Queen's University should apologize, create process to validate Indigenous identity: report - Action News
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Queen's University should apologize, create process to validate Indigenous identity: report

The 32-page report from First Peoples Group, an Indigenous advisory firm, was released Friday and comesafter an anonymous report surfaced online last June allegingsix instructors, professors and associates at Queen's had falsely claimed Indigenous identity at the Kingston, Ont., university.

Report comes out of allegations some university staff falsified identities

A sign with the words
A new report calls for Queen's University to create a process to validate Indigenous identity after an anonymous report allegedsix instructors, professors and associates at the Kingston, Ont., university had falsely claimed to be Indigenous. (Michelle Allan/CBC)

A review of howQueen's University in Kingston, Ont., evaluates Indigenous identity when hiring staff calls for the school to apologize for the pain the issue has recently caused and recommendsall faculty who self-declared as Indigenous undergoa new process to validate theiridentity.

The 32-page report from First Peoples Group, an Indigenous advisory firm, was released Friday and comesafter an anonymous report surfaced online last June allegingsix instructors, professors and associates at Queen's had falsely claimed Indigenous identity.

The report issues seven recommendations, including that the university setupa department of Indigenous studies. It also suggests that only those who are qualified, Indigenous and have lived experiencebe considered for any teaching position that should be held by Indigenous people.

It also rejects a controversial community that has had strong affiliations with the university for years the Ardoch FirstNation describing the "odd relationship"as the report's"raison d'tre."

Three of the people named in the anonymous report are members ofthe Ardoch First Nation, anon-status community in eastern Ontario.

Queen's initially defended those individuals, but changed its position afternearly one hundred Indigenous academics and leaders across North America signed a letterasking the school to take the allegations seriously.

"Ardoch is not a First Nation despite it positioning itself as such," states Friday's report.

Unless Indigenous communities have been granted authority from their nation to speak on its behalf and enact its law and ceremonies, they are simply an urbanIndigenous organization and "cannot grant or imply citizenship equals Indigenous identity," it adds.

That stance aligns with statements fromWendy Jocko, chief of the Algonquins of Pikwakanagan First Nation, who previously told CBCthat Ardochis "not a First Nation" and includes "people who do not meet any of the criteria for belonging to the Algonquin Nation."

While self-declaration is an important part of Indigenous identity, it's proved 'insufficient in creating a safe, respectful, and inclusive community' at Queen's, said university chancellor Murray Sinclair. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

University vows to set up oversight council

Queen's principal Patrick Deanesaid in a statement Friday that the university accepts the report's recommendations in principle and as a starting point.

"Our immediate response will be to establish an Indigenous Oversight Council to advise the university on matters of Indigenous representation and citizenship," he wrote.

Deane said members of the council will come from the lands on which Queen's was built and will help setup a "more comprehensive approach" to Indigenous identity.

First Nations whose territory overlaps with Queen's include the Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte, Alderville First Nation, the Algonquins of Pikwakanagan and Kitigan Zibi Anishinbeg, according to the report.

In a statement, Queen's chancellor Murray Sinclair saidthe council will bea step toward an Indigenous-ledprocess of confirming one'sidentity that doesn't rely on self-identification which has "proved insufficient in creating a safe, respectful and inclusive community" at the university.

The retired senator and formerchairof the Truth and ReconciliationCommission addedthe changes shouldn't stop at hiring, calling for the university to develop programming that teaches Indigenous knowledge, traditions and cultures.

After the report's release, Sinclair told CBC Radio'sOntario Todaythat the university was "rightfully" being criticized for lacking an appropriate policy around self-identification but added that for most of Canada's history, claiming to be Indigenous was seen as a "negative thing."

"It would result in you being treated unequally [and] in a negative way. And so it's only been recentlythat people have been actively and publicly been declaring their Indigenous identity," he said.

"The one thing we have to be careful of is that people can take advantage of that and advantage of the willingness of institutions and organizations to rely upon [those declarations] solely."

The university said it will create an oversight council to advise on Indigenous representation and citizenship. (Michelle Allan/CBC)

Report says many hurt, insulted

First Peoples Group says itheard from Indigenous people who are "deeply disappointed, hurt, and insulted," adding "many are embarrassed to be associated with Queen's."

Its firstrecommendation arrived at after discussions with First Nations on whose territory the university stands is for Queen's to apologize and to hold healing ceremonies.

The reportcalls for Queen's to set up a department of Indigenous studies and suggests hiring four instructors, with "one from the east, one from the south, one from the west and one from the north."

It also discusses qualifications to teach Indigenous studies, saying the authors heard clearly that those without citizenship and lived experiences should not be doing so.

The process ofimplementing the recommendations will begin with forming the oversight council and that will "take a bit of time," said Janice Hill, the university's vice-principalof Indigenous initiatives and reconciliation

"Some of them are very complex and some of them are going to be easier than others to implement. We'll be able to identify with [the council] which ones we can act on most expediently," HilltoldOntario Morning.

Queen's, as a colonial institution, doesn't have the authority or right to determine who is Indigenous.- Janice Hill, vice-principalof Indigenous initiatives and reconciliation

The report's authors saidthey heard that at a minimum, the validation policy for Queen's should include citizenship or membership cards, plus a professional reference and references from a family member andan elected First Nations, Inuit or Mtis leader.

Those who couldn't fulfilthecriteria could submit a written story and photos citing relatives who don't go further back thantheir grandmother or grandfather. Thestories would take the form of an affidavit that would be investigated, the report suggests, and if anything was found to be false, the employment contract would be invalid.

"Queen's, as a colonial institution, doesn't have the authority or right to determine who is Indigenous," said Hill. "It must be an Indigenous-led process."

Canada's residential school system broke the connections many Indigenous people had with their cultures, which partly explains why it's hard for some people to concretely establish their citizenship within a particular community, Sinclair added.

The report notes that opinions on what should happen to staff who don't meet the new Queen's requirements range from finding them alternate assignments at the university to firing them.

"We heard strongly that people whose claims of identity are unproven or may be unprovable be moved out of positions of influence in any Indigenous course or program or related field of study," the report says.

"While it may not be clear what should be done, it is clear that something must be done."

With files from Michelle Allan, Amanda Pfeffer, Nicole Williams and Ontario Morning