[Witness speaks in Cree, interpreted as follows:]
Hello. I greet all of you here today.
Arok Wolvengrey is my name. I'm also called White Eagle in Cree.
I am grateful that I've been invited here to speak about indigenous languages.
I am happy to be allowed to speak Cree on this day.
I thank you that you are starting to hear these language.
As well, I am also happy that you started listening to these languages here in the Government of Canada.
Thank you.
[English]
It's my understanding that Minister Saganash has already spoken to this committee about the inherent right to function in one's mother tongue, as ensured in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and he's added his belief that this is also entrenched within various sections of the Canadian Charter of Rights and the Constitution.
Honourable Senator Serge Joyal and MP Ouellette emphasized the aboriginal right to languages entrenched in section 35 of the Constitution Act. I can certainly not speak with any more authority or eloquence than MPs Saganash and Ouellette and Senator Joyal in such matters.
If it is wished, I can speak to the importance of language to the identity of both an individual and a people. I can also place this in a national context of reconciliation with the indigenous nations within this land, now known as Canada.
[Witness speaks in Cree]
However, I expect that I've been asked to speak here today about the languages themselves and the logistics of providing simultaneous interpretation or translation of indigenous languages spoken here in Canada and thus potentially in the House of Commons.
I will do my best to answer your questions.
[Witness speaks in Cree]