Historic letter recalls time when Indigenous people were discouraged from 'excessive indulgence' in dancing - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Historic letter recalls time when Indigenous people were discouraged from 'excessive indulgence' in dancing

When Sylvia McAdam posted a 95-year-old letter to Twitter, written by the former deputy superintendent of the Department of Indian Affairs, it went viral.

Idle No More founder finds Indian Affairs letter from 1921 among late mother's possessions

Sylvia McAdam says she posted the letter on Twitter not thinking it would make an impact, but it quickly went viral. (Craig Norris/CBC)

When Sylvia McAdam posted a 95-year-old letter to Twitter, written by the former deputy superintendentof the Department of Indian Affairs, it went viral.

That's because in the letter, Duncan Campbell Scott expressed alarm at the increasing rate of dancing on reserves and instructed department staff to use "tact"and "firmness"to "obtain control"and "dissuade the Indians from the excessive indulgence in the practice of dancing."

"I was really surprised actually, quite shocked that people were talking about it and commenting how they were ashamed, or sad,"McAdamsaid.

McAdam, one of the founders behind the grassroots movement Idle No More, found the letter after her mother's death earlier this month. She tweeted it out on National Aboriginal Day.

McAdamsaid her mother was given the letter sometime during her travels working as an elder in correctional facilities.

The reaction to the post exposed a "disconnect,"McAdam said. There were some non-Indigenous people who commented on the posts, telling McAdam to move on and get over the past.

I don't think there's much that's changed.- SylviaMcAdam

"People don't realize that my parents lived through this era," she said.

McAdam'sband, the Big River First Nation in Saskatchewan, was labelled as disloyal for resisting the Canadian government's colonial policies, she said.

"The sad part about it is during that era, the Indian agent would decide, or the superintendent or the Department of Indian Affairs, would randomly decide which reservations were loyal and which ones were disloyal."

McAdamsaid she will 'get over it' when "racist legislation"such as the Indian Act and the British North American Acts are abolished.

"I don't think there's much that's changed," McAdam said.

With files from CBC Radio's Morning Edition