91探花

Welcome to 91探花, the news archive website for our family of Indigenous news publications.

Raven's Eye

  • Shauna Lewis Raven鈥檚 Eye Writer Mission, B.C.

A partnership has been forged between two B.C. First Nations that could see them benefit from future joint development projects destined within their overlapping territories.

The economic-based protocol agreement, signed Sept. 26, will provide the Sts鈥檃iles [Chehalis band] and the X鈥檟tsa [Douglas First Nation] with ensured certainty and stability when it comes to economic development鈥

  • Shauna Lewis Raven鈥檚 Eye Writer VANCOUVER

Candles flickered brightly as stories of loss and remembrance were shared among the 80 people that gathered in Vancouver to pay tribute to lost Aboriginal women Oct. 4.

The community candlelight vigil, held in East Vancouver鈥檚 Crab Park, was one of many events held across Canada, marking the country鈥檚 National Day of Remembrance for missing and murdered Indigenous women. The vigil was鈥

  • Compiled by Debora Steel

Simon Fraser University celebrated the launch of it鈥檚 new Executive MBA in Aboriginal Business and Leadership program at a鈥爌arty in Vancouver on Sept. 20. It is the first such program in North America and provides all the rigeurs of it鈥檚 executive MBA program but with the Aboriginal worldview layered on top of that knowledge. The first cohort includes 28 students, and the dean of the program鈥

  • Compiled by Debora Steel

Aboriginal business leaders came together for a Tsleil-Waututh Nation Leadership Forum featuring Startup Canada that provided an opportunity to talk about Aboriginal economic development and entrepreneurship. The Sept. 19 forum was the only one of 130 affiliated forums held across Canada co-hosted by a First Nation. It featured a roster of speakers that included Tewanee Joseph, CEO of Tewanee鈥

  • Compiled by Debora Steel

Gitxsan Hereditary Chiefs are concerned about a draft agreement
in principle between the province of BC and the Kitselas First Nation. The offer contains land that is part of Gitxsan traditional territory, they say. And it鈥檚 being done without proper consultation or accommodation of the affected Simgiigyet (chiefs). 鈥淲e are quite surprised and shocked to see our lands are part of this offer鈥

  • Compiled by Debora Steel

First Nations on BC鈥檚 North and Central Coast have declared a ban on the trophy bear hunt in their traditional territories. The trophy bear hunt is an issue that has been brewing in First Nations communities for several years, said Kitasoo/Xaixais First Nation Chief Doug Neasloss. 鈥淒espite years of effort by the Coastal First Nations to find a resolution to this issue with the province this鈥

  • Sam Laskaris Raven鈥檚 Eye Writer Vancouver

Richard Peter鈥檚 illustrious international wheelchair basketball career is now over.

And three simple words confirmed this.

鈥淚 am retired,鈥 said Peter, who had been a member of the Canadian men鈥檚 wheelchair basketball squad since 1994.

The 40-year-old Vancouver resident, who is a member of British Columbia鈥檚 Cowichan Tribes, couldn鈥檛 have asked for a better way to finish鈥

  • Shauna Lewis Raven鈥檚 Eye Writer Vancouver锘

The Haisla First Nation has signed a Liquefied Natural Gas [LNG] framework agreement with British Columbia that could see the band benefit financially, provide jobs for members and help fast-track a major LNG facility near Kitimat.

The agreement allows the Haisla First Nation to either lease or purchase 700 hectares of land on the Douglas Channel and work with the natural gas industry鈥

  • Shauna Lewis Raven鈥檚 Eye Writer Tsawwassen First Nation

When many young people his age are pursuing higher education, new Tsawwassen First Nation Chief Bryce Williams is leading his nation.
The role is undoubtedly demanding for even the most seasoned politician, but for Williams, who is just 23 and now holds the workings of B.C.鈥檚 first urban treaty in his hands, things seem exceptionally weighty.

Williams defeated the community鈥檚 long-鈥

  • Compiled by Debora Steel

The Coastal First Nations unequivocally supports the
NDP鈥檚 plan in British Columbia to establish a 鈥渕ade in BC鈥 Northern Gateway Project review process, said executive director Art Sterritt. 鈥淔irst Nations and all British Columbians have been waiting for the Liberal government to provide leadership on this issue and they have steadfastly failed at every turn,鈥 he said.
&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;鈥

  • Compiled by Debora Steel

Since the 1970's, pollution in Cowichan Bay on Vancouver
Island has caused a ban on the shellfish harvest. But with efforts from government agencies, forest companies, conservation groups and First Nations like the Cowichan Tribes, a shellfish harvest could be a reality by 2020. 鈥淭hose clams are the canary in the coal mine,鈥 said Chief Harvey Alphonse.

鈥淲hen we can eat them again,鈥

  • Compiled by Debora Steel

A Gitxsan land claims negotiator is in favour of the plan by media mogul David Black to build a refinery in Kitimat for the crude that Enbridge plans to pipe from the Alberta tar sands. This would mean that refined products like gas, diesel and kerosene would be exported on supertankers along BC鈥檚 coast, instead of the raw bitumen that is at the heart of Enbridge鈥檚 Northern Gateway pipeline鈥

  • David P. Ball Raven鈥檚 Eye Writer Vancouver

A legal showdown over open-net fish farming in B.C. is looming with Kwicksutaineuk/Ah-Kwa-Mish First Nation (KAFN) announcing it will fight for its right to launch a class action lawsuit at the Supreme Court of Canada.
After B.C.鈥檚 Court of Appeal ruled on May 3 that Indian Act Bands are forbidden from launching class-action proceedings on behalf of 鈥淎boriginal collectives鈥濃 siding with the鈥

  • Shari Narine Raven鈥檚 Eye Writer VANCOUVER

This October in Erfurt, Germany, judges from around the world will see what Aboriginal cuisine looks like. Four years from now, they will taste it.

The 2012 World Culinary Olympics is the second step in a three-step, 10-year plan formulated by Chef Ben Genaille to bring Aboriginal cuisine to the fore.

The journey began in 2007 when Genaille鈥檚 five-member Aboriginal culinary team鈥

  • Shari Narine Raven鈥檚 Eye Writer Tk鈥檈mlups te Secwepemc Indian Band

Joan Jack is confident that another class action launched in federal court will only strengthen the position of day scholars and day school students as they seek recognition and compensation for the abuse they suffered in federally-funded schools.

Jack鈥檚 law firm has been acting on behalf of day scholars and day school students since filing the McLean Day School Class Action in federal鈥