One Dish, Many Stories
One Dish, Many Stories
Jordan Carrier
This podcast will examine the stories of and within the lands known as Hamilton, Ontario. Hamilton is known for steel factories, waterfalls, Tiger-cats and an interesting political landscape. The people who live, work and play within these lands should know more about the lands, the names of places by the Indigenous nations who lived, travelled through and used these lands for sustenance. How this growing urban center has impacted Indigenous peoples and the resilience on strength of the urban Indigenous community
From Land Acknowledgements to Treaty Partners
As land acknowledgements become standard practice in Hamilton it is also increasingly becoming rote, to checkmark to-do things on a list. People read the land acknowledgement most often without understanding the treaties or nations within the land acknowledgement. This episode will explore and discuss treaties related to these lands and further explore the treaty relationships and responsibilities of Hamiltonians. I will have a conversation with Betts (Elizabeth) Doxtater to discuss how to move beyond land acknowledgements to treaty partners.    Guest Bio: Elizabeth Doxtater was born and raised on the Six Nations Indian Reserve #40, Grand River.  She is a lifelong learner in the field of Indigenous Arts as a cornhusk artist, painter, and storyteller.  Doxtater conducts workshops, blending the arts with historic and cultural narratives for students, child welfare agencies, educators, and a variety of other organizations. Her work focuses on the concept of re-villagizing as the next step after decolonizing.   In 2019 Doxtater was commissioned by the Ontario College of Teachers (OCT) to artistically represent the four ethical standards of the teaching profession: Care, Integrity, Trust, and Respect.  Elizabeth coauthored the 2022 OCT document, Restorative Journey: Indigenous Educational Wellness, which features her essays, paintings, poetry, and photographs of her cornhusk dolls.  She has also written two books, Art of Peace and Dreamfast.   Doxtater coordinates the “Group of Six”, a grassroots program working with six local youth artists whose work focus on unity through art.  Doxtater notes, “As we revillagize and prepare to hand over the tools for Peace to the approaching faces, sometimes those tools are a canvas and a paintbrush.” Doxtater is the recipient of the Canadian Senior Artists Resource Network (CSARN) and Toronto Foundation 2021 Visionary Artists Lifetime Award, a 2016 Ontario Arts Council Indigenous Arts Award – Emerging Artist, and is a Six Nations Polytechnic 2015 Community Scholar.
Jun 15, 2022
42 min
Welcome to Attiwondaronia - Language and Place
In the first episode I will share my story, who I am, where I come from and what Hamilton means to me, why it is important to me to share these stories. We will also explore these lands and examine place names of these lands using Indigenous languages.    Our guest for this episode is Sonia Hill who is Mohawk from Six Nations and a resident of Hamilton.    "Shé:kon! My name is Sonia Hill and I'm Mohawk from Six Nations and Lebanese. I was born and raised in Hamilton ON. My pronouns are they/them. I am the director of the Indigenous Sustenance Reclamation Network (ISRN), and the creator/coordinator for Kahnekanoron - a program operating with ISRN as the Hamilton Regional Programming for the Network. I am currently completing a Master's in Sociology at McMaster University where I'm writing about community building and nation-making within local Indigenous communities. I also co-chair the Indigenous Solidarity Working Group with CUPE Local 3906. I write poetry, longboard, and garden at home and with friends. I've been learning Kanien'keha (Mohawk language) for 6 years and am working to one day be able to hold a conversation in the language and to be able to pass this knowledge on to my future kids. "   ISRN website: https://www.isrn.ca  Kahnekanoron Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kahnekanoron_isrn/?hl=en  CUPE3906 Indigenous Solidarity Working group website: https://www.iswg3906.org CUPE3906 Indigenous Solidarity Working group Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iswgcupe3906/?hl=en
Jun 3, 2022
42 min