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IndigenousVideo

5 years after Truth and Reconciliation, Indigenous athletes say sports programs have not done enough

Five years afterCanada's Truth and Reconciliation Commissionrecommended sports programs reduce barriers and become more inclusive of Indigenous athletes, a panel ofexperts says not enough has been done to reach that goal.

CBC panel discussion explores systemic racism, lack of movement on Canada's TRC recommendations

Kahnawake, Que, native Waneek Horn-Miller became the first Mohawk woman from Canada to make it to an Olympics, co-captaining the Canadian water polo team in Sydney in 2000. (Jeff De Booy/The Canadian Press)

Five years after Canada'sTruth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) recommended sports programs reduce barriers and become more inclusive of Indigenous athletes, a panel ofexperts say not enough has been done to reach that goal.

"We have to stop seeing sport as a recreational pastime," said Mohawk Olympian Waneek Horn-Miller, of Kahnawake, Que.

"In the Indigenous world, it's far more important. It is a suicide preventer. It's leadership building.The TRC included [sports] because they understood their community-building capacity."

The online panel, hosted by CBC's Duncan McCue and released on Monday, was a collaborative production by CBC Sports and CBC Indigenous.

The TRC'sresultsreleased in 2015 included 94 "calls to action." Nos. 87 to 91 call upon governments, national and international sporting officials to collaborate with Indigenous Peoples on several fronts. Those include:

  • Funding for community-based and professional sport initiatives.
  • Providing education on the history of Indigenous athletes.
  • Developing policies for cultural awareness and anti-racism training.

Horn-Miller was part of a panel discussionthat also included:

  • Spencer O'Brien,an Olympic snowboarder of the Haida andKwakwaka'wakw Nations.
  • Trina Pauls,afourth generation Arctic Winter Games athlete from the Tahltan and Tlingit Nations.
  • Serene Porter, the executive director of partnerships and marketing with the 2021 North American Indigenous Games (NAIG).
  • Dr. Lynn Lavalle, an Anishinaabe/Mtis instructor at Ryerson University, whose research focuses on Indigenous sport, health and fitness.

WATCH | Where does Indigenous sports stand?

Where do the TRC's calls for action on Indigenous sports stand?

4 years ago
Duration 40:48
It has been five years since the Truth and Reconciliation Commission recommended more access and education in sports for Indigenous people. CBC Sports and CBC Indigenous convened an expert panel to discuss the successes, shortfalls, and unfinished business of the five calls to action on sport.

At the age of 14, Horn-Millerspent months onthe front lines of resistance during the 1990Oka Crisisandwas stabbed in the chest by a soldier's bayonet. Shewon a gold medal at the 1999 Pan American Games and co-captained the first Canadian women's water polo team in the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia.

Horn-Miller said developing as an athlete was "a cornerstone" in rebuilding her self-confidence while facing discrimination in Canadian and international sport institutions. Implementing the TRC's calls to action can become a way to address systemic racism in other areas, she said.

"I think sport has this incredible capacity to make change."

'Hope and enthusiasm'

The discussionalso explored the impacts that organized sport can have on Indigenous youthand the ripple effectson their communities.

WATCH | Duncan McCueon need for increased Indigenous access to sports:

Increased Indigenous access to sport still needed

4 years ago
Duration 5:15
Duncan McCue, who hosted CBC Sports' panel on the TRC's 5 calls to action regarding Indigenous sport, joined Heather Hiscox to discuss where those calls currently stand.

Call to Action No. 87 calls on governments and sport-related organizationsto provideeducation on the history of Indigenous athletes in Canada. Pauls, 15, whose family has participatedin the Arctic Winter Games as athletes and officials,said it's important for young athletes to have role models and examples of success.

"[Indigenous youth]don't really get taught the history, unless youhave first-hand knowledge from your family or friends," she said.

"Sportsmakeme feel happy and it makes me feel good about myself ... and seeing all the athletes [on the panel] gives meinspiration to try to be the best athlete I canand continue in being an Indigenous athlete."

Encouraging healthy living and teamwork in Indigenous youth is central to the North American Indigenous Games, Porter said.

The 2020 games wereoriginally scheduled to take place in K'jipuktuk/Halifax, N.S.,July 12-18, but were postponed until 2021 because of theCOVID-19 pandemic.

Porter said the NAIG team was concerned about the impact the postponement would have on the mental health of young athletes. They're planning a virtual event to take place during the same week in July to provide athletes and communities an opportunity to connect.