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Kateri Akiwenzie-Damm & the NSWP



Last Updated: 4/20/2009

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Status: Single
State: Ontario
Country: CA
Signup Date: 4/21/2006

Blog Archive
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Tuesday, November 28, 2006 

Current mood:  thankful
may you live life abundantly
may you have all that you desire
may joy and laughter be your constant companions
may the dreams you hold closest to your heart be realized
may you know each moment of your life that you are loved
Friday, October 20, 2006 

Category: Writing and Poetry
chasing cars on the radio. a phone call till 3 a.m. a dream refuses to be forgotten. see how fragile this leaf fallen at my feet. in daylight i linger. i am only passing time. the clouds are shapeshifting timepieces worn around our heads. please wake me up when you get home. i forgot to set the alarm once again. are you still here? how can one touch change the world? why did they tell me to turn your way. if tomorrow never comes what then. walking the riverbank in the rain. no one will see the tears bursting the dam. it's only me for a moment. return to your seats. i'll walk with you in december. i'll pretend i'm asleep. the house is shivering. wearing fear like a second skin. i want to laugh in the space between your shoulder and wrist. i want to count stars in the small of your back. is it really too much to ask? we can't be sure what next week will bring. but i will stretch out for the world to see. please come with me. let's not hide in the shadows. the lights will come on if we just breathe. time will slow if we just be. let's not waste time waiting. this is all we'll ever have. let's just breathe.
Friday, October 20, 2006 
i've reached a point where i realize that pleasing others doesn't bring joy. many are impossible to please. some are fickle & what pleases them today may not please them tomorrow. i am learning to put my own happiness first - even if it means being unconventional (which is nothing very new for me) or doing things that others might disapprove of or condemn. let them have their self-righteousness! i will choose my own happiness. i don't want to be my own oppressor. i am through with undermining myself. to hell with the ones who don't accept me for who i am. the ones who are too busy. the ones who are too afraid to love me. i want to smile more. laugh more. tease more. and let go.... and i will. i asked a friend of mine a couple of days ago if he is happy. 'every day,' he said. hell yeah!!
Friday, June 09, 2006 

Current mood:  enraged
Category: News and Politics

Check out this news report about the Bush family, the Skull and Bones Society, and the theft of Geronimo's remains by G Dubya's grandfather.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0u2-dFEmBIM&eurl=

Wednesday, June 07, 2006 

Current mood:  pissed off
Category: News and Politics
Natives more likely to be murdered, jailed: study
Canadian Press
 
Updated: Tue. Jun. 6 2006 7:33 PM ET
OTTAWA New statistics say native people are many times more likely to be murdered, jailed or the victims of crime.
Aboriginal people were seven times more likely to be murdered between 1997 and 2000 than non-natives, says a report Tuesday.
The study by the Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics says 40 per cent of aboriginals over age 15 reported being crime victims in the previous year, compared with a national average of 28 per cent.
Native people were twice as likely to be repeat victims, three times as likely to be robbed, assaulted or raped, and three and a half times more likely to be attacked by their spouse.
On reserves, the numbers were more grim - aboriginals were eight times more likely to be assaulted and seven times more likely to be sexually assaulted, compared with national averages. Only robbery was less often committed, at a rate of roughly half that for the rest of Canada.
Jodie-Anne Brzozowski, a senior analyst with the Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics, said aboriginal offenders share several traits that can help guide law and policy makers.
"Being young, having low education, having low incomes, having higher levels of unemployment, being a child raised by lone-parent families, higher rates of mobility and crowded (housing) conditions.
"Those are all things that tend to raise the risk of anyone being a victim or offender. But they tend to be more common among the aboriginal population."
Native people serve an especially disproportionate amount of jail time.
Aboriginal adults make up just three per cent of the population but comprised 21 per cent of provincial inmates and 18 per cent of federal prisoners in 2003-04, says the study.
In Saskatchewan, aboriginals account for 10 per cent of the population but 80 per cent of those sent to provincial jails.
Young native people have a greater chance of landing behind bars than graduating from university, said Larry Chartrand, head of the aboriginal governance program at University of Winnipeg.
"That's pretty stark.
"I think they should rethink their failure to uphold the Kelowna Accord," he said of the Conservative government.
Indian Affairs Minister Jim Prentice says he supports the goals of improved living standards that underpinned the $5.1-billion agreement struck last November by the former Liberal government, native leaders and every premier.
But the Conservatives promised just $150 million this fiscal year and $300 million next year for such efforts.
Prentice says his government will commit more money and set its own course to fight native poverty.
"Those are very sad numbers," he said Tuesday of the latest crime figures.
"There were things discussed at Kelowna in terms of targets and objectives which I've said are positive.
"But we're going to do it with a Conservative plan to move forward."
Peter Dinsdale, executive director of the National Association of Friendship Centres, says there's no time to waste.
His group represents 117 front-line centres in cities across Canada.
"It's stunning, the crimes we're doing against ourselves and how we're internalizing . . . oppression and the legacy of all this.
"There's years of us not graduating from high school, not being employed, not having access to the full benefits of Canadian society.
"The violence is going to increase. We're starting to see some of these trends."
Kelowna didn't focus enough on native people living in cities but the accord was a rockbed for real commitment to change, Dinsdale said.
"It's why events like Kelowna were so important from a First Nations perspective - to get to the roots of some of these homicides and sexual assaults."
Monday, June 05, 2006 
it's 2 a.m. in ottawa. the rez was waking up to birdsong every morning, watching the wild leeks leave for the year, walking the park road with otis, playing my stereo as loud as i want, talking to the cuzzies. life on the rez. so beautiful. so quiet. so alone the bones ache.
Monday, May 22, 2006 
check out my other myspace site where i occasionally post poetry and smartarse remarks....