Citizenship Challenge Civics Education Guide

Some students may respond strongly to activities and discussions related to Indigenous peoples in Canada. It is important that the classroom climate encourages students to be positive, respectful, and supportive. Ensure that students know where to go for help and support should any concerns arise. NOTE ACTIVITY FOUR: TREATY RESEARCH ACTIVITY Beginning in the early 1600s, the British Crown entered into a series of agreements and later treaties with Indigenous nations in what is now known as Canada. The treaties were intended as formal agreements to encourage peaceful relations and to specify promises, obligations, and benefits for both parties. Today, most historians agree that Indigenous peoples offered to share some of their land and resources in return for material support. But the terms of this exchange were understood differently by the parties involved. This difference in interpretation is rooted in differing worldviews, with distinct concepts of land ownership. Indigenous peoples had (and still have) a relationship with the land that informed their politics, spirituality, and economy. Europeans, on the other hand, saw the land as a source of economic productivity and often as something to be exploited. Europeans began to impose artificial borders that did not line up with the traditional lands or jurisdictions of Indigenous peoples. Coupled with a language barrier and contrasting methods of knowledge transmission, misunderstandings multiplied. While the broad philosophy of treaties is universal (setting the terms for how to relate to each other), each treaty is a unique agreement based on unique circumstances. Treaties were created to define the respective rights of Indigenous nations and colonial governments. It is important to note that successive colonial governments have often left treaty obligations unfulfilled. Though many treaties pre-date Confederation, they are living documents (much like Canada’s Constitution) and their interpretation is continuously re-examined and debated by Canadian and Indigenous lawmakers to this day. Part of this activity is also found in Historica Canada’s Treaties in Canada Education Guide . For more activities on understanding treaties, you can download a PDF of the guide here: education. historicacanada.ca/en/tools/260 1. Select a treaty (consider your local area if you live in a treaty territory). Working in a group, conduct research and identify three people or events from the time of the treaty’s negotiation that might have had an impact on its creation. Use The Canadian Encyclopedia to start your research. What was going on in the area that might have affected the treaty-making process? 2. Use the research you did for Question 1 to examine the factors that motivated your particular treaty. • What was the process of making the treaty? • What was the spirit and intent of the treaty? • What were the oral interpretations and descriptions, if any, that came with the written document? • How were complex terms and concepts translated and explained to the Indigenous delegates? • How were complex terms and concepts translated and explained to the Crown’s delegates? • Is it possible to surrender a specific area of land if you are a society that does not follow a worldview where land ownership is an accepted practice? • Does purchasing land include purchasing sovereignty? • Who were the people signing on behalf of the Crown? Indigenous Nations? • What makes the treaty relevant today? 3. It is often said that “We are all treaty people.” Have a class discussion. How universal is this statement? What makes you a treaty person today? Who benefits from the treaty you are researching, and how? Modification: Place students in strategic groups for peer support, and have them write short, point-form paragraphs explaining the key points of the treaty they have selected. Have them fill out a 5Ws chart to help with reading comprehension. Painting of the Québec conference in 1864 to settle the basics of a union of the British North American Provinces, by Robert Harris, 1885 (courtesy Library and Archives Canada/C-001855). Senate Chamber, inside Parliament (Dreamstime/Ken Pilon/2960370). Justice Murray Sinclair gives the keynote address at the Shingwauk 2015 Gathering (Wikicommons/ Archkris). Map showing historical treaties in Canada, negotiated between 1725 and 1930 (licensed under Open Government Licence – Canada/ courtesy of Natural Resources: Canada/http:/ geogratis. gc.ca/api/en/nrcan-rncan/ ess-sst/7ac840d4-638c-575e- 9b77-e44c02b5dbdc.html). Teacher Tip: Use Th e Canadian Encyclopedia and/or Native-land.ca to search for information on treaties in Canada. Idle No More protesters, January 2013 (Dreamstime.com/ Lostafichuk/28927045).

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