Grand Council Flag of the Mi鈥檏maq Nation to fly permanently above University Hall
In honour of Mi鈥檏maw History Month, Acadia today raised the Grand Council Flag of the Mi鈥檏maq Nation above University Hall where it will fly permanently alongside the Canadian, Nova Scotian, and 外流影片 flags.
鈥淭he flying of the Grand Council flag on University Hall is a permanent symbolic gesture of the developing and ongoing commitment 外流影片 has to its Indigenous students, employees and extended community,鈥 says Dr. Donna Hurlburt (鈥97), Acadia鈥檚 Aboriginal Student Advisor. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an important first step that openly states that we recognize that our campus is built on the unceded lands of the Mi鈥檏maq. They are a symbolic gesture, one that Acadia must back up with ongoing commitment and action on the ground.鈥
To student Mackenzie O鈥橯uinn, the raising of the Grand Council flag serves as a powerful reminder. 鈥淭he fact that the flag is flying over University Hall is the greatest act of reconciliation I have seen since coming to Acadia,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t's like Acadia herself is saying to me, 鈥業 see you, I hear you, you belong here.鈥 This is our land. It has been our land for thousands of years. And suddenly it feels like we are sharing it again, like we have regained a place on it. There is absolutely more work to be done, but this small action means the world to me.鈥
To some, the flag raising is seen as a great sign of respect. 鈥淏y flying this flag above University Hall, this is a reclamation of the land, and the identification that Canadian Colonial Society (The Canadian Flag) and the Miq'Maw society (Miq'Maw Flag) can coexist peacefully, and move forward together,鈥 says Rachel Watts, president of the Indigenous Student Society of Acadia. 鈥淭o me, this action is a sign of respect to the Miq'Maw community, which is the basis for all Indigenous society. With the raising of the flag, I hope we continue to move forward as an institution and show signs of gratitude and respect toward our first people.鈥
The flag raising is just one of the steps Acadia is taking to promote reconciliation on campus. A Presidential Advisory Council on Decolonization has been formed on campus to support the reconciliation process. Prior to Mi鈥檏maq History month, Acadia was host to a number of events including Indspire Acadia, Authors@Acadia presents The Power of Stories: The Outside Circle, with author Patti LaBoucane-Benson and artist Kelly Mellings, and the first of three Turtle Island, Reading to 鈥淒iscover鈥 sessions put on by the English Department. Moving forward, there are plans to expand Welkaqnik, Acadia鈥檚 Indigenous Resource Centre.
While these steps towards reconciliation are great, Hurlburt acknowledges that there is still work to be done on campus to further the reconciliation effort. 鈥淭he challenge will be to support these initiatives over the long term and to ensure that they are having positive impacts on the communities they are intended to serve,鈥 she says. 鈥淢ost importantly though, we need to be thoughtful in our approach and make sure that we hear and respond to Indigenous voices as we move forward. Reconciliation means that you actually have to build relationships and converse in meaningful ways.鈥
For photos of the ceremony please see our photo gallery: https://goo.gl/rZt9Mx