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Opinion

Tales from the Dump: Something to tickle your nose

Tales from the Dump: Something to tickle your nose

Do you ever get the sneezels for no known reason?
Tales from the Dump: A growing election question

Tales from the Dump: A growing election question

Well, we seem to be slipping into autumn and you know what that means? I will let you answer that question yourself because it means different things to different people.
Gail Cyr’s Memories of the North: Helping organize the first Joint Dene-Metis Joint General Assembly

Gail Cyr’s Memories of the North: Helping organize the first Joint Dene-Metis Joint General Assembly

Within a month of arriving in Yellowknife, I started work with the Indian Brotherhood of the NWT – now the Dene Nation — as a community development worker to assist with the operations of the first Joint Dene Metis Assembly in Fort Good Hope.
Notes from the Trail: The burning potential for disaster

Notes from the Trail: The burning potential for disaster

On the afternoon of Aug. 17, fire trucks were called out to extinguish what appeared to be an abandoned campfire in Range Lake. Attending crews had some challenges dealing with it from ground level because of difficult accessibility and a helicopter was brought in by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources to help.
Gail Cyr’s memories of the North: When I worked at the Gold Range as a barmaid

Gail Cyr’s memories of the North: When I worked at the Gold Range as a barmaid

Gail Cyr moved to Yellowknife in May 1974. She is originally from Nelson House, Man., where she was one of seven siblings all fostered out. After arriving in the North, Cyr took a job as a coordinator with the Indian Brotherhood of the NWT – now the Dene Nation – before becoming the first executive director of the NWT Native Court Workers’ Association. In 1984, she was elected to Yellowknife City Council, where she served for 10 years.
Medicine Stories: The strength of an Elder, and the determination of the Dene; a legacy

Medicine Stories: The strength of an Elder, and the determination of the Dene; a legacy

“In the old days, if there was a family that was living in one location - like rabbit skin - there would be four or five families living there. And the old hunters would be hiking out there hunting their stocky moose, and sometimes in the fall time they would shoot three or four moose, all hanging around together, and they would get them all, OK?
My job is to start difficult conversations – Behchoko followup

My job is to start difficult conversations – Behchoko followup

I want to start off by apologizing if I offended anyone with my last column. Social problems unfortunately exist in all communities, not just in Behchoko. There is no such thing as utopia, even in our Nations. Before colonization we had our struggles entwined within our great success stories and in the future we will too. However, Indigenous communities are becoming stronger each day after all that we have been through.
What I have to say about the GNWT’s covid response

What I have to say about the GNWT’s covid response

Was a long, frustrating two years but it’s difficult to see how the government could’ve done much better
Labour Views: Words must be followed by action

Labour Views: Words must be followed by action

Pope Francis’s visit captured national and international headlines. Like many across Canada, I watched live updates and listened to the long-awaited apology.
Northern Wildflower: From Behchoko to Whati

Northern Wildflower: From Behchoko to Whati

My mom and I and her best friend made the trip up to Whati a few weeks ago to check out the new road leading to the small Northern community on the edge of the water, a place we had never been before, even though our bloodline is Tlicho, being that my grandmother’s uncle was Chief Monwfi, the leader who signed the treaty 100 years ago.