LAND BACK! What do we mean?
written by Ronald Gamblin, 4Rs NLC Coordinator (see original here)
Note to reader: This piece is meant primarily for non-Indigenous people living on Indigenous lands. It is supposed to confront, while simultaneously comforting your uneasiness around land back and reparation conversations and actions. Please take your time in reading this, exploring where in your thoughts and body your discomfort shows up. Acknowledging and unpacking how it makes you feel is an important part of personal growth. Also this is only an opinion piece: recognizing the diversity of Indigenous teachings, governance and lived experiences means that Indigenous people will have different interpretations of this topic.
To begin this reflection, I would like to paraphrase something that Kris Archie — an amazing Secwepemc and Seme7 facilitator — said at a recent funders conference:
“When you hear the words decolonization, white supremacy, patriarchy or even racism, do you feel something? Do you get a chill down your back, randomly start crossing your arms, get tense all over your body, or even just feel an urge to resist? Well good! When your body is cold it shivers, when it’s hungry it growls, when it’s in fear it shakes and when it’s sad it cries. Your body is meant to respond, whether that be physical or emotional, and it’s the same when deconstructing what you’ve been taught. It tells you that something is there and that you must go through it and find ways to process it.” – Kris Archie, Executive Director of the Circle on Philanthropy and Aboriginal Peoples
The first time I experienced this framing being used in a room full of non-Indigenous peoples, I felt the energy shift. I felt shoulders loosen, anxiety released and some minds opened. The unique beauty this quote provides is that it offers a simple personal practice for tackling any situation in which unlearning is needed, including engaging in generative conversation about giving land back to Indigenous peoples.
Now that I have shared this, I would ask you to please keep Kris’ words in your mind, body, heart and spirit while exploring this concept.
So, what does “Land Back” mean? While these words seem straight forward enough, this phrase encompasses a complicated and intergenerational web of ideas/movements. When I hear Indigenous youth and land protectors chant “Land Back!” at a rally, I know it can mean the literal restoration of land ownership. When grandmothers and knowledge keepers say it, I tend to think it means more the stewardship and protection of mother earth. When Indigenous political leaders say it, it often means comprehensive land claims and self-governing agreements. No matter what meaning is attached, we as Indigenous nations have an urge to reconnect with our land in meaningful ways.
When you look at it, as Indigenous peoples and nations, we come from the land. The land is our home, our mother, our caregiver, it’s what makes us Indigenous. The architects of Canadian colonial policy understood this. They knew that if they wanted access to the lands in order to generate wealth and power, that they would need to separate us from this relationship. So, they used tactics such as forced relocation away from our homes and onto reserves (Canada’s apartheid system), introduction of patriarchal governance (Indian Act Chiefs), starvation of traditional resources (such as buffalo massacares), breaking family units and knowledge transfer through Indian Residential Schools, targeting women and children with violent policies, limiting our access to on the land cultural practices, and even making it illegal for us to fight in the Canadian legal framework for stolen land. These were systematic tactics intended on destroying our relationship with our mother.
Considering this, non-Indigenous folks need to understand that land back is about much more than land. You need to understand that when you hear youth scream “LAND BACK”, when you see land protectors stand off against the RCMP, when elders make prayers for the land, and when political figures sit in land negotiations, Land back is about Indigenous peoples confronting colonialism at the root. It’s about fighting for the right to our relationship with the earth. It’s about coming back to ourselves, as sovereign Indigenous Nations
What is needed next is for non-Indigenous peoples to work on their relationship and reaction to giving land back. The best way to put this is that with every step Indigenous peoples take forward, we are pushed two steps back. The amount of times I’ve seen non-Indigenous people react in panic, anger, guilt or straight up ignorance around this topic is amazing on its own. Who can blame these folks though?
In school we are all taught a one sided and misleading version history, as a newcomer you’re told to avoid Indigenous folks and neighbourhoods, when buying property you’re made to believe that the land you “own” wasn’t acquired through violence, but only through exchange. At every point possible your existence has been shaped to unknowingly push against Indigenous land reclamation efforts. Most people that reside in Canada are taught to avoid and neglect conversations about colonialism and its negative impacts, to be possessive of land and to be ignorant towards Indigenous folks. This is intentional.
Canadian society has been set up to resist Indigenous relationships to land. Colonial states are afraid of the power Indigenous relationships to land hold, the questions this creates around wealth and ownership, and the systems that have to be dismantled. The individual reactions to land back, are a fractal/reflection of colonial based systems embedded goal to resist Indigenous relationships to land.
Because of this I want to let you know that it is okay for you — non-Indigenous folks — to be gentle with yourself. Take time to feel what you feel, go learn and unlearn what is necessary to work on this relationship, let go of any fragilities and then come to us with your support. At the same time, I want to let you know that you cannot expect Indigenous folks to be as gentle. Indigenous peoples have been targeted, oppressed and colonized for centuries for our land, and we’re sick of it. We want desperately to get past the slow process of educating non-Indigenous folks, and put all our energy into saving the earth, our families, our kinship relationships and ourselves. If we yell at you, block you or just dismiss you, it’s because we don’t have time to support your emotional and intellectual processing. We have people to save and land to reclaim.
I know that I can’t provide readers with the end all answer on how to practice solidarity around land reclamation, but I do have some tips.
Here are some ways you can begin to unlearn your reactions to land back, and practice being in a better relationship with Indigenous peoples around land reclamation:
- Research whose land you’re on. If you live in the Americas, you live on someone else’s land. Figure out this relationship. I would recommend starting with the whose land app.
- Follow Indigenous social media accounts that tackle these topics. This will help desensitize you to some ideas and realities. I would suggest Indigenous meme pages, Indigenous artists, land protection camps, international Indigenous movements and local community organizing groups. Here are some to get you started
- @Terrilltf on Twitter
- @KanahusFreedom on Twitter
- @NDNcollective on Instagram
- @iiycfamily on Instagram
- @Lylajune on Instagram
- @Indigenousclimateaction on Instagram
- @Ip3action on Instagram
- @beaver_hills_warriors on Instagram
- @Danishinaabe on Twitter and Instagram
- @TheBandOffice on Instagram
- @A7G_Official on Twitter and Instagram
- @AYOMovement on Twitter and Instagram
- @Similo_o on Instagram
- @Ijotikak on Instagram
- @retired.cop on Instagram
- @takaiya.blaney on Instagram
- @2braidzikwe on Instagram
- BIG TIP: Please do not react out of guilt, anger or fragility. Observe and support when possible, but do not burden Indigenous folks with the emotions of your processing.
- Learn about Canada’s treaties: the difference between treaty territory unceded land, traditional territory and land claims.
- Research moments in which there has been land reclamation. Would highly suggest looking when Vancouver city gave land back to the Musqueam nation.
- Be inspired by other non-Indigenous folks who are finding bold and creative ways to actively support land reclamation.
- Read Yellowheads Institutes pieces on Land Back
- The Wolastoqey Nation filed a land claim in 2020 seeking title to more than 50,000 square kilometres in the province that the nation claims as its traditional lands.
- Research and familiarize how various First Nations are approaching land claims, such as the Confederacy of Mainland Mi’kmaq, Musquam Nation, and Ktunaxa Nation.
That’s it! I hope you have learned something new from this. Whether that is a reminder to explore your reactions, a piece of history, a new lens on colonialism or even just a possible next step. Take whatever you learned and use it to help Indigenous people who are taking those steps towards land back.