Land Back: Indigenous people in c\a\n\a\d\a have been dispossessed of land. The poor quality of housing on reserve, and the homelessness that many urban Indigenous people suffer from is a direct result of their inability to connect to their natural and cultural homelands. To repair this violence, we demand that all land c\a\n\a\d\a claims for the “crown” be returned to First Nations, Métis, and Inuit Peoples in co-ownership trust with either Federal or Provincial or Municipal governments.
Vancouver
Xalek/Sekyu Siyam Chief Ian Campbell, Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation)
Simoogit Saa Bax, Patrick R. Stewart Architect, Nisga'a Nation
Sarah Silva, Hiyam Housing, Squamish Nation
For Indigenous people home is land. Home is not the walls of a physical house, but people’s physical, cultural, emotional and spiritual relationships with the land. These relationships that form one’s home, are found on the land. All land in c\a\n\a\d\a is Indigenous land, so this capitalist nation-state is built on stolen land. This theft was initiated in by Europeans through both abstract decrees like the Doctrine of Discovery and Royal proclamations, and individual settlers' physical acts of homesteading. This process was structured through legislation in the nineteenth century, most importantly the Indian Act, which left Indigenous people legally, culturally, ecologically, and existentially landless and homeless. This process of land dispossession enriched settlers, creating their intergenerational wealth, while enacting an Indigenous genocide. Yet, the theft of Indigenous land has not only alienated Indigenous people, but settlers as well. All beings in this territory are alienated from the land, because healthy and empowering housing cannot be built on stolen land. The most important step addressing the deplorable housing conditions produced by these land policies is the return of land to Indigenous people.
We demand that all public lands claimed by the “crown” and controlled by all levels of government–municipal, provincial and federal–be governed jointly by the Indigenous Nations (First Nations, Inuit and Metis) in whose territory the land resides and the government of c\a\n\a\d\a as a “co-ownership trust.” This arrangement would benefit Indigenous Peoples, settlers and immigrants, by allowing access for Indigenous people to the land, privileging sustainable relations with non-human natural world, and making better use of the precious resources of the land. This would be a radical departure from existing processes of consultation, which are non-binding and allocate Indigenous Nations little or nothing of the substantial revenues that private companies reap from extraction on their territories, obstruct First People's use of these lands, and devastate their fragile ecologies.
Examples of what this might look like are starting to appear—such as with a “nature agreement” between British Columbia’s First Nations and the provincial and federal governments to formally preserve and protect land, species, and biodiversity in the province through Indigenous leadership. Another example is the creation of a community land trust to preserve an eco-cultural landscape on a small island, SISȻENEM, in British Columbia. Both show how land back can be achieved through forms of co-management.
Land Back calls for a complete rethinking of both land relations and the housing system in c\a\n\a\d\a. Only a true restoration of Indigenous land values, creating what the Nisga'a call the common bowl–to which everyone contributes and from which everyone can be fed–can create a real home for all people. This requires educating everyone about the violence of colonialism and its land dispossession, its destruction of non-commodified understandings of home, and the power of a non-acquisitive and cooperative relationship to land as a foundation for equitable housing system. As a pilot project, we have created many maps of territory as a means to this end, helping everyone to envision with two-eyed seeing (indigenous lens with one eye and the other eye, a western lens) what such a transformation at the scale of territory could look like.
Sarah Silva | ||||
Krystel Clark | ||||
Alexander Moses | ||||
Simoogit Saa Bax Patrick R. Stewart | ||||
Xalek/Sekyu Siyam Chief Ian Campbell |
We are Architects Against Housing Alienation and we believe the current housing system in c\a\n\a\d\a must be abolished!