
- Publisher: Fernwood Publishing
- ISBN: 9781552664056
- Price: $14.95 CAD
- Publication Date: Mar 2011
- Rights: World
- Pages: 96
Buy Now!
Examination Copy
Professors/Instructors in Canada: We will provide examination copies of our books for consideration as course texts. We do reserve the right to limit examination copy requests and/or to provide books on a pre-payment or approval basis.
Request Exam CopyBathtubs but No Water
A Tribute to the Mushuau Innu
Gerry Steele
In 1967, the Mushuau Innu — the Aboriginal people of Labrador — were resettled on Davis Inlet by the Canadian government. Originally a land-based people, this move to the coast created cultural, economic and spiritual upheaval, and Davis Inlet became synonymous with shocking substance abuse and suicide rates. In Bathtubs but No Water, Gerry Steele offers the reader a participant observer’s perspective on Davis Inlet. An employee of the federal government working with the Mushuau Innu since 1993, Steele explores their oral history of the resettlement process, substance abuse and deaths, and argues that these problems are a direct result of the government’s lack of respect for Aboriginal peoples. In 1992, the Innu tried to regain responsibility for their future, focusing on the traditions and strengths of their own community, but government bureaucracy would not support this partnership. Steele urges the government to engage in respectful partnerships with Aboriginal communities in order to achieve positive change.
Contents
Acknowledgements
1. Foreword: Ms Katie Rich
2. Introduction
3. The People of the Barrens
4. The Three Pillars
5. Discovering a People
6. Government Errors. Innu Deterioration
7. Losing Control, Governments’ Responsibility
8. Getting Attention
9. Mushuau Innu Vision
10. Reaching Out
11. Healing the Children
12. Chief Katie Rich
13. Ottawa’s Mixed Agenda – Conflict of Interest?
14. The Innu in Control
15. Time Heals What Reason Cannot
16. Innu Wisdom Ignored
17. A Fading Dream
18. Ottawa’s Dilemma/Failure
19. A Growing Track Record
20. Let the Innu Lead
21. Going Forward, Overcoming Conceit
About the Author
Gerry Steele has worked with regional economic expansion in Ottawa, Alberta and Newfoundland, with Indian Affairs in Alberta and Ottawa, and as an advisor andnegotiator on Aboriginal affairs at national, regional and provincial levels. He has worked with the Mushuau Innu in Labrador on behalf of Health Canada for more than fifteen years.