Schlagwörter
Aktuelle Nachrichten
America
Aus Aller Welt
Breaking News
Canada
DE
Deutsch
Deutschsprechenden
Global News
Internationale Nachrichten aus aller Welt
Japan
Japan News
Kanada
Karte
Karten
Konflikt
Korea
Krieg in der Ukraine
Latest news
Map
Maps
Nachrichten
News
News Japan
Polen
Russischer Überfall auf die Ukraine seit 2022
Science
South Korea
Ukraine
Ukraine War Video Report
UkraineWarVideoReport
United Kingdom
United States
United States of America
US
USA
USA Politics
Vereinigte Königreich Großbritannien und Nordirland
Vereinigtes Königreich
Welt
Welt-Nachrichten
Weltnachrichten
Wissenschaft
World
World News

3 Kommentare
Not true the divide existed from national alliances , individual nations and bands .
Its a extremely diverse and complex group of people.
Ironically it is reconciliation that was creating the divide and Trudeau government failed to adjust to what was always going to be a product of reconciliation, division .
It will get more complicated As more nations and bands regain their individual identitys, as they receive more control and benifets to their lands.
You mean it’s dividing the elected chiefs and the hereditary chiefs.
That’s usually where these divides come from.
The ones that want things to be better and the others that want things the way the once were.
This is going to keep on playing out to no one’s benefit. Not sure how everyone gets past that but here we are.
Aptn had quite an interesting article a while ago about how some are expecting the next big fights in indigenous circles to be not so much about indigenous collectively vs. the crown / government, but rather pro- and anti-development indigenous groups against each other.
You could see it even in the reactions to C-5, some were at least cautiously on board and willing to see it as opportunity, and others were totally opposed.
I’m not indigenous, so it’s not really my battle to fight, but there seems to be a divide in how to handle, essentially, the fact that it’s not the year 1491 anymore and we can’t turn the clock back to the pre-columbian days