Valley of the Birdtail: How two Manitoba communities came together to build a road toward reconciliation
Valley of the Birdtail: How two Manitoba communities came together to build a road toward reconciliation

By Matteo Cimellaro  Local Journalism Initiative Reporter There’s a common question posed to the co-authors, one Indigenous, the other not, of Valley of the Birdtail: An Indian Reserve, a White Town and the Road to Reconciliation. It goes something like this: how does a non-Indigenous person deal with the fear of acting on reconciliation?   Andrew Stobo Sniderman, the non-Indigenous co-author of the book, finds the question absurd. Non-Indigenous Peoples created the mess of colonization, and so it’s their responsibility to take us out of it, Sniderman said the morning after a book tour event in Ottawa last week. Douglas Sanderson, the Indigenous co-author, has a more charitable view: he thinks Indigenous Peoples should teach their non-Indigenous counterparts how to walk with them because “it’s a relationship.”   “Whose job

The post Valley of the Birdtail: How two Manitoba communities came together to build a road toward reconciliation appeared first on The Turtle Island News.