Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The new association was inactive through most of the war years, and it still represented mostly Indians from central Alberta. In 1943, Chris Shade and other aboriginals from southwestern Alberta formed their own group: the Blood Indian Local Association. Callihoo met with the organizers, hoping to attract the association to the IAA.
A split took place in the League of Indians in 1938, and in 1939 the Indian Association of Alberta was formed. After the Second World War, the other faction formed "The Protective Association for Indians and Their Treaties" to advocate for native title and recognition of rights over traditional territories and resources.
Aboriginal Peoples of Alberta: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow (PDF). Alberta Aboriginal Relations. November 2013. ISBN 978-1-4601-13073. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 3, 2014 "First Nations in Alberta". Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada. 2010-09-15
It was intended as an umbrella organization for the various provincial and territorial organizations of status Indians, such as the Indian Association of Alberta. [3] [4] The Métis and non-status Indians set up a separate organization in 1971, known as the Native Council of Canada (NCC). It originally was made up of regional and provincial ...
List of Canadian Aboriginal leaders; List of First Nations peoples; List of Indian reserves in Canada; List of Indian reserves in Canada by population; List of place names in Canada of Aboriginal origin; United States. Federally recognized tribes (Federally) unrecognized tribes; Native Americans in the United States; List of Alaska Native ...
The Métis Nation of Alberta (MNA) is a registered not-for-profit society in Alberta, Canada, that acts as a representative voice on behalf of Métis people within the province. [3] Formed in 1928 as the Métis Association of Alberta, its primary founding members were Felice Callihoo, Joseph Dion, James P. Brady, Malcolm Norris, and Peter Tompkins.
In 2001 she was promoted to full minister, of Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development. [8] Calahasen initially supported Lyle Oberg in the 2006 P.C. leadership election , [ 9 ] but switched her endorsement to Ed Stelmach after Oberg dropped off the ballot; [ 10 ] despite this support, she was not included in Stelmach's cabinet once he ...
One prominent critic of the White Paper was Harold Cardinal, a Cree leader of the Indian Association of Alberta, who referred to it as "a thinly disguised programme of extermination through assimilation" in his bestselling 1969 book The Unjust Society, which attacked the premise that a society that treated its Aboriginal population like Canada ...