If I could just add to that, there was something you brought up earlier in terms of education.
The average Canadian citizen--either immigrant or born, raised, and educated in this country--has no idea of the situation of aboriginal peoples. Everything they know comes from Walt Disney movies: the Indians were conquered and they all live on reserves somewhere in the north in teepees. That's the basis of most people's education and understanding. A lot of well-educated people are still functioning under those kinds of misunderstandings, so that's the important first step: to really start having an understanding.
Second of all, even if I put all the native women and all the native people I know on a contact list and we put all of our resources together, the few bake sales we could have still wouldn't be much. But somebody like you, you have access to a number of, as you said, other privileged people who have the resources, the contacts, and the networks, and to people who have the education and the skills to be able to contribute to what we're doing, not to take it over, but to say they want to support our vision and ask how can they do that. Absolutely, then, that kind of help would be welcomed.
I'm sure there are people out there who have resources and would be willing to start funding some of these important programs, such as the “I Am a Kind Man” program, to get it to all of the communities.