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Jean Becker will join the University of ݮƵ on January 13, 2020 in the newly-created Senior Director, Indigenous Initiatives position in which she willprovide strategic leadership to articulate a University of ݮƵ-specific response to the Truth and Reconciliation Calls to Action, and identify systemic and systematic changes that move beyond the Calls to Action by creating a long-term vision for the University.

Tomson Highway'sSongs in the Key of Creeis a collection of Cree and English songs that arepart of a collaborative research project on Indigenous languages revitalization.On November 19, 2019,the ݮƵ community was delighted by aSongs in the key of Creeintegrated performance-speaker event, with captivating vocalist Patricia Cano, guitarist Kevin Barrett, saxophonist Marcus Ali, and fiddler/guitarist Nathan Halcrow, joined by artist and HistoryMA candidate Emma Rain Smith.

Indigenous languages are critically endangered throughout the world. This is morethan a loss of words: Indigenous languagesembodysets ofrelationships and ways of being in theworld that are powerful, transformative, and sometimes very funny. TheSongs in the Key of Creeperformance highlights the global importance of Indigenous languages.

For Applied Health Sciences alumnus Cornelia (Nel) Wieman (MSc Kinesiology ’91), there is no question that Canada's healthcare systemresults in Indigenous peoples being poorly servedand discriminated against.A desire to transform the system by intregrating culturally appropriateapproaches for Indigenous peoples has been a focus of Wieman’s career as Canada’s first female Indigenous psychiatrist.

On September 18 the 2019-20Indigenous Speakers Series opened with Jesse Thistle, a Métis-Cree-Scot from Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. Hisbestselling memoir,(Simon and Schuster Canada), chronicles his life on the streets and how he overcame trauma and addiction to discover the truth about who he is.His scholarship is focused on intergenerational and historic trauma of the Métis people, and also reflects on his own past struggles with homelessness.

As an activist and historian vocal onIndigenous rights, History PhD studentLucy Vorobejworks to raise consciousness of how historical negative stereotypes and injustices were created and how they can be redressed within Canadian society.Lucy co-leads a website centred on missing and murdered Indigenous women. Her goal? Diving into the history from the 1970s to the 2000s and assessing how missing and murdered Indigenous women’s narratives were misreported and misstated to understand how different stereotypes of Indigenous women formed.

Si'Yam Lee Maracle’s unflinching look at life on Turtle Island under settler colonialism has propelled a generation of storytellers.In a recent interview with the CBC, the author of path-breaking books such asBobbi- Lee: Indian Rebel,andRavensongtalked of the bigotry she faced trying to tell Indigenous stories as a young woman growing up in 1970s Vancouver.