Warning: This article contains a reference to sexual violence.
Christa Big Canoe introduces herself as a mother and a lawyer. But you don鈥檛 have to speak with her long to notice that beyond these labels is a change-maker.听
Known for her role as senior legal counsel for the (MMIWAG), Ms. Big Canoe has devoted herself to rerouting centuries of deadly and discriminatory action toward Canada鈥檚 First Peoples. Her approach is to find systemic changes to systemic problems. And her vision for change is rooted in storytelling.
This Saturday (Nov. 5), 新加坡六合彩开奖直播's Faculty of Management will present Ms. Big Canoe with the 2022 Scotiabank Ethical Leadership Award in honour of her work on behalf of Canada's First Nations. She'll receive the award at the 鈥 an event that follows a two-day case competition with student teams from all across Canada and the United States.听
Ms. Big Canoe was in the years ago when she represented six of seven families of deceased Indigenous students at the Seven Youth Inquest in Thunder Bay, Ontario. In 2017, she was named one of the in Canada. Last year, the Alnoba Lewis Family Foundation for being a 鈥渄aring woman leader committed to advancing gender equity while demonstrating the moral courage, tenacity and guts needed to bring about equality.鈥
We know that cultural practices are protective and preventative
For more than a decade, as legal director of Aboriginal Legal Services (ALS) in Toronto, Ms. Big Canoe has driven change in how Indigenous people are received when they enter the legal system. Instead of seeing those who use ALS as clients, she describes them as members of her community and ALS as their home.
鈥淲e know that cultural practices are protective and preventative,鈥 she explains.听 "We know that when people can be in their communities, they thrive and do better.鈥
But this, she admits, can be complicated. There鈥檚 one story that has remained with her since law school when she flew into northern communities as a deputy clerk of the court for the Northwest Territories. Ms. Big Canoe remembers a 13-year-old girl, facing minor charges, who was belligerent to the judge. The judge threatened to send her to Yellowknife if she didn鈥檛 behave. Ms. Big Canoe says the teen told the court she was 鈥済onna keep committing crimes until you get me out of here. I'm the only girl my age that hasn't been raped by multiple men at some type of party.鈥澨
'We need to share our narrative'
Whatever the story, Ms. Big Canoe says, 鈥渨e [Indigenous people] need to share our narrative. That's part of our healing process, getting all the truth out. And if you don't get all the truth out, then you're starting from a premise or a point where you can't actually go back and heal.鈥
Storytelling doesn鈥檛 just heal; she knows it helps educate. When Ms. Big Canoe developed curriculum for Aboriginal Cultural Competency Training for staff in the legal profession, she discussed the tough truths of Indian residential schools. In one session, held at a former school, she says participants were so distraught that they needed to debrief. A common refrain was, 鈥淚 lived 10 kilometres from a residential school, and I never knew it was this bad.鈥 The debrief was an opportunity to acknowledge harm but also to heal.
During the two and a half years she oversaw the MMIWAG national inquiry, Ms. Big Canoe and her colleagues collected testimony from more than 2,000 individuals. The final report contains many of those stories and is only a glimpse of the horrors presented to the inquiry.听听
Shown above right, Ms. Big Canoe and her daughter.
When the remains of 215 bodies were detected on the grounds of a former residential school in Kelowna in 2021, Ms. Big Canoe was angered by the response of Canadians. She says after all the testimony and publicity around her inquiry and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, she wanted the press to 鈥減lease stop using the number 215 because we already know there's probably 20,000.鈥
Some tough truths
Ms. Big Canoe's perspective has since changed. She says Kelowna reinforced what First Nations people experienced, adding, 鈥淭here's some tough truths, but the reality is, once you know, you cannot unknow. So, all the knowledge and all of these truths I'm sharing with you, they're a gift.鈥 It鈥檚 up to all of us, she says, 鈥渢o decide what are we going to do with that gift鈥.听听
Surprised to be nominated for the same award as one of her heroes, former Supreme Court Justice Rosalie Silberman Abella, who won in 2017, she says change comes from systemic approaches. 鈥淎nd the only way we do that is by building relationships.鈥
Kim Brooks, dean of the Faculty of Management, says this year's recipient represents everything the award is meant to embody.
鈥淚t is significant to me that we鈥檙e celebrating our final Ethical Leadership Award by acknowledging the extraordinary contributions of Christa Big Canoe. She has been relentlessly committed to justice and community building. I know that she will be an inspiration to this generation of students.鈥
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Reflecting on her role as a mother, Ms. Big Canoe can鈥檛 help but reference her family, and, in particular, her father, who kept her community鈥檚 talking stick for years before passing it on to the next storyteller. As her son and daughter enter adulthood, she says she knows they鈥檙e steeped in stories of their ancestors and in their culture. And they鈥檙e supported by many. It鈥檚 what she wants for all Indigenous people, who she describes as 鈥渂eautifully resilient.鈥
The Scotiabank Ethical Leadership Award recognizes a Canadian leader from a corporate, non-profit or public organization who has demonstrated and maintained outstanding ethical leadership.听
Past recipients include Ruma Bose, Sir Graham Day, Rom茅o Dallaire, Phil Fontaine, Richard Pound, Irwin Cotler, Anna Tudela and Justice Rosalie Silberman Abella.
There are only a few tickets left to the Ethics in Action gala. If you're interested, please email Marianne Hagen.