Thank you very much for the welcome, Mr. Chair. It's good to see you here.
Witnesses, thank you for being present here, in particular Okimaw Sunshine, from my neck of the woods. It's good to have you here. You spoke to me earlier, before we started today. You said that you weren't certain how good of a politician you are, but you did a pretty good job today, I'd say, in outlining the concerns of Treaty 8, particularly those of Sturgeon Lake Cree Nation.
We heard a lot, particularly in Alberta from Treaty 6, Treaty 7 and Treaty 8, that there hasn't been enough consultation. However, in your remarks, I think you elevated the discussion to a place where Canada has never really wanted to go, the place where they have to actually address the fact that they had a treaty with many people on the prairies—mine, yours, just the whole province of people—and had these commitments that were laid out in the treaty-committed partnership. They committed to a nation-to-nation relationship, committed to dual sovereignty, this idea that we could exist separately but together.
I think the principle you're speaking about today, and one that I really implore my colleagues to listen to deeply, is that this is the most critical kind of legislation, in the sense that it deals with water, life, our women and our future. If I've heard anything that's been clear from chiefs in Alberta, it's that we have to get this right, and if we don't get it right, then we have to go back to the drawing board.
You mentioned in your statement that we have to find a way to return to treating each other more honourably, but most particularly Canada, the Crown, has to see its obligations to its treaty partners first and foremost. You even mentioned the Province of Alberta as an obstacle to what is, really, the full enfranchisement or full recognition of treaty rights, as well as your nation's sovereignty, future and ability to be recognized for its already existing powers: the right to self-government, the right to water, the right to land, the right to simply be who we are. Those are fundamental rights that exist, whether Canada acknowledges them or not. Your statements here today have made even more clear and deeply founded in my heart the great reminder that this place has a lot longer to go in finally trying to recognize its jurisdiction, which isn't complete jurisdiction but a shared one—one that it hasn't yet fully recognized with indigenous people.
I want to ask you this, Chief Sunshine. You made this statement about Canada: “They put us in a box and they forgot about us.” It pains my heart to know that such a proud people, particularly the Cree people on the prairies—my mother, my parents, our relatives—find themselves in this deplorable condition of poverty where water.... This is something that you mentioned in Calgary right now is being met by the people there as something so critical and desperate that now the attention on the importance of it is at the forefront of every newspaper in Alberta. However, this is something you've thought about as chief, something your people have thought about, something that indigenous people across the prairies have thought about for generations. What does our future mean without water? What does our future mean without clean water?
You also spoke about the importance of limiting the damages to existing water. The fish we eat come from the water that's been there, gifted by the Creator, yet toxic pollutants are constantly put into the water without your notification.
Many of these issues stem from a great deal of disrespect when it comes to the signatories who signed those treaties all those years ago, to have all these barriers put in front of them and to force you to come to this table today to say yet again what's been said for over 100 years, which is to simply allow us to be ourselves and to simply allow us to continue to do the work that we've been doing for generations, since time immemorial, to recognize the fundamental jurisdiction that is already present. The jurisdiction doesn't come from the Crown in better ways. It comes from our Creator, and you've made that very clear today.
My question is whether you'd like to elaborate any more on why the things you've said today are so important and why they lead you to oppose this legislation.