WINNIPEG — A dozen Muslim families who recently arrived in Canada have told Winnipeg's Louis Riel School Division that they want their children excused from compulsory elementary school music and coed physical education programs for religious and cultural reasons.
"This is one of our realities in Manitoba now, as a result of immigration," said superintendent Terry Borys. "We were faced with some families who were really adamant about this. Music was not part of the cultural reality."
Borys said the school division has alerted Education Minister Nancy Allan about the situation since music and phys-ed are compulsory in the province's elementary schools.
There have been no issues so far with children of middle-school or high-school age, he said.
The families accept physical education, as long as the boys and girls have separate classes, but do not want their children exposed to singing or the playing musical instruments, Borys said. The division has suggested they could instead do a writing project to satisfy the music requirements of the arts curriculum.
However, a local Muslim leader says there is no reason for young kids to be held out of music or phys-ed classes based on religious and cultural grounds.
"Who is advising them? My first concern would be who are these new immigrants talking to?" said Shahina Siddiqui, executive director of the Islamic Social Services. "This is the first time I am hearing this; I'm not very happy about it."
Read more:
http://www.globalwinnipeg.com/world...phys+classes/4228444/story.html#ixzz1DC6df3Js
Cree community bans FNs spirituality
By Annette Francis
APTN National News
OUJE-BOUGOUMOU, Que.–An overwhelmingly Christian Cree community in northern Quebec has banned sweat lodges and all forms of First Nations spirituality.
The ban was imposed after a local family built a sweat lodge in their backyard with the help of a friend, triggering major controversy throughout Ouje-Bougoumou, which means, “the place where people gather.”
Redfern Mianscum said he built the sweat lodge to help people, but his dream was short-lived. The evangelical Christian majority in the community, which sits about 722 kilometres north of Montreal, turned against it.
The band council then passed a resolution against the all forms of First Nations spirituality, calling it shamanism, and had it torn down in early December.
“They see it as evil or something that’s not good and I heard somebody say that it is a form of witchcraft,” said Mianscum.
The lodge was built on Lana Wapachee’s property. She was going through a hard time and wanted help. To her, the sweat lodge was a God-send.
“It felt good to see them working together for healing for a moment,” she said. “Though I felt scared, I felt, what are people gonna say?”
Soon a petition started to circulate around the community calling for the sweat lodge’s removal.
The petition drew so much attention that the band council called a meeting which Wapachee said was rigged.
“There was a plan, a strategy,” she said. “They wanted…to take down the lodge and at the end of the general assembly, the community got up and they passed the resolution.”
The resolution said the Cree community’s elders did not want any form of “Native spirituality or practices” in Ouje-Bougoumou.
“The practice of the sweat lodge and its rituals are not restricted to merely medical…healing, but in essence a way to contact and communicate with the spirit world through shamanism,” said the resolution. “The majority of the Ouje-Bougoumou members are Christian faith-oriented and have strong Christian values.”
Wapachee said it was difficult watching the tear-down of the lodge.
“They came in and it was really long and hard to witness it. It was just me and my kids,” she said.
Wapachee’s nephew, Bruce Wapachee, said it upset him to see the lodge destroyed.
“I felt that they were…taking away our rights to have our beliefs in what we want to believe in,” he said. “I wasn’t too happy. I was upset about them coming down to tear down our sweat lodge and it was our way of healing.”
One of the men who tore down the sweat lodge said the sweat lodge was scaring his children. Rainy Coon-Come said the lodge should never have been built in the community.
“Growing up, I didn’t see that. I never saw that. My dad didn’t do it…My grandfather wasn’t into it,” he said. “Go build it somewhere else, not at someone’s house. All this wouldn’t have happened if they’d built it across the lake.”
http://aptn.ca/pages/news/2011/01/17/crees-ban-sweat-lodges-fns-spirituality-from-community/
comments
vizionmaker [Moderator] 2 weeks ago
That is so heart-breaking & very disturbing to throw away such holy rituals from our ancestors. The Europeans did a good job brainwashing many First Nations. How can this man say his children can't sleep at nights for the sake of a witchcraft sweatlodge, his great great fore fathers practiced these ways before the others got brainwashed. I think it's time to wake up now & get out of their misery. I would strictly press charges to the Nation for Religious Discrimination!!
kwaho [Moderator] 2 weeks ago
Sad indeed..that 500 years later, some of us are still being brainwashed by religions imported from across the Great waters...While your Elders are preaching the european practices of spirituality, we keep walking forward with those ancestral teachings which have never been forgotten....only left behind. Wish I could welcome anyone from your community to pray in the Sacred Rock Lodge set up behind my humble dwelling...and then who knows...you just might remember who you truly are...
ojicree1977 [Moderator] 1 week ago
this is a just another sad case of the effects of colonization...once we were all a proud and united people...First Nations people who had our own way of life, our own identity and our own culture. This community obviously is lost.....they have truely lost their identity...to the man who said he never saw it, that his dad never saw it, and that his grandfather never saw it.(sweat lodge)...that's what you call the inter-generational effects of assimilation.....it all started with the grandfather....this man and his children are aboriginal in body only, not in spirit......i hope and pray that community someday remember who they are.........