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Our Home On Native Land Part 1

Today on Listen Up, the battle for law and order when neighboring citizens can’t agree on whose law rules the land. We look at Canada’s home on native land and the Caledonia dispute next. …

Old thoughts of racism have come back to create a Canadian headache whose tension goes back 200 years. Tension over who owns tracts of land Canadians call home. Today we look at the Caledonia land dispute. A battle over a new subdivision that native people say should not be developed because the land was issued to the Six Nations people in 1784. Today, violence and protest have drawn the battle lines in fear over this tract of land, judges orders are being ignored, and no one seems to have answer for resolving a deeply held conflict that First Nations people say could be repeated at a 1000 disputed land claims across Canada.. What the legal mess is doing is sending many to the history books for a lesson in how to move forward in making a more peaceful future.

THE TRANSCRIPT OF THE SHOW
HOW TO PRAY FOR THE LAND CLAIMS DISPUTE IN CALEDONIA
LORNA’S GLOBE & MAIL ARTICLE:
Where the Church Might Help the State

LORNA’S BLOG
MY PEOPLE INTERNATIONAL
BROKEN WALLS

BRANT’S VISION” by ALAN TAYLOR
CALEDONIA BACKGROUND
LORNA’S WRAP

LORNA’S GLOBE & MAIL ARTICLE


Where The Church Might Help The State

By LORNA DUECK

Print Edition 11/07/06 Page A13

Today marks the 16th anniversary of the Oka land dispute that saw a police officer lose his life over a golf course expansion into treaty-contested land. It's a good moment to lift up the carpet and re-examine the nasty bit of evil we like to keep sweeping away: Canada's 300 unresolved land-claim disputes with our first nations neighbours. All these years later, Oka negotiations are still unresolved, barricaded natives in Caledonia, Ont., are six months into their standoff, and who knows what's next? Isn't it time we consider what we might gain by considering the spiritual dimensions of these disputes?

Quite a lot, I thought, as I stood recently at a fascinating intersection of state and church at Her Majesty's Chapel of the Mohawks, not far from the current Caledonia land-claim dispute. The Canadian Bible Society had brought political and church leaders, both native and white, to celebrate the 200-year anniversary of the Mohawk translation of the Gospel of John. The Mohawk Chapel is one of Canada's oldest churches and, from there, the ceremony moved to one of the newest, a nearby Baptist church sitting amidst the disputed Caledonia land claim with a Six Nations warrior flag planted high in the tree in its yard.

Ontario MPP David Levac, whose riding covers this disputed ground, spoke passionately of the need for peace and pleaded with churchgoers to "eliminate the tricksters -- they are all over us."

Tricksters, in aboriginal tradition, are imaginary devils who interfere with human activities. Mr. Levac didn't need to explain to the audience the reality of demons disturbing human affairs. The Mohawk translation we had gathered to celebrate was written by a frustrated native war hero, John Norton, who was kept waiting months for an 1806 hearing by the British Privy Council on the land-claim disputes along the Grand River in Caledonia. While he waited, he translated the Gospel of John; 200 years later, we were on the same disputed land. Nothing much had changed in the course of justice.

What of the "tricksters," could they be working against us? Perhaps it's best if you decide. One of Christianity's greatest contemporary authors, Oxford professor Clive Staples Lewis, helped millions imagine how the great trickster, the devil, might try to distract humanity from God's best ideas. In his popular wartime book, The Screwtape Letters, C.S. Lewis imagined an exchange of letters between a senior devil, Screwtape, and his nephew, Wormwood, a junior tempter. Those letters helped people acknowledge their personal worlds were also a battleground for issues of the heart, issues that could stop a nation from moving forward in the goodness of God.

I could imagine, taken from such a perspective, the Caledonia dispute might sound like this.

My dear nephew,

Your battles in the media have been remarkably successful.

The angry images at Caledonia have evoked fear and delicious voices of racism. Telling a story of 200 years complexity in sound bites and two-minute runs has been brilliant; the humans have gobbled it up and the loss of knowledge is on our side. They are impatient and ill-informed on all these areas, and neither side has an appetite for facing truth -- which is where we have the advantage. I am also glad you have kept their chief, David General, out of the press. He does not support the barricade and his voice must continue to be silenced and divided from his people at Six Nations. Keep your distortion tactics vigilant.

Your affectionate uncle,

Trickster

Nephew,

They were singing Khenorankwha at our battleground at Caledonia and it cannot continue. It is Mohawk for love and medicine. "Jesus is good medicine," they sang; I'm not pleased. It was a wretched scene, dancing and drumming to the Creator. It cannot happen again. Don't mistake their little Mohawk translation as a harmless distraction. The Jesus in their Mohawk Bible demands unqualified just treatment of all peoples and asks the oppressed to forgive and love their oppressors. How is our cycle of greed, bitterness and repayment supposed to survive that? We have had an unfortunate setback and we must regain as quickly as possible.

See that the singing to the Creator stops.

Your uncle,

Trickster

Dear nephew,

Perhaps I am overreacting; I am sorry if I caused you second thought. Let's assess our advances: Both sides have become quite hardened in their ways; there have been so many of our inspired transactions completed, I can't foresee any hope of forgiveness or reconciliation. Remember our stroke of genius decades ago, when our state efforts conspired to ask the church to enforce our policy to wipe out Indian identity? Oh, the delicious wounds run so deep. Remember, the human is designed with free will, which, for the most part, chooses to go its own path separate from the Creator. This forgiveness the Creator inspires doesn't stand a chance. I approve of your heavy use of the drug of apathy on the masses; I'm sure we can continue to destroy first nations people and justice in Canada for many more years.

The church holds the secret, make sure it continues to hide it. Stay the course.

With satisfaction,

Uncle Trickster

Lorna Dueck hosts Listen Up TV, a spiritual perspective on Canadian news on Global TV, CTS and Salt and Light TV.

THE TRANSCRIPT OF THE SHOW

In this Mohawk chapel built in 1785, close to the contested barricade of Caledonia’s dispute, First Nations and white Canadians gather to remember the great Creator is watching over history. If they needed proof that the national argument over native land claims mattered to the Creator, this story appears to have evidence enough.

As part of his journey to understand his past, Wolf Thomas became a actor/historian. He’s learned that during The American War of Independence, warriors of his Six Nations tribe fought for the British and sacrificed nearly four million acres around what is now New York state and the Niagara River for their alliance.

What the warriors received for helping the British protect what would become Canada was this new land along the Grand River, and it would become the native reserve.”

Six miles on each side of the Grand River, from its mouth to its source, a total of 950,000 acres. The Haldimand Proclamation - a land tract from the British Crown. Today, only 45,000 acres remain under Six Nations control. A new subdivision of 600 homes up against the dwindling Six Nations land sparked this confrontation between Caledonia residents and their native neighbors. .

Wolf supported the native blockade, but he learned that it wasn’t the first time the Great Creator hoped for justice. Dennis Hillis of the Canadian Bible Society had also been looking into history and asked Wolf to re-enact a war hero from his people; Teyoninhokarawen – or John Norton as the British called him.

Wolf …. “I learned a lot ……..bridging cultures”

Today’s dispute at a subdivision began with an earlier Chief of the Six Nations, Thayendanegea, or Joseph Brant. He was a respected negotiator for racial harmony – many Canadian developments today bear his name. 200 years ago, Brant had a vision of partnership for the Haldimand Tract, and leased land to white tenants, putting the income into a public fund to support children and elderly among the Six Nations. But within 40 years of signing the Haldimand declaration, British officials blocked Brant’s lease arrangements. Alarmed, Chief Brant asked Norton to help negotiate.

In 1804 Norton walked back to New York, received commendation from Quakers there who had connections to Britain’s political leaders. Quakers, like Norton and Brant, believed their lives were to be submitted to the rule of the Great Creator who cared for justice and peace. So did the British politicians the Quakers referred Norton to.

Hillis: They were the Clapham Sect – Prime Minister William Wilberforce and team who were credited for abolishing slavery and starting the British and Foreign Bible Society.

But despite the spiritual connections for justice, Norton’s quest for aboriginal land was stalled.

And in a quick brush of history, that is how Six Nations sees the loss of the Haldimand tract. Broken agreements. They still see themselves as a nation within a nation, distinct from Canadian law, and younger warriors like Wolf are willing to stay on barricades despite judges orders that they leave the protest:

The Canadian governments are the ones breaking the law. Under their law, a lot of Canadians don’t even know what I’m talking about, about the evidence, about the government breaking their own law.”

Wolf is convinced few Canadians know the history of broken agreements or of native negotiators like John Norton.

He was very well educated, articulate, and from what I understand about him, he also worked on building bridges between the 2 communities and like you said earlier, he was frustrated by waiting on waiting politics.”

But in Norton’s day, while he waited to negotiate, he was asked to translate one of the Bible’s most life giving books, the Gospel of John into Mohawk. On the 200th anniversary of that translation, Dennis Hillis asked Wolf to re-enact the ceremony where Norton brought that Gospel to the Six Nations. The fact that it timed perfectly with another dispute over the same land, showed history repeating itself.

Rev. Dennis Hillis / Canadian Bible Society:

Everything Wolf has said is true, we haven't stepped up as a nation and dealt justly with First Nations people, we as Canadians need to treat them fairly and with justice; we've broken most of treaties we've made with them.

Participating at the ceremony was Mavis Etienne, a Mohawk negotiator from an earlier land claims dispute in Canada, Oka Quebec. 16 years ago a police officer there was killed over arguments similar to Caledonia. The reach into history for a land claim crisis that brought about a Mohawk Gospel of John brings her hope:

Mavis Etienne/Mohawk Negotiator at Oka Crisis - I think it has wonderful significance because again God is in the picture, just like when we had the crisis, you know, God was in control, and we knew it. With the celebration of 200 years of the Mohawk language, so it’s so exciting, and when I was reading, I was reading from Norton’s version.”

But God in control is not what it feels like to residents caught in this web of history.

The disputed land is behind me and it’s too volatile to take our cameras behind the barricade, the area has been taken over. The community has said enough, camping out all over its quarters.

This Six Nations protest is breaking court orders. Impatient protestors are using quite different methods to protect their land than Brant and Norton. The local mayor takes security precautions in what used to be a peaceful community:

Haldimand County Mayor Marie Trainer:

There's no respect for the law, or Gov’t at any level, they have ATV's running up and down the street, baseball bats, weapons, terrorizing people, lights in the bedroom, children are frightened, people have taken their children away, threats,

they stop vehicles from entering properties, search vehicles, sexist remarks, frightened from everything

Along with people who break the law, there are wise and peaceful negotiators from the Six Nations on this dispute, native lawyers who, in the past ten years, have filed over 70,000 documents in court on Haldimand concerns. There are also historical documents that show much of this contested land did get sold at the end of Brant’s life. Sales caused by British officials blocking native goals for self sufficiency. Justice has at least 200 years of tangled mess to sort out here. Today, the public face of the frustrated warrior here is one that has frightened and worn down the rural town of Caledonia. The day we talked with the mayor, two cameramen were beaten and hospitalized while 20 police stood by.

911 means nothing anymore, no one comes, or if they come, they watch, it's pretty scary...”

Ontario Police protocol is to not enter reserves, but they have changed their hands off approach at the nearby town of Caledonia. Five months into the dispute, the government bought out the embattled subdivision from its developers for $12.3 million. It puts the disputed land on hold from development. Arrests have been made, theft and attempted murder charges along with dozens of contempt of court charges laid, the law is trying for a comeback. Warriors on the front line won’t speak with media about that unless it’s through their spokesperson, Janie Jamieson.

Janie Jamieson:

It's hard to maintain control of everyone's emotions, no I don't condone violence it's not our way...”

The violence has retreated but everyone knows it could flare at any time. Seven months into the dispute, white residents most affected are too afraid to speak on camera. A letter from a Caledonia minister to her parish describes the need for care: create

August 9/06 Stresses are showing in all sorts of ways these days.  Marriages are breaking down.  People are losing jobs.  Some are closing off to friends and family.  If you get a gut feeling that somebody needs help, reach out in care.  You will know how best to respond.  God is with us on this journey.  We've got to keep believing that soon, there will be an end to the madness.”

Rev. Chris McMaster, St. Paul’s Anglican, Caledonia

What makes settling Caledonia so difficult is the reality that Canadians have died over smaller native disputes than the one here. Others like it are brewing all across the country. Six Nations is Canada’s most populated reserve and they’re fighting for history to change. Rule of law being ignored said the judge – but that’s the argument both sides are staking their claim on – problem is, they each have a different understanding of the law. And caught in the crossfire of justice, the church is praying for peace.


Throw: When we come back, spiritual perspectives to the problem of justice for Canada’s native land claims. Our question this week for you at home is “What will it take to resolve Canada’s native issues?”

Listen Up is back examining a battle being fought for all of Canada’s outstanding native land claims. Over 1000 specific land claims of First Nations are before Canadian courts. Native warriors at Caledonia, Ontario hope their protest will push settlements for all the disputes. They’ve decided one more subdivision eroding their land claim was the final straw. How should the dispute be settled? Some argue there are spiritual issues that need to be part of the answer.

If it was just one spurned negotiation, perhaps the dispute at Caledonia wouldn’t be as complex as it is. “Many layers of truth”, is how negotiators have put it. You could say “many layers of pain.”

Janie Jamieson /Native Spokesperson

A lot of people think we only want this parcel of land back, there's so much more, the Gov’t knows it, they know full well everything they've done to our people.”

Janie Jamieson was chosen by her people as their spokesperson for the Caledonia protest. Not a clan mother, nor an elder, or elected politician, she a First nation woman who’s kept track of her people’s story:

There’s not one policy we’ve given permission to that has affected our lives …residential schools, etc. etc.”

Canadian law denied First Nations the right to vote until 1960. Canadian law forcibly removed tribal councils and traditional laws. It did not allow natives to hire lawyers to argue for their rights. Between 1920 to 1996 the government ran Aboriginals residential schools. They were first ordered by the Canadian government to separate native children from parents and quote - “kill the Indian in the child.”

Schools were run by United, Presbyterian, Anglican and Roman Catholic churches. This year, some of the churches who ran those schools remembered their 20th anniversary of apology for those sins, other churches have sold their buildings to pay for the lawsuits and give native victims compensation until finally in 2006, the government agreed to pay residential school survivors compensation.

These kinds of wounds are at the heart of why the anger over land claims runs so deep. There’s never been a national apology for the wrong, and statistics showing native people bear the highest rate of social ills in the country are proof enough that Janie’s claim for justice is widely held among her people.

Despite its flawed past in dealing with native people, the church is leaning on its core message in this trauma.

Even with Mohawk Christians giving their own story of how their hearts have been healed through Jesus, the church knows the message must come through the door of apology. Apology for their own part in abusing native identity. The aboriginals here don’t believe their Christian faith is a white man’s religion.

Mavis Etienne:” When I hear that I tell them, God is not white, God created us all and he doesn’t make mistake, he loves variety.

Lorna – and the fact that this message was carried by British people, white colonialists?

I have no problem with that – it helped me meet my Lord and Saviour who’s the center of my universe.”

This Baptist church hosting this peace gathering is caught right next to the disputed land. They’re using their location to bring the Creator’s message of forgiveness and reconciliation

Its not an isolated occasion – there have been prayer gatherings like this all across Canada – Missisauga Indians and clergy in repentance, Whistler, Ottawa and Edmonton – and again at Caledonia – an interfaith call on the disputed for God’s intervention for peace.

Since the beginning of the stand off, pastors in town have been praying together weekly for healing a lasting resolution to the stand off. Adrian Jacobs was on the protest line with his people:

There was a real feeling that this is a community thing, not just a few radical people doing something wild.”

A single father raising five children, Adrian grew up on Six Nations Reserve. He stood in the protest with no weapon but prayer, he said, determined the abuse of his people must stop.

I've heard that many times, rule of whose law?

It's not that 6 nations are lawless, there is a way the community has governed itself, something still being sorted out, since 1924 the elected system came in,

one of the things native people respond to is rule of law cannot mean theft of land, failure to handle responsibility,...those kinds of things are part of law. Law does not support lying or injustice

Even though the Gov’t hasn’t kept their word, native people still come back, and I've said either native people are pathologically committed to covenant or it’s just their nature to expect it to be kept.”

For Adrian, that battle is a spiritual one:

One of the things that have come clear to me has been the issue of border disputes, God made from one man every nation.

God is involved in border disputes so we may find him; people have a golden opportunity to find him in the midst of conflict.”

And that’s exactly what appears to have happened as pastors have had to wonder what to do with broken government commitments that now affect their community:

Rev. Roy Hawkins / Pastors Church in disputed zone:

One of the things this conflict has done has made us ask what are the events that have taken place and are there sins of the parents that need to be corrected at this stage of the game, the outcome will be beneficial for the Aboriginal and people of Caledonia, the legacy we leave will be…

I think it’s sad when I read that 300-600 land claims are registered and still outstanding, as a Canadian I'm not happy and I think we can do better

It’s been a time of soul searching for spiritual guides in Caledonia. Ross Baxter began weekly prayer meetings with clergy at the beginning of the conflict.

Ross Baxter / Caledonia Community Church:

Watching this unfold from the protestors first being out there, you get a sense of the growing anger, the hidden heart, misunderstanding, and brews into a volatile situation that you never know where it’s going to go. As you persevere and deal with the sins of the past, deal with your heart, God’s holding up a mirror, are you proud of it, do you need to have a confession, and God wants to heal our land.”

  • When the wind of the spirit blows …..warrior come on and ride the wind ….warrior, come on and ride the wind …

This kind of friendship developed on the church lawn is a rare and isolated incident – exactly the kind of spirit the entire land claims dispute needs.

When we come back -- the Chief marginalized by his own warriors speaks out on finding a way forward. Well I’ve been taken to task from the beginning …..I did not support the protest, they always go sideways …..So why go there in the first place?

Listen Up is back looking for answers in what‘s become Canada’s hidden scar – land claim disputes with First Nations peoples. We’re watching Caledonia – a community that set out to build a 600 home subdivision on land that the Six Nations people claimed they’d owned since 1784. The subdivision was stalled, just like progress on 1000 native land claims. We pick up our story with the Chief in charge of the protesting native community.

The drawn out stand off over building more homes in the Haldimand Tract has deep parallels to history. When this dispute started, Chief of the borderlands, Joseph Brant, lived a dangerous and double balancing act – making relationships with powerful British and Americans while being a Mohawk leader wanting to help his people. Eventually, no one agreed with his efforts. Today’s Chief, David General faces a similar challenge. He wrote and advised developers to stop their plans for the 2006 expansion into Douglas Estates. He was ignored by developers, and ignored when he advised restraint to his people. The Six Nations website clearly explains the differing negotiations since then (www.sixnations.ca) all of it putting the Chief’s role under national scrutiny.

So right now there’s a tremendous amount of focus on the Six Nations ….often on the discussions of development, not only our history …huge wave of development in the golden horseshoe ….some of the resolve to come to the events in our territory may well be divine.

this is the first time I have heard a spiritual injection built into this crisis./ The greetings, the readings, the words you spoke, included that there is a hope the Creator’s Spirit, as you say, a divine moving that will have to part of resolving this. Am I over-reading that?

Well I’ve been taken to task from the beginning …..I did not support the protest, they always go sideways …..So why go there in the first place?

In occupation of this sort …when you’re dealing with the largest First Nations in all of Canada, the number of people we could people put on this site, the number of different agendas, .it not hard to see it go sideways and to our dismay because the fallout it has.

You can’t settle this out behind protest lines and the media ….gotta sit at the table …..And how you’re going to resolve.”

Tell me about that, a native chief who says I will not support the does not support the barricade

It’s not a very popular stand …. But as I’ve told all my colleagues across the country, Caledonia is a very, very complicated issue. And the more people see that, it’s not just about land, it’s about the internal dynamics of First Nations. And that’s probably where we need all the consideration, understanding and respect of every body’s diverse points of view to resolve, reconcile some of the issues before of us.”

At the height of this protest, over 100 chiefs from across Canada traveled here to show solidarity for Six Nations. Despite the pressure that this dispute is symbolic to all land claims across the country, Chief General says safety comes first.

The other message I’ve been giving to political leadership across the country is tell your people to send your prayers and best wishes for a peaceful resolve but stay home. We don’t need your people in harm’s way. And that’s not a popular message but it’s the only way I can see of keeping people safe.”

Why did this subdivision erupt? There’s been a wave of development on your people’s land, why did was this one the breaking point?

Probably the proximity, people drove by it every day ….you could find another site nearby ….but I remind people you could find another site similar to tell Gov’t to get on with the land claims process.

Why is the story for land claims not understood in Canada?

Well I’m taken to task for calling it claim, not the language of rights.

Rights are the essence …. First nation’s people have been messaging for decades, centuries their attachment to the land.”

As they’ve been working on that message – now sometimes with violence, sometimes with breaking Canadian law, ignoring the provincial judge ruling to leave the barricade – have you observed any shortcomings in your people and their approach to this?

.To the credit of our people, they’re very proud of our history, but sometimes you can be too proud. And that’s a hard statement to make, but everything has to have a balance. And pride, and your nation and your sense of nationhood all have to have a balance. You have to know your nation’s strengths and weaknesses, you have to be proud of what they’ve contributed and you also have to be aware of their shortcomings. You blend them all together and if you can accept all of that, then you’re a proud citizen.”

Why is prayer important for you on this process?

I was once told ….a lot of what we’re trying to replace was divinely given by the Great Spirit. ……. peace keeper …..We may have to wait for the second coming of the peace keeper.

When you’re dealing with the matters of seriousness and emotions of people, I think you ……you have to use everything ….available to you, the tact, .prayer, and Creator God to move away from our anger and look at what we need to do.”


  or All Shows
LORNA’S WRAP

When neighbors can’t agree over who owns the land they both want, there’s few alternatives. Former Premier now turned land claim negotiator David Peterson said of the crisis at Caledonia “at the end of the day we have three choices – they can shoot all of us, we can shoot all of them, or we can all get along.” Getting along is a matter of the heart. As legal teams wrestle, we also need the church to participate in offering spiritual care to the wounds of injustice. I take heart in hearing from those who refuse to be stuck in the sins of land claims, residential school actions, and who repent, apologize, and walk forward in peace, love and forgiveness that the Creator commands us to live in. Our native neighbors are waiting for people like you and I to apologize and repent for historic sins. Canada has yet to issue a national apology, but rather parcels the pain out in $5 billion a year payments. We have done badly. An aboriginal song that sticks in my memory from covering the story is “Jesus is good medicine”. A dying native elder told his son to pass those words along to his people. The church still needs to carry that message to wounds that run deep.

CALEDONIA BACKGROUND
www.cbc.ca/news/background/
caledonia-landclaim/historical-timeline.html

HOW TO PRAY FOR THE LANDS DISPUTE IN CALEDONIA

To help you pray for the land claims dispute in Caledonia we offer this summary of the Healing Prayer Gathering that was recently held on Six Nations of the Grand River Territory at Chiefswood Park:

Let us come together as on people to pray for each other and for healing the hurt we have caused each other.”

Holy One, God…we honour you…We pray for all who live to the East of us. We thank you for new beginnings, new opportunities and for the new life you offer. We thank you for each new day to be with you.

Thank you for children. Help us to respect and protect your children and to bring them up to love you. Thank you for Jesus who lived on Mother Earth as a child.

Awaken in us new dreams and hopes never before imagined. Thank you for h miracles that are born with each new dawn. Creator of hope, hear our prayers.

Holy one, creator of all, We honour you…We pray for all who live to the South of us. You give us deep feelings to share with each other.

Thank you for women and for all who nurture youth. We pray for families and thank you Jesus for his mother Mary. He nurtured others and had a passion for justice and a respect for the gifts of women.

Warm our lives as roots deep in the soil of the earth, and stretch out our hearts as branches to be places of nurture and protection. Sower of life, hear our prayers.

Holy one, Light in our darkness, we honour you… As the sun sets in the west, the darkness comes upon us; we thank you for all we have learned each day we thank you for elders as they share the wisdom that comes from you.

We thank you for Jesus who earned your wisdom within himself and who will meet us as earthly life darkens and lead us into the light of the Creators presence for ever.

Guide our steps through all ending –times. Fill us with your peace as you enfold us with the great mystery of your grace and love. Creator of kindness, hear our prayers.

We pray for all people who now live to the North of us. Thank you for snow which covers Mother Earth while she sleeps. We are reminded of the purity of the snow, the purity you expect in the lives of your people, the purity which comes when you forgive our mistakes.

Thank you for spiritual elders and assisting them in their journey among us. Help those of us who are spiritual leaders to be conscious of the responsibility given to us by you and y our people. Help all your people to turn to you for forgiveness and purity of life. Thank you Jesus, whose life and spiritual wisdom leads us on our sacred path to wholeness.

Teach us to use with care your gifts; to love with tenderness all our relations as gifts from your heart. Creator of wisdom, hear our prayer…

Great Spirit, in Jesus we find healing and connectedness. In his death and resurrection we are given hope and life. We bring to you now those who need to feel your resurrected presence in their sickness, hurt, emptiness, broken relationships, unjust systems and in their longing for peace…

Creator, source of all healing, you hear the deepest prayers of our hearts, touch the lives of all for whom we have prayed with the healing only you can give.”

Amen.

BRANT’S VISION – ALAN TAYLOR

www.theglobeandmail.com...

BROKEN WALLS

www.brokenwalls.com

MY PEOPLE INTERNATIONAL

www.mypeoplecanada.com

Who are we?
My People International is a non-denominational / cross-cultural Christian ministry to Native North Americans. Though predominantly comprised of Native people, the staff and board of My People International reflect a strong commitment to Native leadership development in an intercultural setting.

What is our mission?
Our mission is: “To communicate the gospel of Jesus Christ to Native North American people in a culturally relevant way; disciple them in a culturally affirming way; encourage Christ-centred worship in a culturally redemptive way; and facilitate their presence in the wider church, in a culturally appropriate way.”

What is our History?
My People International was federally incorporated as a non-profit charitable corporation in the fall of 2000. It was initiated in response to the need for a more effective paradigm of Christian ministry in the Native North American community (Many decades of work in traditional Christian mission had left a large, untouched Native community; many who had set out on the Jesus Way struggling to grow and become healthy in their faith walk). The organization grew quickly to its present staff of eight, six full-time and two part-time associate staff – six Native and two non-Native workers who focus their efforts on Christian leadership development at all ages. The head office is at Evansburg, Alberta with staff working from home offices across Canada. We work cooperatively with our partner organization in the USA, the Lutheran Association of Missionaries and Pilots US.

What do we do?
My People International ministers to the whole person (Spiritually, Emotionally, Socially and Physically). We work cross-culturally in partnership with other individuals and organizations, including other Christian ministries, to: speak the message of a fulfilled faith and life through Jesus Christ to all who need to hear; to nurture faith in those who believe; and, to disciple those who are already following Jesus. To accomplish this our programming includes:

- Community Outreach

  • Bible studies, VBS Programs, Sports and Youth Camps etc;

  • Partnering with community groups for training conferences

- Teaching and Development

  • Equipping Workers through seminars, resource development, counselling

  • Personal growth programs for the abused, the grieving, and social outcasts

  • Community capacity building building on community assets not deficits

  • Special Projects such as Servant Events

- Facilitating Strategic Alliances

  • Partnerships for training, teaching, discipleship and community development

  • Alliances and partnerships with local churches, Native agencies, and others to create opportunities for evangelism and discipleship

  • Volunteer development

- Native leadership development – facilitating men and women to serve in full-time or volunteer ministry in the native church and in the wider world

What is our Vision?
Our vision is a simple one: that every Native North American Person will know a fulfilled Faith and Life through Jesus Christ – experienced in a Native North American Way.

Our approach makes possible a ministry which has not existed in an intentional way previously:

  • Native and non-Native Christian leaders committed to a culturally-rooted strategy for the training and discipleship of Native people.

  • A staff committed to removing barriers between Native peoples and non-Native people

  • An integrated cross-cultural staff and Board under Native leadership

  • A staff dedicated to the affirmation of cultural identity and the value of culturally appropriate faith as the principle means of evangelism and discipleship

  • A staff committed to on-going training and development in culturally-appropriate ways


 
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CICT Sunday 11am
Edmonton CTS Thursday 8:30AM
CITV Sunday 11am
British Columbia GLOBAL Sunday 10:30am
Other stations airing Listen Up TV
Miracle Channel, The Christian Channel, iLife TV ~ The Inspiration Network, TCT and Salt & Light
  USA
Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN) Pacific 1:30 am Monday
Mountain 2:30am
Central 3:30am
Eastern 4:30am
National Religious Broadcasters (NRB) Eastern 8pm Monday
10:30am Wednesday

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Copies are $15.00 which includes shipping. Payment can be made by cheque (made payable to Listen Up TV); VISA or Mastercard.

 

About Lorna  Dueck 

Lorna's bio
Read Lorna's Globe & Mail columns by searching our archive.
Read 'Media & The Message'. Lorna says if the church wants to impact society, we need to share our stories.
On April 30, 2005 Lorna was privileged to receive an honorary Doctorate of Christian Ministries from Canada's largest Christian university, Trinity Western University.  Lorna was recognized for the witness and leadership that Listen Up TV has provided in public messaging: "a leader in the voice of evangelical life in Canada."
View the Listen Up Team and our Board Members.

What The Press Is Saying

read an article about Listen Up ...
Listen Up TV goes independent
Balancing a busy life: A work in progress
Celebrating the national evangelical mind
A snapshot of contemporary Canadian evangelical writers

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