Thank you for allowing me to come and join you today.
I'm a former chief of the Chippewas of the Thames First Nation just outside of London, Ontario. I now work at the University of Waterloo. I'm the indigenous knowledge keeper. I'm also a traditional healer and I work in organizations where we do indigenous healing practices for various people who are trying to find their way of healing.
Today was an interesting day. I took my faculty dean over to the Mohawk Institute in Brantford, Ontario, where we memorialized the survivors of that school and the ones who passed away at that school. Today's topic really resonated very well with me in terms of a person's life. I really think this committee needs to have an indigenous person's perspective to think about what we're going to do with the laws here in Canada. As I was at the residential school today, I knew very clearly that there is a deep-rooted history here that really needs to be looked at a bit more strongly in terms of life and the way indigenous people look at life in this world.
We also understand that there are times when people find a very complicated lifetime and some of the hardships they live through, but I think that in terms of how indigenous people look at life, it is really our Creator who we turn to at times like that. If we make laws that really look at this perspective, indigenous people have been through this already. We've been forced to leave this world, as you know from the children who have been lost and found at residential schools lately, in a form that was taken from them very similarly.
It's really hurtful to know that those children left this world without any type of opportunity in life. I know that survivors today are challenged, too, mentally, physically, emotionally and spiritually. I'm living through that right now with a father-in-law who doesn't want to live any more because of the residential school that he had to endure. In his later years, his mind just goes back to that era in time. What he has given to me is the fact that he still has worth. He still has an ability to share something that this country needs to hear about that experience. He's not going to allow himself to fall into suicidal thoughts, even though the pain he's feeling today has really hurt him so badly.
I think that with today's topic and what we're discussing we want to get involved in this conversation. Indigenous people throughout Canada have endured all these terrible things, but today, I think, when it comes to supporting people who can help themselves through alternative measures like indigenous healing practices.... I've seen it happen already with some people who have gone to that point of wanting to leave this world, but now, in coming back to their culture and knowing there are ways that we are able to treat and work with these people, that thought of wanting to leave this world has subsided.
Throughout my healing practices that I've done with many people, it's very clear to me now that they need to have that extra ability to know their healing practices, and when they do that, because that was taken away from our people. For all those years, the residential schools didn't allow us to have our sweat lodges and our ceremonies, but because people now are able to practise these things again, they see an opportunity now, rather than trying to end their lives. It's not just for indigenous people, but for all people. If they find that peace that allows them to know that there is hope out there, then I think we can really look at this topic a little more strongly and have an opportunity once again to maybe revive in these people the hope that was lost.
I also know that there are times when people come to that point in life when it's inevitable and the pain they're feeling is probably at that point. I don't think medical professionals disagree that there are times when that is doable.
Until we get to that point, it has to come from the person. I think we can support that, and maybe make that decision a little bit later, rather than having somebody who has gone through this punishment in their own mind and wanting to just leave this world.
My message to you is, let's support this committee discussion. I don't know whether there are any indigenous people who have been invited to these meetings, and hearing that perspective. But for the years I have been doing healing work, I know we can help people, even at a point when they think there is no longer any hope for them. I have seen it happen so many times.
I'm here to reflect on that and to give us a chance to speak our mind. There's nobody else in this country who has been through what we have been through and the experiences we share. At a committee level like this, I think it's very important for you to hear this and for us to have these opportunities to share this knowledge that we have.
I hope we're able to continue on with this discussion with these very important elements that I think need to be addressed within this topic.
Canada is a great country, but we need to include the people who have been here since time immemorial on these topics. We have come through a hard time. Because of residential school, we're regaining those healthy ceremonies that we have always done. They were outlawed in this country for a long time. Now that we're regaining that, we're seeing people like my father-in-law being able to hold on a little longer, and then his knowledge gets passed on in his children and grandchildren.
I wanted to share that with you today.