UOI OFFICES, Oct. 9, 2013 /CNW/ - The government of Canada must stop experimenting with the lives of First Nations children.
Anishinabek Nation Grand Council Chief Patrick Madahbee says the federal government's plan to unilaterally push ahead with a First Nations Education Act looks like the latest in a long list of federal attempts to control the destiny of First Nations people.
"They have used us like lab rats - sterilized us and starved us, and forced us to attend schools where we were beaten and abused and thousands of our children died. When will they learn that they don't know what's best for First Nations?"
Indian Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt said this week that there will be no additional federal funding for First Nations education until he sees "reform" of the current system of education delivery on First Nations. The federal Conservatives are expected to introduce the First Nation Education Act this fall.
"Instead of investing in our own Anishinabek Education System and our own First Nations school boards, the federal government is yet again forcing its method of education on our First Nations," says Madahbee. "The Anishinabek have invested 19 years in consulting our citizens and education experts to develop a school system that will make it more likely that our children can succeed in the classroom.
"During that time the federal government has imposed a 2 per cent funding cap on education, which has resulted in funding for students attending First Nations schools being thousands of dollars less than those attending public schools off reserve. It also means that fewer First Nations students can pursue post-secondary learning.
"The federal government has to stop experimenting with us, and blaming us that an education system that they imposed on us is failing our children."
The Grand Council Chief said the imposition of a First Nation Education Act would contradict the Residential School apology issued by Stephen Harper in the House of Commons five years ago, as well as the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples - to which Canada is signatory - and which says: " Indigenous peoples have the right to establish and control their education systems and institution in a manner appropriate to their cultural methods of teaching and learning."
The Anishinabek Nation established the Union of Ontario Indians as its secretariat in 1949. The UOI is a political advocate for 39 member communities across Ontario, representing approximately 55,000 people. The Union of Ontario Indians is the oldest political organization in Ontario and can trace its roots back to the Confederacy of Three Fires, which existed long before European contact.
SOURCE: Anishinabek Nation
Marci Becking, Communications Officer
Phone : 1-877-702-5200 Cell : 1-705-494-0735
Email : [email protected]
www.anishinabek.ca
www.anishinabeknews.ca
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