STORIES / Okara’shòn:’a

Train collection
Personal, Hobby Emma McLaughlin Personal, Hobby Emma McLaughlin

Train collection

I’ve got sets and sets and sets of trains. I’ve got buildings, I’ve got cars, buses. I bought them in Montreal, Massachusetts, New York City. My wife didn’t understand how much I liked trains, but she didn’t stop me. It’s my hobby.

Read More
Enduring the cold months
Family Owen Mayo Family Owen Mayo

Enduring the cold months

When I was a child, our houses were not insulated like they are today. They would get very cold at night. In the winter, my father would have to put plastic over the windows and newspaper on the walls to try and keep the heat inside.

Read More
Just a business
Family, Language Aaron McComber Family, Language Aaron McComber

Just a business

I graduated from Chatelaine Business College in June of 1964. I was 18 and I started working in August for Dominion Bridge. I didn’t have a good job at first. It was the mail room then the print shop, but I made my way up eventually. 

Read More
Handsome
Family Aaron McComber Family Aaron McComber

Handsome

Till this day, people will come up to me and say, “Your father liked me so much that he would always call me handsome!” I never have the nerve to tell them that he called everybody handsome because he couldn’t remember their name.

Read More
Visiting
Religion, Family Jonathan Turenne Religion, Family Jonathan Turenne

Visiting

My mother was sent away from Kanehsatà:ke to residential school in Ontario when she was only six. My father's little sisters, who lived down in the village, were sent to the same residential school and they became friends with my mother. 

Read More
Learning on the job
Language Jonathan Turenne Language Jonathan Turenne

Learning on the job

The people that I worked with helped me. If I couldn’t say the word and if they could, they’d tell me how to say it. I received my education right there with those workers.

Read More
Shovel or pencil
Language Jonathan Turenne Language Jonathan Turenne

Shovel or pencil

My father told me, he said, “You want to quit school, then you’ve got to get to work. I don't want to see you walking on the streets in a year. Either pick up a shovel and work, or pick up a pencil and go to school. 

Read More
Made it work
Ironwork, Family Aaron McComber Ironwork, Family Aaron McComber

Made it work

We made it work and would come back from Detroit for Christmas and summertime. But it got to a point that there were a lot of guys from town who would come back every weekend, right from work.  

Read More
Union local 25
Ironwork, Family Aaron McComber Ironwork, Family Aaron McComber

Union local 25

My father was in the business here in Montreal and he knew the ironwork business agents and people in the industry. So, I asked him to get me in instead.  

Read More
Foundation of our strength
Sovereignty, Culture, Discrimination Simona Rosenfield Sovereignty, Culture, Discrimination Simona Rosenfield

Foundation of our strength

The impacts of the colonial genocidal project have created divisions and dysfunction within our communities. Centuries of hurt and trauma take time and often the oppression turns within, causing the divisions. In order to create reconciliation within ourselves, Indigenous people must understand their past, their stories of survival and life.

Read More
Raised holy stink
Education, Culture Emma McLaughlin Education, Culture Emma McLaughlin

Raised holy stink

Some kids would go away for school and would come back and couldn’t be part of the community because they don’t speak Indian. It was a mess. So, we continued to raise holy stink. These were the grandchildren of the people that were in residential school, where the language was just plain taken away from them.  

Read More
Best Man
Personal, Ironwork Aaron McComber Personal, Ironwork Aaron McComber

Best Man

I met a guy from Six Nations in Cleveland once and he asked if I was Indian from Canada, I told him I was and he said, “Come meet with the boss, I’ll get you on the job.” That’s how things worked out back then. 

Read More
Where I feel at home
Land, Personal, Family Emma McLaughlin Land, Personal, Family Emma McLaughlin

Where I feel at home

The Pines or Onen’tó:kon, has always been a sacred place and one of refuge for the generations of my grandparents who sought peace in the Pines when the Sulpicians were harassing and brutalizing the people. They wanted us all to leave for Wáhta, but in the end, we have won because we are still here and we’re not going anywhere. 

Read More
detach with love
Family, Personal Kassidy Jacobs Family, Personal Kassidy Jacobs

detach with love

I would have a lot of quiet talks with my mother on her back deck by the pool. My birth mother helped me a lot. She told me my father’s name and helped my children and I get status. I remember we went to some office, she spoke Mohawk for about five minutes, and within a month I had my status. 

Read More