Centuries ago, the First Nations people of western Canada lived a life on the lands. Hunting, fishing and farming were the ways of their world, and while the First Nations people had clearly defined territories associated with regional bands, the concept of land "ownership" was a foreign one. Social organization consisted of interaction between bands for trading, with many bands related to one another through marriage and kinship. Treaty
8 was the last and largest of the nineteenth century land agreements
made between First Nations and the Government of Canada. At the end
of it all, over 840,000 square kilometres of land was set
aside by the agreement. From that point in time up to the present,
the federal government has claimed that the Cree, Dene, Métis
and other various First Nations peoples living within the Treaty 8
boundaries had surrendered any claim to title to all but the lands set aside as
reserves. However, many Native leaders have challenged this view,
claiming instead that their peoples signed a nation-to-nation treaty that
not only recognized their rights to maintain a traditional way of life
without restriction, but that also included rights to education, medical
care, tax exemptions, immunity from military conscription and access to
land, game and other resources for as long as the sun shone upon those
lands.
Over 100 years since the signing of the treaty itself, the context and
meaning of the treaty and the treaty process remains hotly debated.
Here we would like to engage you in that debate by exploring some of the
aspects of how treaty and scrip decisions made in 1899 and thereafter have
affected life for the peoples of Treaty 8. |