Council&#8217;s first chief,                     said: &#8220;We believed in what is known as Gitchi-Manitou, the                     Great Spirit. God was in the sun, in the moon, in mother earth,                     in the rain that made the grass grow. Manitou was a loving                     and merciful god to us. I learned about our Heaven, known                     as the &#8216;happy hunting ground&#8217; where everyone goes whether                     you are good or bad. There is no such thing as Hell and this                     concept was alien to the Indian mind.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>These persons, practising living in a hard environment,                     essentially rural, accustomed to informal living in close-knit                     families and helping-hand communities, find it difficult to                     cross the bridge to the cold, impersonal, time-measured, and                     essentially selfish industrial way of life. The economic base                     of their natural living habits has disintegrated. Reserves                     no longer provide sufficient game, and the people are restricted                     so that they cannot move to more productive areas as they                     did centuries ago.<\/p>\n<p>The crisis did not arise in the sixteenth or seventeenth                     centuries. It did not become evident until late in the nineteenth                     century. It has become intolerable in the twentieth century.<\/p>\n<p>When Jacques Cartier sailed up the St. Lawrence in 1535                     he found Indians cultivating the land on the present site                     of Montreal. The settlers came in small numbers to a vast                     country, depending upon the goodwill of the natives for security.                     Life was simple, and the differences between the pioneers                     and the Indians were only superficial. The Indians taught                     the settlers woodcraft and acted as guides and canoe-men,                     while the settlers introduced new tools of agriculture and                     hunting.<\/p>\n<h3>Whose responsibility&nbsp;?<\/h3>\n<p>It is generally accepted in the ethics of our society that                     the strong are obligated to help the weak. We, the descendants                     of immigrants from far-off lands, are the stronger in this                     scientific and industrialized age, and we are largely to blame                     for the problems of the native people. It is we who have intruded                     upon an aboriginal way of life and made it impossible; it                     is we who have broken up the hunting grounds into artificial                     provinces and counties and homesteads, all fenced in, and                     have relegated the original owners to reserves.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;The North American Indians,&#8221; said Arnold J. Toynbee in                     <em>A Study of History <\/em>(Oxford University Press 1946),                     &#8220;were almost continuously &#8216;on the run&#8217; from the moment of                     the arrival of the first English settlers down to the crushing                     of the last Indian attempt at armed resistance in the Sioux                     War of 1890, two hundred and eighty years later.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>When the battles ended, we introduced a new social order                     which broke down the systems of law, government, customs and                     religion on which the Indian society had rested.<\/p>\n<p>Long before that, in the reign of Charles II, instructions                     were given to the governors of the colonies that Indians who                     desired to place themselves under British protection should                     be well received. In 1755 an office was established devoted                     solely to the administration of Indian affairs. From that                     time on, a continuing administrative organization has been                     maintained for the protection and advancement of the Indian                     interests. Until 1860 the Imperial Government was responsible,                     but in that year the Province of Canada assumed the charge.                     By special provision in the British North America Act of 1867                     the new Government of Canada took jurisdiction.<\/p>\n<p>There has been, then, a continuous record since 1670 of                     governmental obligation, acknowledged in our own times by                     the Indian Act. Under it the primary function of the government                     is to administer the affairs of the Indians in a manner that                     will enable them to become increasingly self-supporting and                     independent members of the community.<\/p>\n<p>This duty of protection and care is not discharged fully                     by paternalistic measures. The Duke of Edinburgh&#8217;s Study Conference                     in 1962 reported: &#8220;There is a danger, already evident in certain                     areas, that the social isolation of the reservations and the                     supervision by Indian agents may inhibit the resourcefulness,                     initiative, and individuality of the Indian people, and that,                     however well intended, it could perpetuate the very situation                     which it is intended to alleviate.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Some suggestions<\/h3>\n<p>A brief of the Ontario Division of the Indian-Eskimo Association                     said in 1964: &#8220;Most of the one hundred thousand Indians of                     this province are living in dire poverty. A high percentage                     are unemployed and are educationally and socially unequipped                     to obtain and hold a job. Little real effort has been made                     to help the Indians develop new industries to replace the                     declining industry of hunting and trapping. It has been easier                     to give relief than to develop industries.&#8221; Only six per cent                     of the federal government&#8217;s expenditure on Indian work is                     development-oriented.<\/p>\n<p>The Indians are acting to help themselves. Ten bands sent                     delegates to the Western Indian Leadership Institute at Petrolia,                     Ontario, in 1965 to examine and practise skills and acquire                     the knowledge needed for handling band affairs. Frank A. Calder,                     who was the first Indian to sit in any Canadian Parliament,                     advocates either the elimination of the reserve system or                     the giving to Indians of opportunity to administer their own                     local affairs.<\/p>\n<p>The Indian-Eskimo Association has made some suggestions.                     It asks for establishment of an Economic Development Agency,                     charged with administering a fund of $25 million, and the                     establishment of an Economic Advisory Council composed largely                     of Indian representatives. It wrote to the Prime Minister                     in April 1965 recommending that the Indian Affairs Branch                     be constituted a full department. It suggests that technical,                     professional and management personnel be supplied in the early                     phases of approved new business enterprises, and that training                     programmes be provided to prepare Indians to take over these                     duties when qualified; that companies be encouraged to locate,                     with the agreement of Indian band councils, new industrial                     plants in or near reserve communities to provide employment                     opportunities to Indians; that the Economic Development Fund                     provide assistance to on-job training programmes in these                     plants, and that plans be expanded for the employment of Indians                     who do not live on reserves.<\/p>\n<p>In January 1966 the Government of Ontario announced its                     plan for raising the living standards of Indians within its                     jurisdiction. By agreement with the Federal Government, which                     is constitutionally accountable for Indian affairs, it seeks                     to take over responsibility for education, housing, employment,                     law enforcement, health, recreation, and economic development.                     Other provinces are expected to follow this lead.<\/p>\n<h3>Eskimos: the forgotten people<\/h3>\n<p>The Eskimos are a hardy, resourceful people, cheerful even                     in the extreme adversity that has dogged their lives. They                     called themselves &#8220;Inuit&#8221; &#8211; the only strong and true                     men. No other race, having so little to work with, has accomplished                     so much.<\/p>\n<p>People who lived in the Arctic before the invasion of highly-gadgeted                     outsiders had to do everything for themselves. They needed                     detailed knowledge of their environment, its animals, plants,                     and other natural products, its dangers and its potentialities.<\/p>\n<p>But they were not savages. William S. Carlson, President                     of the State University of New York, spent a winter of his                     youth with an Eskimo family of five. He found their honesty,                     sincerity, and coolness in the face of danger noteworthy.                     They had &#8220;a refinement of body, manners and mind. They loved                     one another in a helpful, tender, but not sentimental way.                     I learned that it is the civilized man who could emulate the                     so-called savage to advantage.&#8221; And Vilhjalmur Stefansson,                     Canadian-born explorer, said: &#8220;On the basis of my years with                     the Stone Age Eskimos I feel that the chief factor in their                     happiness was that they were living according to the Golden                     Rule.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The country of the Eskimos is &#8220;underdeveloped&#8221; today, with                     problems somewhat like those of underdeveloped countries abroad,                     but it has a significant difference: it is an integral part                     of an affluent and comfortably-living nation. There are no                     insurmountable barriers of land, climate, or culture to excuse                     our not helping the Eskimo to adjust to the new world we are                     making.<\/p>\n<p>Farley Mowat calls upon Canadians in his book <em>The Desperate                     People <\/em>(Little, Brown &amp; Co., Toronto, 1959) to &#8220;resolutely                     set ourselves to expunge a damning reflection upon our own                     pretensions to humanity, and&nbsp;&#8230; commit ourselves unequivocally                     to make amends&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Canada was quick to throw the paraphernalia of law over                     the Arctic; her voice has often been raised to champion the                     cause of underprivileged people in other lands; she has subsidized                     exploration for Arctic minerals; but the reality of her own                     northland native people has remained obscure until recent                     years.<\/p>\n<p>It was in 1954 that the Minister of Northern Affairs and                     National Resources told the press: &#8220;Canada is now turning                     in earnest to the development of its northland.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Today&#8217;s plans<\/h3>\n<p>What is being done to bring our 12,000 Eskimos into the                     twentieth century?<\/p>\n<p>The Government of Canada, reports Canada Year Book, is helping                     the Eskimo people through the adjustment period by providing                     education, family welfare services and technical training:                     the same services as those available to people in the rest                     of Canada.<\/p>\n<p>Many of the older generation of Eskimos will never be able                     to fit into the structure of wage employment, but the younger                     people take readily to the mechanical arts. For government                     departments they work at a variety of occupations, and as                     employees in defence establishments and private companies.                     A growing number are being trained and are working as teachers&#8217;                     aides. Women work as interpreters, waitresses, nursing assistants,                     clerks and airline stewardesses. But three-quarters of the                     Eskimo population live in the harsh land outside the main                     centres of economic and government activity.<\/p>\n<p>Planning is needed not only to develop the rich material                     resources of the north, but also to provide the maximum development                     of the native people, wherever they may be.<\/p>\n<p>The <em>Manchester Guardian <\/em>paid tribute to the federal                     government&#8217;s loan fund designed to help Eskimos to establish                     co-operatives dealing in fishing, boat building, lumbering,                     and arts and crafts. In October 1965 the Minister of the Department                     of Northern Affairs announced a programme to build 1,600 houses,                     extending throughout the Arctic in the next few years, to                     be rented by Eskimos according to their ability to pay, or                     purchased with the assistance of capital grants. A start has                     been made in creating small local industries in some sections                     of the north, befitting the talents of the people and the                     materials at hand, thus associating the Eskimos with their                     own advancement.<\/p>\n<p>Education is crucial. The Eskimos are moving from a stone                     age culture to the machine age in a generation. Schools are                     being established for them in key centres from Fort Smith,                     on the Alberta border,to Grise Fiord, 800 miles from the North                     Pole on Ellesmere Island, and travelling libraries carry books                     into some of the out-of-the-way places where they live. Residences                     at Fort Simpson and Yellowknife accommodate Eskimo children                     who are continuing their studies in higher grades. Courses                     in carpentry, building construction, electronics, automobile                     and diesel mechanics, and other occupations, are offered at                     some central points.<\/p>\n<p>While other native people in the Americas have been swept                     out of their ritualistic tribal arts into production for the                     tourist trade, the geographical remoteness of the Eskimo has                     protected him, and today his art in native stone and ivory                     is of world-wide renown.<\/p>\n<p>Market research across southern Canada and in the United                     States has revealed a substantial outlet for Eskimo crafts,                     and though the carving industry can never of itself solve                     the economic problems of the Arctic, it has provided an interim                     answer for a lot of people. Moreover, it has brought home                     to other Canadians the existence and the capabilities of their                     Arctic fellow-citizens.<\/p>\n<p>Among other products of the Eskimos are seal-skin prints,                     slippers fashioned from tanned muskrat and Arctic hare (one                     pair won second prize at an international shoe show in New                     York), and graphics which have been given display in the permanent                     collections of the National Gallery of Canada and the Museum                     of Modern Art in New York.<\/p>\n<h3>The co-operatives<\/h3>\n<p>Stefansson brought back this lesson from the Arctic: &#8220;Perhaps                     we could live as happily in a metropolis as in a fishing village                     if only we could substitute the ideals of co-operation for                     those of competition.&#8221; In their co-operatives the Eskimos                     carry forward their traditional custom of pooled labour and                     shared harvests.<\/p>\n<p>More than 500 Eskimos &#8211; nearly one out of every five                     Eskimo families &#8211; are members of co-operatives. During                     1963 nineteen co-operatives were active, with a total business                     turnover of close to a million dollars. Of this amount, more                     than $250,000 was derived from the sale of sculpture, prints                     and handicrafts. The balance came from char and salmon fisheries,                     the operation of retail stores and tourist camps, logging,                     boat building and marketing furs.<\/p>\n<p>The best known in the Northwest Territories is the West                     Baffin Eskimo Co-operative, at Cape Dorset. From a modest                     start in 1959 and considerable help in the early stages from                     the Northern Affairs Department the men and women of this                     gifted community, within two years, were producing graphic                     art, sculpture and fine crafts to a value exceeding $200,000.                     In the east, co-operatives started with credits from the Eskimo                     Loan Fund are now owned by the local people. In 1963 the first                     conference of Arctic co-operatives brought together Eskimos                     from as far west as Aklavik and as far north as Grise Fiord.<\/p>\n<h3>Into tomorrow<\/h3>\n<p>It is not unreasonable, in view of their background, that                     Indians and Eskimos should be convinced that in changing over                     to new ways they are giving up something valuable.<\/p>\n<p>But when offered reasonable opportunity, kindly advice,                     understanding tolerance, and practical help, all our native                     people have shown their willingness and desire and ability                     to make the change.<\/p>\n<p>The issue for tomorrow is this: we newcomers took the land                     of the native people. Whether it was a good thing or not;                     whether it was inevitable in the march of history or not:                     these are irrelevant. We took their land, disrupted their                     way of life, ruined their way of livelihood, and undermined                     their culture. We are challenged to discharge our obligation                     to them.<\/p>\n<p>What is needed is not primarily entreaty, urging, or exhortation,                     but understanding help. Over and over again in the course                     of the world&#8217;s history, says Jenness in his book, great social                     and economic advances have been made when two peoples who                     had marched on separate roads came together. The anniversary                     of confederation offers an opportunity to enlarge and intensify                     and hasten our effort to raise the level of life of Canada&#8217;s                     native people to that of the general Canadian standard.<\/p>\n<p>The guiding principle in dealing with both Eskimos and Indians                     is expressed perceptively by Irene Baird in her poem &#8220;Keep                     Your Own Things&#8221;, addressed to the Eskimos. It was published                     in <em>North<\/em>, a magazine of the Department of Northern                     Affairs and National Resources, in the March-April issue 1964.                     These are the opening lines:<\/p>\n<p>Inuit You who call yourselves The People Keep your own things!                     Use our things if you will Use them as you must But only just                     As they serve ends Between friends We face you and you us                     Over a deep gulf of time Over arctic spaces moon-lonely We                     are like strangers meeting after A hard journey With everything                     to learn From one another If only how to live and die A little                     better<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[46],"class_list":["post-3746","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-46"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>February 1966 - VOL. 47, No. 2 - Canada&#039;s Native People - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-1966-vol-47-no-2-canadas-native-people\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"February 1966 - VOL. 47, No. 2 - Canada&#039;s Native People - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Canada is the homeland of the Indians and Eskimos. 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They had no communication with the great centres of developing civilization abroad. They looked no farther than the land in which they lived for fulfilment of all their needs. 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