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Aboriginal People In Canada

Decent Essays

Acquiring an education and the act of being educated in a school are two enormously different teachings. Indigenous Peoples of the world have been educating each other within their own communities for thousands of years. Through the processes of ritual, spirituality, and tradition, these cultures thrive, sustainably, by living in unison with their land. As Dr. Weber-Pillwax explains, First Nations Peoples of Canada live in relationship to their "to the land" and their "the community" and these values are therefore ingrained into Aboriginal identity. Furthermore, the molecular transference of these distinct features of First Nations culture, which Dr. Weber-Pillwax articulates using Dr. Candace Pert's theory of "molecules of emotions," transcend …show more content…

Nonetheless, European settlers, particularly during Colonization, made the assumption that their culture, religious beliefs, and educational systems was superior; and, as part of the process towards colonizing the land that is now Canada, this group of European people attempted to abolish First Nations Peoples' culture. As Bonita Lawrence reveals in her overview of Aboriginal people in North America, "the colonial act of establishing legal definitions of Indianess . . . enabled the Canadian government to remove a significant sector of Native people from the land," and in doing so, colonization inevitably removed a sizable number of Aboriginal people from their culture (7). These historic Colonial events irreversibly changed Aboriginal culture. Aside from the glaring fact that Aboriginal children were expected to conform and attend a colonial educational system, irrespective of their cultural education, "status" Aboriginal children, during Colonialism, essentially became the initial step towards a reacculturation of the Aboriginal

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