How do we create a present and a future where Indigenous communities see their values reflected in the world around them?
For Indigenous youth, true reconciliation means achieving this vision through agency and self-governance. But for this to happen, Indigenous sovereignty must be recognized, respected, and integrated into policy and practice across Canada.
In the fifth and final volume of our Voices of Indigenous youth leaders on reconciliation series, Indigenous youth offer insights and recommendations on advancing sovereignty and self-governance. Addressing the narrow, limiting dialogues on Indigenous sovereignty, these leaders are reshaping the conversation, calling on all of Canada to join them in opening the shared path of reconciliation.
To me, sovereignty means the freedom to live by my own values, to nurture my own relationships and the respect that comes with being my own entity.
- Indigenous youth leader
An inclusive definition of sovereignty
For Indigenous youth, sovereignty means exercising free will while living in harmony with both spiritual and natural worlds.
In their words, they define Indigenous sovereignty as...
"...taking responsibility for their relations to the land, to animate and inanimate beings, and to each other. Sovereignty involves having the freedom to self-express and live one’s cultural identity without encroachment, with the necessary resources and spaces to do so. Finally, sovereignty means an ability to set and have those boundaries respected. This ability manifests in having authority on what happens on their traditional lands, to their community, to their relatives (human and non-human), and to oneself."
A vision of Indigenous sovereignty
Currently, the necessary measures for realizing their vision aren't in place. So, how do we bridge the gap between aspiration and true reconciliation?
Through:
How can private, public, and non-profit sectors work together to advance Indigenous sovereignty?
Learn how in our latest report
What's next on our journey?
For many Indigenous youth in Canada, true reconciliation is being able to look around and see examples of one’s values reflected around them and that the world they live in reflects their values. With young Indigenous voices leading the way, we can widen the shared path of reconciliation.
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