Community VoiCes
Behind the Blockades
Val napoleon*
I
Introduction
1
II
Some Context
2
III
The Stories—Acts of Resistance
5
IV
Questions
10
V
The Future
13
no one can love and be just who does not understand the empire of force and
know how not to respect it.1
I
Introduction
Blockades, like any direct political action, can invoke a powerful sense of
indigenous solidarity and political strength. the messages are loud and clear:
indigenous people have had enough bullshit! indigenous people are united
against oppressions! across Canada and around the world, indigenous peo*
Val napoleon is of Cree heritage and is an adopted member of a Gitksan House (matrilineal
kinship unit). Val is an associate professor with the university of alberta teaching in the faculties of native studies and law. Her doctoral research focused on a substantive articulation of
Gitksan law and the development of a Gitksan legal theory. in June 2010, Val was awarded the
university of Victoria’s Governor General’s Gold medal for her dissertation entitled ayook:
Gitksan law, legal order, and legal theory. she publishes and teaches in areas of aboriginal
legal issues, indigenous legal traditions, indigenous feminism, oral histories, restorative justice
and governance.
1
simone Weil, quoted by James Boyd White, Living Speech: Resisting the Empire of Force
(new Jersey: princeton university press, 2006) at 1 [White].
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ples are fighting for their rights! this is all extremely satisfying, inspiring and
politically delicious. and all of these messages are also true—at least while
the direct political actions are taking place.
in this paper, i want to examine the often invisible relationships between
the larger political actions of self-determination on the one hand, and violence, self-destruction and personal resistances on the other hand. to do this i
will explore some of the human experiences behind and beyond several blockades that i was a part of in northern British Columbia. i will first describe
context—the land, the people and recent history from which these stories
emerge. second, i will share five snapshot stories that have been seared into
my memory and onto my heart, and to which i return again and again. third,
i will discuss some of the questions and contradictions that these stories raise
and, finally, i will offer some brief suggestions for building citizenry as a form
of future political action. it is my position that the urgency of these stories
is such that we cannot afford to ignore the complex and powerful connections between empowerment, resistance, denial, self-destruction and violence.
there are many voices to listen to—from the whispers of our grandmothers,
to muted voices of despair and to angry shouts across the land. there are no
easy answers here, but what is important is to unflinchingly stay within the
tensions of the hard politics and with the discomfort they generate.
II Some Context
Who are the Gitksan? the Gitksan are one of three closely related northwest
coast peoples in British Columbia that form the tsimshian linguistic group.
the Gitksan, nisga’a and tsimshian share a common ancient heritage and
their societies and languages are similar.2 as with many other indigenous
peoples across Canada and the world, the Gitksan, nisga’a and tsimshian
have long histories of actively resisting the authority of colonizing governments. they fought against the theft of their land and against the imposition
of the reserve system.3 For example, in the late 1960s, the nisga’a (formerly
spelled nishga) initiated the Calder legal action which was heard by the British Columbia supreme Court in 1969 and later decided by the supreme Court
of Canada in 1973.4
2
3
4
Napoleon E.indd 2
susan marsden, margaret anderson & Deanna nyce, “tsimshian” in paul R. magosci, ed.,
Aboriginal Peoples of Canada: A Short Introduction (toronto: university of toronto press,
2002) 264.
see for example, Hamar Foster, Heather Raven & Jeremy Webber, eds, Let Right Be Done:
Aboriginal Title, the Calder Case, and the Future of Indigenous Rights (Vancouver: uBC press,
2007).
Calder v. British Columbia (attorney General), [1973] s.C.J. no. 56, 34 D.l.R. (3d) 145
[Calder].
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Behind the Blockades
3
in the mid- to late 1970s, the Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en (formerly called
Carrier) were attempting to negotiate a land claims settlement.5 at that time,
the federal government’s policy was to negotiate with only six aboriginal
groups at any one time across Canada. in BC, since the nisga’a were negotiating with the federal government, it did not seem as though there would be
an opportunity for the Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en to begin their land claims
negotiations.
in 1977, the Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en delivered the Gitksan-Carrier Declaration to then minister of indian and northern affairs, the Honourable Hugh
Faulkner. this political declaration set out Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en ownership and jurisdiction over 25,000 square miles of Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en
territory.6 the declaration included the following statement:
since time immemorial, we, the Gitksan and Carrier people of Kitwanga, Kitseguecla, Gitanmaax, sikadoak, Kispiox, Hagwilget and moricetown, have exercised sovereignty over our land. We have used and conserved the resources of
our land with care and respect. We have governed ourselves. We have governed
the land, the waters, the fish, and the animals. this is written on our totem poles.
it is recounted in our songs and dances. it is present in our language and in our
spiritual beliefs. our sovereignty is our Culture.7
as part of advancing the Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en political project and
legal claims, there was a deliberate, and partially successful, effort to shift
local political authority away from the band council system to the Gitksan
kinship system of matrilineal House groups with hereditary chiefs as legal
holders of the House territories according to Gitksan law.8 years later, tensions
between the imposed Indian Act 9 band council system and the Gitksan kinship
system continue and remain unresolved and conflicted.
5
6
7
8
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While the Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en collaborated for many years and were both plaintiffs in
Delgamuukw, most of my work and research was with the Gitksan.
interview of Gary patsey by the author (9 July 2005) Glenvowell Band office, Glenvowell,
BC. the Gitksan-Carrier Declaration was written by neil J. sterritt, Don Ryan, Gary patsey, &
ardythe Wilson. at this time, the Gitanyow (formerly, Kitwancool) were a part of the GitksanCarrier tribal Council.
Gitksan-Carrier tribal Council, Gitksan-Carrier Declaration, 1977.
For further explorations on various aspects of this question, see generally Richard Daly, Our
Box was Full: An Ethnography for the Delgamuukw Plaintiffs (Vancouver: uBC press, 2005);
p. Dawn mills, For Future Generations: Reconciling Gitxsan and Canadian Law (saskatoon:
purich publishing, 2008); albert peeling, “traditional Governance and Constitution making
among the Gitanyow” (2004), online: national Centre for First nations Governance <http://
www.fngovernance.org/pdf/Gitanyow.pdf>; and natalie oman, “paths to intercultural understanding: Feasting, shared Horizons, and unforced Consensus” in Catherine Bell & David
Kahane, eds, Intercultural Dispute Resolution in Aboriginal Contexts (Vancouver: uBC press,
2004) 70.
Indian Act, R.s.C. 1985, c. i-5.
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Delgamuukw arose from the combined events of the Calder 10 and Bear
Island 11 decisions, and the repatriation of the Canadian Constitution, 1982.12
according to mediig’m Gyamk (neil J. sterritt) and Hanamuxw (Don Ryan),
from 1981 to 1983, key aboriginal leaders from across Canada held a number
of discussions about a possible major aboriginal title court action.13 these
leaders identified three criteria for deciding where such a court action would
be launched: financial resources, political will and people with recent life experience on the land. it was agreed that the Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en could
best meet these criteria. in 1984, the Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en14 filed Delgamuukw. the trial did not actually start until 1987 and then it lasted 374
days. the infamous British Columbia supreme Court decision by Chief
Justice mceachern was released in 1991.15 the Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en
appealed the trial court decision to the British Columbia Court of appeal,16
and finally on to the supreme Court of Canada.17
Delgamuukw was a massive and extremely costly legal action for the
Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en peoples. thus, the context for my stories includes
the many dynamic forms of political and legal activism taking place in Gitksan and Wet’suwet’en territories, and the across rest of Canada. as someone
fortunate enough to be working with the Gitksan during these years, this was
a fabulously exciting time.18 We were all part of something really important
and far bigger than any of us. and we were connected to the rest of the world
through the numerous international visitors—activists, academics, supporters and the curious—who traveled to the territories from such diverse lands
as ethiopia, australia, new Zealand, thailand, the united states, norway,
Japan, england and africa.
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Napoleon E.indd 4
For an in-depth discussion and history of the nisga’a-Gitksan overlap dispute, see neil J. sterritt
et al., Tribal Boundaries in the Nass Watershed (Vancouver: uBC press, 1998).
Baker Lake (Hamlet) v. Canada (Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development), [1979]
F.C.J. no. 184, 107 D.l.R. (3d) 513 (F.C.t.D.) [Baker Lake].
Constitution Act, 1982, being schedule B to the Canada Act 1982 (u.K.), 1982, c. 11.
interview of neil John sterritt by author (11 July 2005) Hazelton, BC, pp. 3-5. some of these
leaders included Gary potts, Herb norwegian, ed John, Georges erasmus and Billy Diamond.
the Gitksan are part of the tsimshian language group. the Wet’suwet’en people are part of the
athapaskan linguistic group.
Delgamuukw v. The Queen (1991), 79 D.l.R. (4th) 185 (B.C.s.C.).
Delgamuukw v. British Columbia (1993), 104 D.l.R. (4th) 470 (B.C.C.a.). this decision is
actually erroneously cited as Uukw v. British Columbia.
Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, [1997] 3 s.C.R. 1010.
i am from saulteau First nation in northeast British Columbia. i am an adopted member of the
House of luuxhon of the frog clan, in which i am honoured to hold the small name of Gyooksgan. i have lived in Gitksan territory for many years and i have worked with Gitksan groups for
most of that time. most of my work may be categorized as community development in the fields
of education, employment, justice and legal services, and health.
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Behind the Blockades
5
III The Stories—Acts of Resistance
STORY ONE
i will tell you about a story that i hold. it is a deeply conflicted and powerful
image that forces me to ask hard questions about my work, political change
and possibilities. this image is close to 20 years old now, but it remains crystal clear. i do not know what to do with it or about it. i return to it often,
wondering, and yearning for something elusive that remains just beyond it. i
hold it up and look at it from different angles, and i’m still searching. all i can
do is continue to hold it close to me and, hopefully, learn from it.
the images of the story look like this: there is an inky-blue night sky high
above the darker masses of the mountains. the air is cool and tastes fresh.
the forest is near and i can smell the pungent evergreens and poplar leaves
that are changing colour. Fragrant woodsmoke drifts by from the campfires.
against the darkness a cone of bright light shines down from a single street
light along a narrow highway that cuts through a Gitksan village. moths circle
endlessly in the light. in that illuminated triangle of space, two men sitting on
camp chairs hunker over a small table in the middle of the highway playing
chess. one is a young Gitksan man—a boy really, only about 14 and the son of
a colleague. He is beautiful, smart and a little cocksure like any teenager. the
other man is my husband, bearded and enduring, and a veteran of blockades.
it is such an incongruous image in so many ways. this is part of its haunting.
it is 1992. the Gitksan are blocking the Canadian national Railway and
Highway 37. in frustration with government and industry, this is one of the
many direct political actions taken by the Gitksan since the early 1970s and
continuing to the present.19
Fast forward a couple of years. that beautiful young Gitksan man is
charged with having committed a violent murder. Drugs were involved. His
father has disowned him. He is sentenced to life imprisonment. all of this too
took place beneath those same mountains, under that same sky and near that
same highway. it just doesn’t make any sense. it is a cognitive dissonance of
stories. in all likelihood, that young man is out of prison now—if he survived,
of course. the statistics about prisons and recidivism are not encouraging,
but i hope that he was able to reach beyond the drugs and violence to draw
strength from the experiences and political activities of his youth, and from
the Gitksan people.
19
Napoleon E.indd 5
see Blockade: It’s About the Land and Who Controls It, video cassette. Directed by nettie Wild.
(Vancouver: Canada Wild productions / Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 1994).
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STORY TWO
there is another blockade. skanu’u (ardythe Wilson) runs her fingers through
her short, curly black hair. she leans back in her chair and closes her eyes,
searching her memory. after a moment, she starts to talk: “i remember that
blockade at sam Green (a creek in the most northern Gitksan territory). i was
out there for over a month. and i was the only woman for a period of time. But
early on, antgulibix (mary Johnson), arrived. i remember ya ya’s old truck
that had no brakes. it came bouncing along with a box spring mattress in the
back.”20 it is one heck of a rough dirt road. then a tiny and very elderly Gitksan woman, antgulibix, is helped down from the truck. she totters over to one
of the Gitksan leaders, looks up at him and asks, “How come you forgot me,
Don?” she is smiling, but she is real serious. she was bound and determined
to be at that blockade and she made it too.
skanu’u continues: “so, there’s the tents. antgulibix and i shared a tent.
i was thankful for another woman’s presence, and she spent, oh God, i don’t
know how many nights there. [antgulibix slept on the box spring mattress]
and she had mounds and mounds of quilts on top of her. i used to cover her up
every night. and then she used to start talking. i would just struggle to keep
my eyes open because i wanted to hear what she had to say. i would be dozing
and then i would jerk awake. and she was still talking away. i thought, oh
how wonderful! this is what they meant. i always remember that, so i want
to do that with my grandbaby.”21 skanu’u is chuckling now and her eyes are
twinkling. she is one of those strong women full of zest and life and who is
lovely at any age.
skanu’u said, “so i told [my daughter], that first child that you have,
you are not speaking english to that baby. the baby will sleep with me the
way babies used to sleep with their grandmothers and i will be talking in the
baby’s ear even until long after she goes to sleep.” skanu’u throws her head
back and laughs happily. this particular Gitksan pedagogy, she explains, is
called “spitting in your grandchild’s ear—talking and teaching until the baby
fell asleep. i was always told as a child growing up, you slept with your grandparents and they talked to you, and that was how they transferred history and
knowledge.”22
antgulibix has since gone on. and now, skanu’u is working outside
her home territory with other indigenous peoples far away. she observes that
“[t]here are unhealthy changes that are taking place in our communities [and]
there are unhealthy relationships to the land.” i press skanu’u on this and she
reflects, “a lot of people went out on their lands and a lot of people actually
20
21
22
Napoleon E.indd 6
interview of ardythe Wilson by author (14 July 2005) Hazelton, BC, p. 3 [Wilson, 14 July 2005].
Ibid.
Ibid.
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Behind the Blockades
7
protected their territories. i know we did. and while the blockade was on, we
rebuilt a cabin that was burned down before. so we were rebuilding things that
the government had destroyed in the past on our territory. i don’t know how
many months we spent out there protecting the last little stand of trees that
they were going to clear-cut. But because we are in a prime location, [Gitksan]
people are just claiming things right and left, [but without the] knowledge.
and then those sleazy bastards [the government], they gave the licence to one
of our people so we had to come up to our own bully boys on the land.”23 Her
eyes darken as she shakes her head with disgust. the blockade came down.
there are no simple issues here. it is not a matter of good Gitksan and bad
Gitksan, or authentic Gitksan and inauthentic Gitksan. it is not about skanu’u
being right or wrong. to think in such dichotomies is to engage in politics of
the cheapest and most superficial sort. the issues are about history and power,
about a people and their land, about resistance and colonialism and about individual and collective agency. and there is conflict, as there is with all peoples.
the feelings beneath the blockades run deep—molten.
STORY THREE
another blockade. it is late at night. people are talking quietly and the camp
grows sleepier. a campfire’s amber lights dance across people’s faces as they
sit around in lawn chairs or on blocks of wood. there is a handsome man
with long hair who is holding his small sleeping nephew on his lap. the uncle
doesn’t want to disturb the little boy so he sits very still—for hours. such
gentleness and strength. it is a precious image, but slippery and hard to grasp.
Fast-forward to this year and that little boy is now 21.24 He is charged
with assault, breaking and entering, careless use of a firearm and possession
of a weapon for a purpose dangerous to the public peace. a newspaper article describes “an aboriginal man who, bent on revenge, kicked in the door
of a home, was beaten back but returned with a rifle, firing it into the air
and threatening mayhem.”25 the article positively bristles with self-righteous
outrage about the slack that aboriginal offenders receive because the court is
required to “consider the circumstances of aboriginal offenders.”26 opinion
writer ian mulgrew insists, “[the young man] couldn’t have had his aboriginal
background more understood.” according to mulgrew, the judge knew all
about the “local first nations” because he had “presided in that region for
many years,” and furthermore, a “first nations probation officer prepared the
23
24
25
26
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Ibid.
i know that people can track down the names of the young men at the centre of these stories if
they choose. nonetheless, i think those young men deserve some privacy.
ian mulgrew, “Court of appeal shortens jail sentence: panel agrees with aboriginal man who said
judge didn’t give enough attention to upbringing” Vancouver Sun (20 april 2009).
Ibid.
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pre-sentence report on [John] and defence council addressed the issue too.”27
But, mulgrew laments, “that was not enough.” in the end, the appeal court
shortened the trial judge’s sentence of three years to nine months. at the time
of writing, the young man is still serving time.
i wonder whether either the judge or mulgrew knew that the young man
was Gitksan and that the probation officer was Wet’suwet’en. But those are
only the smallest of the questions that remain deep beneath the surface of this
story.
STORY FOUR
a Gitksan father finds his teenage daughter hanging dead in the garage. there
is no behind or beyond to this story. the pain of it takes up all the breathing
space and it lies heavily on the heart. Words lose meaning here. there are
about 8,000 Gitksan, about half of whom live in Gitksan territory. in 2007,
the number of suicides in Gitksan territories was the highest in Canada. in
one year, 111 attempted suicides were recorded at the local hospital. this
figure does not include those suicides that were successful or those attempted
suicides that never made it to the hospital. some estimate that there were actually 150 attempted suicides in one year.28 the local RCmp reports that it is not
unusual to receive one or two calls per day about attempted suicide.29
the newspaper headlines are sensational and brutal. one reads, “B.C.
community pleads for help to halt suicide ‘epidemic’, 7 suicides in one
week lead to calls for more services for aboriginal youths.”30 another reads,
“Death’s doorstep, Hazelton, B.C. – Death has hovered close to Jezabel turley for several years now. When she was 13, her father held a gun to his head
and tried to force his young daughter to pull the trigger, drunkenly pleading with her to kill him.”31 and, “northern B.C. town tries to stem suicide
cycle.”32 spokespersons’ suggest solutions ranging from economic development33 to cultural continuity34 to social programs and recreational facilities.35
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
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Ibid.
CtV.ca, ‘northern B.C. town tries to stem suicide cycle’ (2 February 2008).
Heather Ramsay, “turning the Corner on suicide: aboriginal youth share life saving insights” (5
December 2007) The Tyee <http://thetyee.ca/news/2007/12/05/nativesuicide/print.html> at 3.
CBC news, “B.C. community pleads for help to halt suicide ‘epidemic’, 7 suicides in one week
lead to calls for more services for aboriginal youths” (22 november 2007).
“Death’s doorstep, Hazelton, B.C.” Vancouver Sun (29 December 2007).
CtV.ca, “northern B.C. town tries to stem suicide cycle” (2 February 2008).
elmer Derrick, “privatizing Crown forests is worth exploring” Globe & Mail (25 January 2008),
online: Gitxsan Chiefs’ office <http://tools.bcweb.net/gitxsan/news>.
michael J. Chandler & Christopher lalonde, “Cultural Continuity as a Hedge against suicide in
Canada’s First nations” (1998) 35(2) Transcultural Psychiatry 191 [Chandler & lalonde].
andy prest, “this Walk is for life, to make strides against aboriginal youth suicide, they
trekked across Canada” (19 June 2006) online; The Tyee <http://thetyee.ca/news/2006/06/19/
WalkForlife/print.html>.
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Behind the Blockades
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the call for recreational facilities does not account for the fact that there is a
community hall in every village, but these are almost fully devoted to bingo.
Fast-forward to 2009. Bev Clifton-percival, a member of the Gitksan
negotiating team, made this observation: “But we’ve had to live with no economy for more than 15 years, and nobody gives a damn. nobody in Victoria
has made any effort to deal with that. nobody in ottawa. they pumped a little
more into our social budget, but five years ago we hit the headlines with our
suicide rate. and still nobody did anything.”36
STORY FIVE
my final image is of politician and scholar tony penikett’s account of a painfully troubling event that took place in Gitksan territory. the Gitksan woman
at the centre of this account holds the wing chief name suu Dii and is a member of the House of Gwininitxw.
on september 17, 2004, i attended a “public negotiation meeting” at the Gitksan
treaty office in Hazelton …
although the B.C. Claims task Force had recommended a public negotiating
process, public meetings like the one in Hazelton are carefully controlled events
with the three chief negotiators giving brief reports and answering selected questions from the audience. … at Hazelton, commissioner Jody Wilson chaired the
session.
as they entered the meeting room, audience members were handed an agenda
and a sheet called “Guidelines for observers.” those attending were required to
sign an attendance sheet and forbidden from taping the proceedings. the guidelines made the position of audience members clear: “you are being permitted as
an observer, not as a participant … the Chair will not recognize any speakers
from the floor during the meeting. talking or disruptions are not allowed during
the proceedings. the Chair reserves the right to ask anyone who does not respect
these rules to leave.”
sitting at the back of the room, i tried to imagine how a local union’s rank-andfile members, at a meeting called to report on progress in collective bargaining,
might receive such instructions. not well, i thought. in the midst of this reverie, i
noticed someone come to the doorway with an RCmp officer and point out a tiny
aboriginal woman sitting quietly just in front of me. the officer came into the
room and told the woman she would have to leave. “this is a public meeting,”
she protested quietly. the officer said, “i’m just doing my job.” “Who told you to
do this?” she asked. the officer refused to say, and a moment later he handcuffed
the woman. she fell to the floor and started crying.
36
Napoleon E.indd 9
Don Cayo, “Fresh approach hits brick wall, Bureaucrats thwart first nation’s attempt to break
treaty-negotiation boilerplate” Vancouver Sun (4 June 2009) 3, online <http://www.vancouversun.com/story_print.html>.
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none of the three treaty commission negotiators came over to ask why someone
would be dragged out of a public meeting, but two old women came over to
comfort her. …
the scene was totally unsettling. … apparently, part of the tension in the community arises from the tribal negotiators’ failure to get consensus on a negotiating mandate, and dissidents allege that millions of dollars … for negotiations
… have gone nowhere. Whatever the merits of the arguments on either side,
it is outrageous that the B.C. treaty Commission would hold a public meeting
about Gitksan treaty negotiations in a building from which certain beneficiaries
had been barred (as i learned later) and that the RCmp would be used to enforce
such a ban.37
again, it is not helpful to begin trying to determine who was in the right
or wrong. Conflicts are always much messier and far more complex than they
first appear. in the end, suu Dii was failed by both Gitksan law (requirement
for a shame feast perhaps with compensation or cleansing) and Canadian law
(perhaps for wrongful arrest). at the time of writing, this case is still indeterminate—stuck in the unacknowledged space between two legal orders.
IV Questions
according to James Boyd White, “We are meaning-making creatures. ... this
capacity is the deepest nerve in of our life, and our instinct to protect it and
its freedom at almost any cost is a right one.”38 When we have experiences
that cause us to feel “somehow ashamed of being a human being,” we have
been denied the fundamental human capacity for claiming meaning for our
experiences. our dignity resides in this meaning-making capacity, and it is in
the denial and erasure of this capacity that “the force of empire depends.”39
at their best, these blockades and direct political actions enabled narratives
wherein despair and anger was channelled into resistance and meaningful demands for justice. these narratives included tolerable and meaningful imaginations of the present and future for Gitksan people. after and beyond the
blockades, the many acts of violence and self-destruction in the stories can
also be characterized as continued forms of resistance against the erasure of
meaning-making. But we must consider who is bearing the cost of these acts
of resistance.
there is always a danger in focusing on the moments captured by memory. the stories can create a false sense of stasis and permanency, whereas,
in reality, life has not stopped for any of the characters in them. in fact, the
37
38
39
Napoleon E.indd 10
tony penikett, Reconciliation: First Nations Treaty Making in British Columbia (Vancouver:
Douglas & mcintyre, 2006) 265–266 [footnote omitted].
White at 41.
White at 168.
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Behind the Blockades
11
stories don’t have conclusions, but are ongoing in our lives today. these stories may be seen to represent an integral and ongoing part of all indigenous
politics today—they are part of its unacknowledged underbelly. Blockades
and other direct political actions include the myriad human experiences, good
and bad, positive and negative, that form the stories we hold. the stories are
my honour songs for all those who had, and still have, the courage to resist
and fight and struggle, despite everything, in the only way they could.
i’m influenced by James Clifford who, among others, advocates for an
appreciation for indigenous social change—an indigenous articulation—that
is capable of encompassing and reflecting the “pragmatic, entangled, contemporary forms of indigenous cultural politics.”40 this means fully and deeply
considering the historic and contemporary change factors that are a part of
Gitksan people’s lives and that Gitksan people are a part of—as individual
and collective agents. the ongoing challenge is to consider how these change
factors (e.g., wage economy, industrial resource activities, etc.) are a part of
all that happens on the ground—in political and legal actions—as well as in
people’s lives and families.
some further unpacking may be informed by the prevalent theories about
suicide. in other words, what is happening in the world where the suicides are
taking place? While a comprehensive analysis of the phenomenon of indigenous suicide is far beyond the scope of this paper, it is worthwhile to look at a
couple of theories. For example, professors michael Chandler and Christopher
lalonde argue that the extent to which indigenous people engage in acts of
cultural continuity correlates with a decrease in suicide rates.41 Chandler and
lalonde define the markers of cultural continuity as self-government, land
claims, education, health services, cultural facilities and police/fire services.42
according to Chandler and lalonde, there is no average rate of suicide among
indigenous communities. Rather, “across British Columbia’s nearly 200
aboriginal groups (i.e., bands); some communities show rates 800 times the
national average, while in others, suicide is essentially unknown.”43 However,
the Gitksan are experiencing brutally high rates of suicide despite decades of
extensive political and legal activism and locally managed education, health
services and fire services. the suicides and attempted suicides continued in
the face of ongoing negotiations for various self-government agreements
(e.g., forestry, fisheries, etc.) and legal actions concerning aboriginal rights
and title. in the end, however, Chandler and lalonde’s study doesn’t help us to
understand the extraordinarily high rate of suicide among the Gitksan.
40
41
42
43
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James Clifford, “indigenous articulations” (2001) 13(2) Contemporary Pacific 472.
Chandler & lalonde, supra note 16.
Ibid., 209-210.
Ibid., 191.
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others have argued that we must examine the societal “narratives of suicide and their impact on individuals and groups.”44 this is a conceptually
different approach to suicidology which primarily focuses on perturbation
(i.e., upset, disturbance, agitation and pain). For example, michael Kral argues that lethality theory must be explored and expanded—the idea about
suicide and how these ideas are internalized collectively (but ultimately acted
on individually).45 Kral explains, “we know next to nothing about lethality:
how the idea of suicide becomes internalized and later selected as a course
of action by some people. a lethality theory of suicide would focus on the
idea of suicide, the context of how ideas are spread and adopted more generally through society.”46 While Kral’s approach doesn’t provide any answers,
the direction he sets out appears to be more useful: what are the ideas about
suicide? What feeds those ideas? How are they acted on and why?
one powerful story of resistance comes from a group of Gitksan youth—in
the form of a graphic comic. Darkness Calls 47 is brilliant and entirely narrated
in Gitsanimx with english subtitles. the darkness is represented by Watxs, an
evil being that uses the anger and confusion of young people to draw them
into a shadow world of darkness and despair, and suicide. a primordial battle
is fought between the superhuman beings Watxs and Weget (Gitksan trickster
figure) over the soul of a young Gitksan who must decide whether he wants to
live. this is a hard-hitting production that includes bullying in its many forms
(e.g., by peers, parents and teachers), addictions, poverty and despair. While
the comic’s politics may be a little too simple, this is nonetheless an incredible
testament to the tenacity and strength and determination of the young Gitksan
who were involved with its creation. to deal with suicide, the Gitksan youth
draw upon their own oral histories and intellectual traditions—and they render these into today’s forms and images. this is also a direct political action
that is very wise and smart.
But the big question that still gnaws at me is why didn’t the early and
ongoing political actions sustain those young Gitksan people? What disconnected the years of extensive political and legal activism from the lives and
deaths of those young people—the young chess player, the sleeping boy and
the suicidal youth? this is a haunting question that still i don’t know how to
answer. the other big question is what feeds the ongoing prevailing conflict
experienced by skan’uu and suu Dii? i don’t have the answers to this question
either. But, perhaps what we must do is ascribe meaning to their actions—to
understand their actions as resistance against the loss of meaning and empire.
Resistances that cannot be given up.
44
45
46
47
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michael J. Kral, “suicide and the internalization of Culture: three Questions” (1998) 35(2)
Transcultural Psychiatry 222.
Ibid., at 222-223.
Ibid., at 223.
Darkness Calls (Courtenay, BC: the Healthy aboriginal network, 2007).
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Behind the Blockades
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V The Future
many of the Gitksan people i have talked with attribute the violence, addictions, crime and conflict to a general lack of knowledge among the younger
members about Gitksan histories and the consultative legal processes that are
part of the Gitksan legal traditions. Historically, much of the Gitksan conflict management strategies (that are a part of the legal traditions) included
extensive consultations and negotiations within the House and between the
Houses, and in the Feast hall. Basically, people had to talk to each other about
substantive issues on an ongoing basis in order to both build and maintain
relationships.
However, lack of cultural knowledge (in the broadest sense, including
a loss of the Gitksan language) and any conflict resulting from that is not
the cause of the problems. that analysis reflects the rhetoric that indigenous
people merely have to be exemplary indigenous people (i.e., respectful,
knowledgeable, patient, obedient, spiritual, wise and so on), in order to return
to some mythical, pre-contact state of social and political harmony. Conflating
norms with behaviours in this way48 indicates a deeper failure to unpack and
examine the implicit law,49 which is part of the tacit background of shared
understandings50 that guide the behaviour of humans in groups. in fact, the
focus on language and cultural knowledge might even be contributing to
the conflict by inadvertently privileging the more fluent and knowledgeable
speakers over others.
the undermining of Gitksan conflict management is linked to colonial
history and to the contemporary political situation of the Gitksan. the conflict and other social problems experienced by the Gitksan must be appreciated within the complex of power relationships between Gitksan people and
Canada, and between Gitksan law and Canadian law. this can be extrapolated
to other indigenous peoples.
48
49
50
Napoleon E.indd 13
see Julie Cruikshank, The Social Life of Stories: Narrative and Knowledge in the Yukon Territory (Vancouver: uBC press, 1998) at 60. Cruikshank argues that “[t]he pitfall of both axioms—
one linking hunters with harmony, the other conflating norms with behaviour—is that each so
easily becomes a weapon when indigenous people fail to pass arbitrary tests of authenticity.”
see Gerald postema, “implicit law” in Willem J. Witteveen & Wibren van der Burg, eds,
Rediscovering Fuller: Essays on Implicit Law and Institutional Design (amsterdam: amsterdam university press, 1999), 255. Building on the work of lon Fuller, postema writes that an
exclusive focus on explicit law can result in overlooking “the vast body of law lying beneath
the surface of the phenomena they seek to understand. yet the existence and content of explicit
laws depend on a network of tacit understandings and unwritten conventions, rooted in the soil
of social interaction” (p. 255).
andrée Boisselle “Beyond Consent and Disagreement: Why law’s authority is not Just about
Will” in Jeremy Webber & Collin mcleod, eds, Challenges of Consent: Consent as the Foundation of Political Community in Indigenous/Non-Indigenous Contexts (Vancouver: uBC press
2009).
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Basically, conflict is an integral and necessary aspect of all human societies. the challenge is not to prevent conflict or even to resolve it, but rather, to
effectively manage it so that it does not paralyze people. it is only by rebuilding an effective and involved citizenry that the Gitksan (and other indigenous
peoples) will be able to overcome the current negative state of paralysis by
drawing on the resources that are a part of their own legal traditions. these
include intellectual resources for problem-solving, deliberation, reasoning,
consultation and collaboration, and interpretation.
Finally, it is through the intellectual undertaking of theorizing Gitksan
(or other peoples’) legal traditions that political space is created within which
people can identify and challenge contradictions and power imbalances. it
is in this political space that people can consider authority, power dynamics,
relations with the state and other peoples, and ways to recognize, change and
apply law to their lives. and thereby change how we relate to each other internally within our societies, to other indigenous and non-indigenous peoples
externally and to the state—whether through future direct political actions or
by other means.
this is my honour song. it is about finding new ways to act. it is a song
about finding meaning in the past in all of our actions and moving on. it is about
recognizing resistance in all its forms and finding its power. it is about hope.
at an individual level our aim should be to resist the empire of force by refusing
to be the kind of person and mind it requires us to be. if we could do it, this would
be an achievement with its own value for each of us who did so; to multiply and
generalize such an achievement would have great consequences for the whole
world—and to insist upon respecting instead the centre of the human mind and
soul, where meaning is claimed and made—is the only way in which our world
can be transformed for the better. it is the only ground for hope.51
51
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White at 205.
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