Petition calling for more representation of Indigenous people in citizenship guide headed to House of Commons
Current guide refers to Indigenous people as 'Indians' and says residential school ended in the 1980s
A petition to include more robust Indigenous history and knowledge in Canada's citizenship guide has garnered enough signatures to be tabled in the House of Commons.
Twenty-two-year-old Mariam Manaa, a summer intern for Oakville North-Burlington Liberal MP Pam Damoff, created the online petition asking the federal government to redesign the current Discover Canada study guide curriculum and citizenship exam.
"You're talking about a whole book and a significant part of our history. It's not even a full chapter we are talking about. It's just a page, under the Who We Are section — those things are part of our history and are just as important," Manaa said.
In a statement, the Ministry of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship told CBC it was undertaking broader consultations with a wider range of stakeholders "to ensure the revised content of the Citizenship Study Guide is representative of Canadians, including Indigenous peoples."
An exact launch date has not yet been determined.
The mandate letter for Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen also lists making the change to the swearing-in ceremony as one of his key priorities.
Indigenous people from B.C. say changes critical
For Wet'suwet'en and African-American youth Taleetha Tait, changes to the guide are critical.
"It allows our experiences to be acknowledged and not to be judged," Tait said.
Information about Indigenous people in the citizenship guide is placed in the "Canada's History" and the "Who We Are" sections.
The first describes the hunting and gathering practices and traditional diets of Indigenous people. For example, it says "West Coast natives preserved fish by drying and smoking." It also adds "warfare was common among Aboriginal groups as they competed for land, resources and prestige."
The Indigenous section under "Who We Are" starts with "the ancestors of Aboriginal peoples are believed to have migrated from Asia many thousands of years ago." It uses the word "Indian" and "Aboriginal" to describe Indigenous people and says residential school ended in the 1980s.
Ry Moran, the director of the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation, says the guide is not giving newcomers the tools needed to participate in important conversations Canadians are currently having.
"It's a very good example of a document that presents very poor information on Indigenous people and absolutely needs to be rewritten," Moran said.
"It repeats the general narrative that there were Indigenous Peoples, there was a brief period of relationship and then goes into the predominant settler narrative. It doesn't talk about the difficult relationship or serve newcomers well," he added.
Changes a long time coming says new Canadian
There are two Truth and Reconciliation Commission calls to action pushing the federal government to revise the information kit for newcomers, the citizenship test and the oath to reflect an accurate portrayal of Indigenous people.
They call on the Government of Canada to change the Oath of Citizenship to observe treaties with Indigenous Peoples.
The guide currently says Aboriginal and treaty rights are in the Canadian Constitution, but there is nothing about treaties in the oath.
Kue K'nyawmupoe came to Canada as a Burmese refugee and is now a Canadian citizen. She says she is relieved the new citizenship guide and exam will be updated and wished she had learned more about Indigenous people when she first arrived.
"That is a very good change that has needed to happen for a very long time, and it would be very useful for Canadians to recognize the first people of Canada, to be more inclusive," K'nyawmupoe said.