Yukon midwifery association to study past Indigenous birth culture
Yukon government gives $74,360 to research project, which will begin this year
The Yukon government is putting money towarda research project that will document Indigenous communities' historical approach to midwifery and childbirth.
The Community Midwifery Association will receive$74,360 for the project, which will begin this year.
"I think it's really important to honour what the practices were, who held the knowledge ...and what were the practices, from prenatal stages of childbirth and the transition to motherhood," said the association's president, Kathleen Cranfield.
"It's important to acknowledge, when you're re-introducing the profession of midwifery to a jurisdiction, that we acknowledge what the history here was."
Cranfieldsays it's not just aboutmidwifery, since not all First Nations would have used that term.
Thegoal is to produce a booklet of stories that describe the traditional culture aroundchildbirth, "from pre-contact to however it was maintained,"Cranfieldsaid.
The project will involve working groups set up in communities around the territory, to collect interviews and stories. Cranfieldsays the project will be led "significantly by the First Nations."
"We'd just like to help to preserve the stories," she said. "We hope to start off small and ask for permission to start some of these focus groups and see where it leads us."
In a statement, Economic Development Minister Ranj Pillaisaid the research project "will allow Indigenous women in Yukon to reconnect with their culture and traditions."
With files from Mike Rudyk