Iyiniw pikiskwewin ki wi pikikwatinawaw.
I was a chief for 20 years. I haven't been chief for awhile now, but once a chief always a chief to people, I guess.
I'm from Saskatchewan. During the time of treaties, Chief Ahtahkakoop was a major chief in Treaty 6. There were two major chiefs: Mistawasis and Ahtahkakoop. All the other chiefs were subchiefs. They were the lords of the plains and that's where I step from, that crew of chiefs.
When they signed treaties it was nation to nation. They stopped the telegraph line from coming through the Saskatoon area because a treaty had to be made, nation to nation. In 1876 the government people came out there and they made a treaty at Fort Carlton. It took about seven or eight days to make the treaty. Our people had our ceremonies.
To move ahead, many of the people left. They didn't want to believe in the chiefs who were making a treaty, a transition to a new way of life. Some subchiefs and followers left. They stood up and maintained an equilibrium, balance, and they made a treaty.
The treaty is the base that we have to work from—the government as a nation and our people as a nation. The Indian Act was a unilateral thing that was brought in by government, supposedly to protect my people, our people. It has done a bit of that job, but at the same time the government got carried away here and there, and abused or took advantage of certain things to hold our people down, to suppress our people. That's not the way things should be.
What you're doing today—I congratulate the MP, Mr. Clarke, and I congratulate all of you sitting here, to be sitting here for the best intentions of our people no matter where they be, from the east coast to the west coast. Things are going to be looked at legislatively by our people, our leaders. Our leaders are picked to represent our people, like Chief Ahtahkakoop and Chief Mistawasis in their day. Our people today, our leaders, still have to be recognized in that fashion. I'm glad to see the Chief of the James Smith Cree Nation here because they have to be recognized for the input they have to the changes that need to be made.
I think you should leave the student residence clause in there but reverse it. It would be all Plains Cree in Saskatchewan for those doing the residence. Nothing but Cree to be spoken. If you speak English, I'll bat you over the head. That's what happened to our people.
Four generations, now people don't speak Cree. I never went to school in residence. My grandfather and grandmother brought me up and they held me back from student residence. As a result, today I can speak Cree fluently. I know our history from the beginning of time to today. It's an unwritten history, the travels of our people—Lake Ontario, Kici Sakahikan; Lake Huron, Onatowew Kami; Lake Michigan, Misi Kami; Lake Superior, Kitci Kamis—kayas ochi, all our history, the history of our ceremonies.
We have a history, but it's been taken away by student residence. It's good to take that away and it's good that settlements have been made. But what needs to be made is legislation now to put moneys into our language and our culture for our people.
I was reading in the paper that there were 15 or so suicides in some reserve in Ontario. That's because those young people do not know their history, their language, or their culture. That's what it has done to us, generation to generation to generation. I brought my children up Cree, and I'm going to bring my grandchildren up Cree. No matter what takes place, they're going to speak their language. They're going to speak Cree.
My point is that you have to work with our leaders. There has to be money put in to make up legislation through the Indian Act. The Nisga'a, under the Nisga'a agreement, work through a grant system, thanks to you. You've made an agreement with the Nisga'a, but what do all the rest of us work with? We work with a contribution agreement. If the province is involved, it's out of a fiduciary system—a fiduciary system from the federal government and representing the federal government. It does not off-load everything to the province so that they make a decision on their own. No, our treaties were made with the federal government—the Queen, the crown—and our chiefs stood firm. They kept the peace.
My son was in Afghanistan fighting for Canada, fighting for all of you and me, right at the front. My father fought in the Korean War in the air force. My grandfather fought in the First World War—he was too young, but he still did it. He was there in the Second World War too.
So we stand up for Canada, but at the same time we need respect and recognition from the government.
Thank you for listening to me. I won't take up too much time.
Hai hai.