Wela'lioq. Ni'n teluisi Graham Marshall, naspi Membertou chief and council.
I want to thank each and every one of you for inviting me here today.
My name is Graham Marshall. I'm part of Membertou chief and council. Membertou Mi'kmaq nation is one of the top indigenous communities in the country of Canada because of what we have done. The work ethic that our ancestors instilled in us has always reminded us to always remain at the top, to always fight, and to always honour our ancestors.
I come from Membertou, which was located first on Sydney Harbour, which we call Kun'tewiktuk. Kun'tewiktuk means “the place at the rock”, which is located in Sydney Harbour. During that time, in the early 1900s, we were forcibly removed. Until the present day, Membertou was on top of the hill where it was all swampland and land that wasn't really fertile for growing anything. Because we come from Membertou and because of the amazing work ethic that our grandparents and great-grandparents instilled in us, we became one of the top indigenous communities in the country of Canada.
When we talk about ATRs and when we talk about how we have to do those, that speaks to why they are important, because when we became successful in this country of Canada, we tried to acquire back the land of our old territory of Kun'tewiktuk located in Sydney Harbour. It took a long process and it ended up lost. As Membertou, we initially just bought that land and gave that land back to our community. Right now, there are present-day commercial buildings located in Kun'tewiktuk representing who we are and representing honour and our ancestors and where we come from.
When we look at getting land back, there are so many different things that happened in Mi'kma'ki. This country was created through Confederation in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. Prince Edward Island is located in Mi'kmaq territory. As Mi'kmaq people, we are one of the indigenous tribes that have the longest relationship with settlers, more than the other indigenous tribes throughout the country of Canada. With that being said, we know the pros and cons of working on relationships with settlers through so many who have come through here and from understanding the people of the dawn, understanding Mi'kma'ki. When we talk about land, you heard from Saqamaw Augustine about the importance of the land to us as well.
When you look at the country of Canada, there are so many amazing monuments and so many landmarks throughout this country. Canadians tend to forget that they are on indigenous lands. They are on the lands of the Algonquin, the Anishinabe, the Haida, the Mi'kmaq, so when we understand that, Canada realizes that this is all indigenous territory.
N’in tleyawi Membertou. I am Mi'kmaq. I am from Membertou, so as an indigenous people we have had experience with settlers of our people. Every Mi'kmaq today is really a walking miracle of the trials and tribulations of a thousand years of a common relationship with travellers. Every Mi'kmaq today is really a walking miracle of why we are here today.
You heard from Saqamaw Augustine about the land and the importance of it to us. It runs with us. Every river and every rock on the land is part of us. We come from the land. The creation story of who we are and where we come from, of Mi'kma'ki, is so important and dear to us. The land is part of us, so as Membertou, one of the top indigenous communities of Canada, we understand that. We understand that, working nation to nation to understand that every country realizes the importance of who we are and where we come from. Indigenous peoples throughout this country are so important and they are so dear to their territories. Therefore, when we change the narrative on understanding who we are and what territory we come from.... We have to go and change the narrative of that.
When we come from Mi'kmaq territory—and I'm in the district of Unama'ki, which is Cape Breton Island—it's so important to understanding who we are. When we are forcibly removed, with the dispossession of so many indigenous peoples throughout this country, that land is so important to us, because land is also included with our language, our culture and our way of life.
I come from a Mi'kmaq community that is located in a town. In this town, we were forcibly removed. There were only two times in this country's history when that was accessible. One of those was my community. We had to make that work. We had to adapt to that, to understand how we understand from the land. The land is so endeared to us, of who we are and where we come from.
When we are in a community where we don't have access to water, as we are located in a swamp, it determines our way of life and who we are. It's embedded in our DNA as L'nu people. That way of life is taken from us. The land holds our language. The land holds our culture.
When we are in dispossession of so many territories and communities, that life is taken from us. That's why land is so important for each and every one of us as indigenous people in Canada, as Mi'kmaq people coming from the “People of the Dawn” in this country of Canada. We are the ones who greet the sun first. We are the ones who have an understanding of settlers. Everyone who resides in this great country, from Toronto to Vancouver, from coast to coast to coast.... We are greeting the sun first and have the longest relationship. We are still here. We still have an understanding of who we are.
Indigenous peoples are created and have a duty to protect Mother Earth. It is our duty to protect every single person in our territory. We have rights, with water and lands, that are taken away. That is why it's so dear to indigenous people, because as indigenous people it's our duty to protect Mother Earth. We are connected to Mother Earth.