Canadian museums set for policy review connected to TRC call to action - Action News
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Canadian museums set for policy review connected to TRC call to action

As Canadian museums grapple with how to best make space for Indigenous voices and perspectives, a new initiative is aiming to give them a boost. Canadian Heritage has announced more than $680,000 to fund a national review of museum policies to ensure they line up with the UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People.

Goal is to develop a toolkit and identify ways of collaborating with Indigenous communities

The Royal Alberta Museum, opened in 2018, chose to showcase Indigenous artifacts and exhibits throughout rather than in a separate gallery. As Canadian institutions grapple with making space for Indigenous culture, the Canadian Museums Association is undertaking a national review of museum policies to ensure they line up with the UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People. (Trevor Wilson/CBC)

As Canadian museums grapple with how to make space for Indigenous voices and perspectives, a new initiative is aiming to give them a boost.

Canadian Heritage announced more than $680,000 in funding on Tuesday for the Canadian Museums Association toundertake a national review of museum policies in collaboration with Indigenous communities to ensure they line up with the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People (UNDRIP) and to make recommendations for best practices going forward.

The directive stems from recommendation 67 made by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission,one of four museum- and archives-related calls to action.

"This project will help build better relationships and stronger partnerships between Indigenous communities and Canadian museums," said MP Gary Anandasangaree, parliamentary secretary to the minister of Canadian Heritage, while announcing the funding during the CMA's annual conference in Toronto.

Anandasangareealso announced renewed funding of more than $350,000 to support professional development and other activities by the CMA, the industry body representing Canada's 2,600 museums and related institutions.

The museum sector has been criticized for sidelining or excluding Indigenous voices and perspectives when presenting exhibitions about those very cultures.

Nowmuseums "are moving into a new era and saying, 'We want to be a part of a broadened dialog. We want to be part of the reconciliation process,'" explainedSarah Pash, a CMA board member,executive director of the Aanischaaukamikw Cree Cultural Institute and chair of the Cree School Board.

Museums are saying, 'We want to be a part of a broadened dialog. We want to be part of the reconciliation process,' according to Sarah Pash, a CMA board member. (CBC)

"What this funding allows the Canadian Museums Association to do is to support museums in that process and to help them with best practices, provide a toolkit, and help them find ways of collaborating with Indigenous communities," said Pash, who also serves as a member of the CMA's Indigenous Reconciliation Council, working on the policy review project.

Over the next two years, the group will conduct in-person and online consultations with museums andIndigenous communities and organizations across the country. Organizers will then draft a statement of best practices for Canadian institutions.

"I would like to be able to walk into museums and to see the Indigenous language of the territory prominently displayed in all labels and signage. I would like to be able to have experiences in an Indigenous language within a museum. I would like to see Indigenous people working in the museum [and] on the boards of major museums," Pash said.

"That's where the real change happens."

Sharing Indigenous culture

Canadian Museum of History staffer GalleMollenhas witnessed the profound effect anexhibition aboutIndigenous culture carefully created and presented by people of that culture can have.

During summer breaks from university, she helped launch, create programming for andworked in the Maison de la Culture Innue in her home community of Ekuanitshit, located opposite the Mingan Archipelago in eastern Quebec.

Mollen saw how much the exhibit meant to visitors, who ranged from international tourists interested in her culture to Innuschoolchildren who gained newfound pride learning from elders.

A museum hosting job during university sparked a passion for the cultural sector for GalleMollen, now co-ordinator of the Canadian Museum of History's long-runningIndigenous internship program. (Canadian Museum of History)

Nowshe serves asco-ordinator of the Canadian Museum of History's long-runningIndigenous internship program in Gatineau, Que. Launched in 1993, the national program is an eight-month boot camp of sorts that gives First Nations, Inuit and Mtisparticipants hands-onprofessional and technical training in how museums work.

Mollen would love to see every Indigenous community have their own cultural centre, as well as more promotion of the wider museum industryto Indigenous youth.It was a serendipitous, first-year university job as a Museum of History host that first sparked her own passion for a career in the cultural sector.

"Working here really opened my eyes to all the possibilities we have," she said.

Not just historical

Too often, museum efforts at including Indigenous culture have been shallow and historically focused, said Carolyn King, an elder and ambassador of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation.

"We tend to be written off in the first sentence,"King said.

"I walk down these roads, drive down these roads, and I see nothing about us. And I would be happy if I was to look up on that wall and see something that represented me. I think that would go a long way to address the hurts of the people."

Too often, efforts at including Indigenous culture have ended after 'the first sentence,' said Carolyn King, an elder of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation. (CBC)

Though she was skeptical whether the initial amount of funding announced Tuesday would be enough for the project, King is hopeful the project will be a path toward improvement forCanada's museums.

She points to financial support Canadian colleges and universities have given to establish Indigenous councils and centres on campus over the years as an example.

"It's made a big difference," she said.