I'd be more than happy to.
When we look at our communities as they are today, there is a huge struggle because of a lack of understanding on the part of the non-aboriginal community about where we were as communities and about our ownership of land. We'll just deal with ownership of land. I can't go into the whole big picture.
In fact, before the imposition of the Indian Act women did hold land collectively, but it wasn't the kind of ownership we look at now, which is fee simple, and you can trade it around or sell it. The ownership and the value of it was held by the family, with the women having as much say as anyone about how it was distributed, how it was broken up, and what it was used for. Once the Indian Act came into effect, there was, of course, the Westminster model, and the lands were broken up. I know that in a lot of communities, they only gave them to the male heads of the family.
I want to make a little bit more of a comment with respect to the place of women. I've done a lot of research in this area, and it reinforces what the elders are saying to us, that the women did hold.... As a matter of fact, I think the women held a higher place in our communities in a number of areas than did the men.
When you do your research, you see in a number of writings that when the non-aboriginal people came into our communities, one of the first things they said is this. What you need to do in order to--and these words I don't agree with--civilize the Indians is break the relationship between the men and the women. You need to instruct the men on how to treat their women, because their women have too much power. The women have too much of a place in the community and in decision-making; therefore, we need to ensure that the European men teach the Indian men how to treat the women.
The women in our communities know this, and they are still holding on to all the culture, all the history, all the stories. The women hold those, and as the givers of life, they hold a very high position. That's what we're talking about when we talk about returning to those traditional values and ensuring that when we build our communities from the ground up, which we want to do, we have the place of women, which is at a much higher place than it is in the non-aboriginal community, I'm sorry to say.