First Nations Newsletter Fall/Winter 2018

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Winter 2018

INDIGENOUS ROYAL BC MUSEUM NEWS A MESSAGE FROM LUCY BELL

HEAD OF FIRST NATIONS AND REPATRIATION PROGRAM DEPARTMENT ROYAL BC MUSEUM AND ARCHIVES Singaay ’laas dii tawlang! Good day, my friends! Since our first newsletter in the fall of 2017, our First Nations and Repatriation department has grown from a team of eight to a team of twelve, which has enabled us to expand upon the work we are doing within the repatriation process and to better respond to the direction that was given at the Repatriation Symposium. We are pleased to welcome: Lou-ann Neel, Repatriation Specialist Brooke Albers, Audiovisual Collections Manager Geena Wilson, Data Technician Pam Rutley, Database Technician, Audio Collections In the past year, we have also made other big changes. First of all, I am proud to say that our Indigenous Collections and Repatriation Policy has been updated. One important change is a new statement saying that we do not actively collect or study ancestral remains and that we discourage archaeologists from collecting ancestral remains to be stored at the museum. The second big change is that anything acquired from Indigenous peoples during the anti-potlatch-law years (1885–1951) is to be considered repatriatable, because we consider this period to have been a time of great duress. This is a significant improvement to our policy, honouring our commitment to the Task Force Report on Museums and First Peoples and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. We have also created a strategic plan to direct our department for the next three years. We have gained great momentum with the addition of new team

Spruce root woven baskets by Brian Wilson.

members and we are ready to plan for the future. As we amp up our repatriation efforts, this strategic plan will support our work. In all of this work, we are indebted to the members of our Indigenous Advisory and Advocacy Committee (IAAC) for their feedback, input and guidance. IAAC has helped to reshape the museum’s policies, programs and exhibits and has fully supported the relationships between Indigenous communities, the Royal BC Museum and the broader museum community. We are excited about the work we are doing, and we look forward to providing updates and sharing stories through our newsletter and through our website at royalbcmuseum.bc.ca/first-nations/ first-nations-repatriation. And finally, we are excited to welcome Nika Collison to the Royal BC Museum Board of Directors! Nika joins Tewanee Joseph of Squamish Nation in representing First Nations on the museum’s board.


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