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Remembering the Children Educator's Guide 2022
Topics include: teacher reflections, preparing for difficult conversations, the role of media coverage, daily life in residential schools, reconciliation through revitalization, and making reconciliation real.
For use with Remembering the Children: Truth and Reconciliation Week 2022
Report on the Affairs of Indians in Canada
Report on the Results from the Survey on Reconciliation Action & Awareness in Canadian Archives.
[Reserve Pass Lesson Plan: Social Studies 8]
Uses archival material as a starting point to teach about the influence of the treaty relationship on Canadian identity and how historical events have shaped contemporary Canadian identity.
Resources on Archives & Indigenous Issues
The Royal Charter for Incorporating The Hudson's Bay Company, A.D. 1670
Safeguarding Cultural Heritage, Protecting Intellectual Property and Respecting the Rights and Interests of Indigenous Communities: What Role for Museums, Archives and Libraries?
Saskatchewan Herald
[Scalping Proclamation of 1749]
Proclamation offered bounty of ten Guineas for the scalps of Mi'kmaq men during the Mi'kmaq War in an effort to eradicate the Mi'kmaq and allow Britain to strengthen its presence in Nova Scotia.
Stories of Indian Days: O-ge-mas-es Relates Many Incidents Of Early Life in the West.
Compilation, edited and annotated, mainly consisting of newspaper articles published between 1920 and 1921. Text in bold, footnotes and words in square brackets are the editor's.
Sustaining Indigenous Culture: The Structure, Activities, and Needs of Tribal Archives, Libraries and Museums
Teaching with Documents: Memorandum Regarding the Enlistment of Navajo Indians
That Albert Johnson Story: Aboriginal Oral History Inclusion in Canadian Archives
“This Spurious Philanthropy”: Indian Policy, Food and Canada’s North-West As Discussed in the Senate of Canada in 1886
"The evidence provided to this commission provides an interesting record of thoughts by the government and (mostly non-Indigenous, male) experts about food, Indigenous people and the Canadian North-West ten years after the near-extinction of the buffalo."