As celebrations for National Aboriginal Day gear up and we honour National Aboriginal History Month, CBC Aboriginal takes a look at five people who are changing the conversation.
These five individuals were chosen for their work that began with passion for their community. They did not expect recognition from their peers or the public. They didn't do it for financial compensation. Simply, they are the change they want to see in the world — and for that we salute them.
Grassroots — Michael Champagne (Cree) is a founding member of Aboriginal Youth Opportunities (AYO). He has been an agent of change for one of Canada's roughest neighbourhoods — Winnipeg's North End. He has been a tireless supporter of Aboriginal youth rights, Idle No More, and Meet Me at the Bell Tower. an anti-violence weekly rally that is in it's third year. More recently Champagne has been travelling across Canada to bring his message of positivity to indigenous communities and conferences.
Chelsea Vowel's blog has become a go-to media resource for aboriginal issues. (Chelsea Vowel)
Media — Chelsea Vowel (Métis) first gained national attention with her âpihtawikosisân blog entry "Dealing with Comments about Attawapiskat" in 2011. She broke down the $90 million funding budget Ottawa claimed to have given the community. What started as a Cree language blog has turned into a go-to media resource for a diverse collection of aboriginal issues — and what they really mean, with no political agenda.
Althea Guiboche, Winnipeg's "Bannock Lady," has been sharing her bannock with the city's homeless since Jan. 30, 2013. (CBC)
Philanthropy — Althea Guibouche (Métis) is a Winnipeg woman who had the idea to feed the homeless and poor with chili and bannock. Also known as the Bannock Lady, Guibouche herself struggles with poverty but that has not held her back from bringing her food offerings to the streets for the better part of a year and a half now.
Relying on donations for ingredients and gas money, Guibouche was recently invited to speak at a TedX event about her compassion for feeding those less fortunate.
Environment — Eriel Deranger (Dene) is an eco-warrior from Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation. She is dedicated to saving the land around her home community from the expansion and impacts of the Alberta oilsands.
Eriel Deranger is an eco-warrior from Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation. (Ben Powless)
Deranger is also the communications manager for the first nation and has spoken at Harvard University on the effects of oil development on her cultural lands.
Awareness — Christi Belcourt (Métis) is the artist behind the art installation Walking With Our Sisters. Her idea? To create moccasin tops or "vamps" to represent the more than 600 'official' missing or murdered indigenous women in Canada, according to 2013 numbers.
What she got was more than 1,700 vamps from across North America. The exhibition is still travelling across the country. (New stats released by the RCMP a few months ago brought the official count to over 1,100 missing and murdered.)
(Christi Belcourt)
Who do you know that has changed your life? Your community? Your world-view?
Share your game changers in the comments below or on CBC Aboriginal's Facebook and Twitter pages with the #IndigenousGameChangers.
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