“The crowd isn’t important, the building isn’t important
what is important is that the Earth has rights.” said Nicole Cahoose a
university student and one of the organizers for Idle No More.
A small group had begun to gather around the fireplace set
beside the escalators at Aberdeen Mall.
A middle aged native man wearing a green camouflage jacket was tuning
his drum. He did this by lightly tapping
the drum skin looking for the spot that would elicit the sound he wanted. The drum measured about two feet in diameter,
had a wooden frame with raw hide tightly stretched over it and all pulled
together in the back by leather thongs which formed the hand grip.
He laughed as he spoke to the women beside him. They all
smiled as they spoke to one another.
Occasionally one would look up towards the gathering crowd as if looking
for someone they knew.
“As long as one or two people get interested or change the
way they think then it is a success.” said Jolene Michel an arts student from
TRU and organizer for Idle No More.
An old woman wearing a white headband began to speak; it
wasn’t clear what she was saying. Her
words lost to the ambient noise of the mall and the open space above them. She lifted a sign with the words idle no more
written at the bottom and the picture of a native woman in traditional dress
above. The picture looked like a head
with an eagle feather on top and the feather was the woman.
A young native woman stepped forward and spoke into a
megaphone but she was as indecipherable as the old woman’s had been. The young woman was Nicole Cahoose a student
from the university and one of the women who organized the event.
Shoppers in the mall slowly started taking notice of the
thirty Native people gathered around the fireplace. Several, thought it was a musical group and stopping
for a few minutes to listen and then moved on when the group paused to speak about
their cause. A group of teens walked
through the crowd closest to the group talking loudly about why people were
making a big deal of this and walked on. Some stayed and listened.
Between the songs individuals stepped forward from the group
to address the crowd. A young man
wearing a blue shirt who was one of the drummers spoke. He said that Idle No More wasn’t about
getting more money from the government or more land it is about ensuring their
children have a place to live in the future.
“These people here today are the only people standing
between you and complete destruction of the earth.” said Michelle Good a local
lawyer and organizer of Idle No More. We
have a right to a clean environment and a right to a way of life. As Good’s speech became more politically
charged people who had gathered to watch began to wander away.
After an hour the group packed up and the crowds dispersed. Saturday shoppers returned to their business
as though nothing had happened here but perhaps some will carry the sound of
drums and the song of idle no more with them.
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