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These are difficult stories. We bear witness in this chapter to the role of sport in furthering the settler colonial projects throughout Turtle Island.  Here are some supports to access in the community and from a distance:

First Peoples House of Learning Cultural Support & Counselling

Niijkiwendidaa Anishnaabekwag Services Circle (Counselling & Healing Services for Indigenous Women & their Families) – 1-800-663-2696

Nogojiwanong Friendship Centre  (705) 775-0387

Peterborough Community Counselling Resource Centre: (705) 742-4258

Hope for Wellness – Indigenous help line (online chat also available) – 1-855-242-3310

LGBT Youthline: askus@youthline.ca or text (647)694-4275

National Indian Residential School Crisis Line – 1-866-925-4419

Talk4Healing (a culturally-grounded helpline for Indigenous women):1-855-5544-HEAL

Section One: History

A) The Residential School System 

Exercise 1: Notebook Prompt

We are asked to honour these stories with open hearts and open minds.

Which part of the chapter stood out to you? What were your feelings as you read it? (50 words)

The stark juxtaposition between imposed Euro-Canadian sports and traditional Indigenous practices evoked a deep sense of sorrow and reflection on the resilience of Indigenous communities, while inspiring hope in reclaiming cultural identity and celebrating enduring heritage truly. I felt truly disheartened to learn the harshness that was unduly imposed onto the Indegenous chidlren.

 

B) Keywords

Exercise 2: Notebook Prompt

Briefly define (point form is fine) one of the keywords in the padlet (may be one that you added yourself).

  • Permanent Settlement: Involves settlers establishing enduring communities on indigenous lands.

  • Displacement: Results in the displacement, marginalization, or elimination of indigenous populations.

  • Structural Process: A systemic framework aimed at replacing indigenous governance, culture, and identity with those of the settlers.

  • Legal and Political Tools: Often enforced through laws and policies that legitimize the transfer of land and resources.

 

C) Settler Colonialism

Exercise 3:  Complete the Activities

Exercise 4: Notebook Prompt 

Although we have discussed in this module how the colonial project sought to suppress Indigenous cultures, it is important to note that it also appropriates and adapts Indigenous cultures and “body movement practices” (75) as part of a larger endeavour to “make settlers Indigenous” (75).

What does this look like? (write 2 or 3 sentences)

This often takes the form of “sanitization” of Indegenous practice to fit settler ideals and strip the original indegenous identity. i.e Words in songs are altered or dances are recoreographed crerating a hybrid/mixed emergent identity that is intended to mask the original indegenous form.

 

 

D) The Colonial Archive

Exercise 5:  Complete the Activities

Section Two: Reconciliation

A) Reconciliation?

Exercise 6: Activity and Notebook Prompt 

Visit the story called “The Skate” for an in-depth exploration of sport in the residential school system. At the bottom of the page you will see four questions to which you may respond by tweet, facebook message, or email:

How much freedom did you have to play as a child?

What values do we learn from different sports and games?

When residential staff took photos, what impression did they try to create? 

Answer one of these questions (drawing on what you have learned in section one of this module or prior reading) and record it in your Notebook.

Different sports and games teach values such as teamwork, discipline, and fair play. They promote resilience, responsibility, and respect for both rules and opponents, while also fostering communication, leadership, and a sense of community.

 

B) Redefining Sport

B) Sport as Medicine

Exercise 7: Notebook Prompt

Make note of the many ways sport is considered medicine by the people interviewed in this video.

Helped Go through school

Unity (kept culture together through challenges)

Medicine

Creates awareness

 

C) Sport For development

Exercise 7: Notebook Prompt 

What does Waneek Horn-Miller mean when she says that the government is “trying but still approaching Indigenous sport development in a very colonial way”?

Horn-Miller is critiquing how government initiatives, although well-intentioned, still impose Western, top-down frameworks on Indigenous sport development. This approach often neglects the cultural nuances and self-determined methodologies of Indigenous communities, essentially reinforcing colonial power dynamics rather than truly empowering Indigenous athletes

Exercise 8: Padlet Prompt

Add an image or brief comment reflecting some of “binding cultural symbols that constitute Canadian hockey discourse in Canada.”  Record your responses in your Notebook as well.

 

The Culture of Hockey in Canada — The SMU Journal

 

Section Three: Decolonization

Please see the major assignment for this half of the term in the final section of this chapter.

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This work (Gender, Sport, and Social Justice by Kelly McGuire) is free of known copyright restrictions.

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