Joanne Hammond Profile picture
May 26, 2018 16 tweets 7 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
I have an idea instead of renaming Emily Carr’s ‘Indian Church’.

👉Teach the role of these little churches in Canada’s civilization project. In clearing the land. In cultural genocide.👈 #TruthBeforeReconciliation (AGO pics) 1/
The decision to Remove-the-Indian-From-The-Painting is a decolonizing opportunity lost.

Better to learn WTF an Indian Church is & *why* they’re everywhere (📷VancouverArchives) 2/
Sure, Carr called the painting Indian Church, and that may grate since we’ve now matured into FirstNationsIndigenous vocab... but it actually WAS that.

It’s a thing: a ~Church~ built by missionaries for ~Indians~. 3/
These churches are all over BC. Setting up proselytizing franchises in Indigenous towns is heritage minute status Canadiana. Betchya there’s one on a reserve near you.

Here’s our local, St Joseph’s. 4/
They actually *were* referred to as ‘the Indian Church’, many still are.

Lots have shownames too, like OurLadyOurPerpetualWillYouStopAlready, and some go by that now, but ‘Indian Church’ was A Thing with a function. 5/
When settlement replaced fur and gold as a reason to be in BC in the late 1850s, missionaries flooded in.

Catholics, Anglicans, Methodists, the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts (really) and others. (Kach Indian Church, N. BC Archives) 6/
Their churches aimed to tether Indigenous people to the places that would become reserves, freeing land for white people, and were an explicit part of ‘civilizing the Indians’.

Missionaries actively helped create and regulate the settlement frontier. (Vancouver Archives) 7/
Indian Churches dominated new villages, where European values were enforced. There were rules.

‘Watchmen’ were appointed to spy, ‘chiefs’ were anointed to enforce. (Excerpt Fisher 1977) 8/
Missionaries’ social and cultural coercion aimed to foster “habits of instant obedience” (Rev JB Good, 1868) and was wholeheartedly supported—structurally and financially—by settler governments. 9/
Indian Churches established to transform “ignorant bloodthirsty savages to quite useful subjects of our gracious queen” (Rev R Tomlinson, 1870), opened the door, naturally, to residential schools. (KIRS, BC Archives10/
Now lots of communities still embrace these churches. Reclaim traditions inside them. Adapt both the structures and the institutions to their needs.

Others never did. (St Paul’s, Squamish, and at Spence’s Bridge via bethcausley.com/nlakpamux-chur…) 11/
I’m deeply sceptical of AGO’s goal to remove “hurtful and painful” content from artwork.

Is it possible, desirable, as a Canadian cultural institution, to do so and achieve any real success in cultural education? 12/
And for who are we sanitizing the works? Who would be shocked and upset by the reality of an Indian Church? Of the attempted conquest of Indigenous—physical, economic, spiritual—by the west?

👉White people, that’s who👈(detail of Carr’s D’sonoqua) 13/
AGO tried, in 2013, to be reflective about this. But somehow ended up positioning these churches as benignly ‘filling the void’ left by outlawed Indigenous spirituality.

As if the void wasn’t predatory, created by the churches. TIME TO TRY AGAIN. 14/
Decolonization isn’t sweeping colonialism under the rug.

We presume that Emily Carr was respectful & open minded? Fine. Then presume she wanted us to understand something about this place. Use her work to educate, not erase. (D Plowden pic) #TruthBeforeReconciliation 15/15
PS Lots more about IndianChurch & missionaries’ roles in BC colonization can be found in these (dated but thorough) volumes.

I’d love to hear your refs for more recent works, esp from Indigenous perspectives.

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More from @KamloopsArchaeo

Sep 11, 2018
This is the Bonaparte Plateau, BC. It’s been stripped bare by logging. The scale of these clearcuts makes size comparisons to football fields seem ridiculous. It’s effing heartbreaking to be here. 1/
Don’t know where Bonaparte Plateau is? Few do. It’s in southern Secwepemculewc. Valued hunting, fishing & medicine grounds for millennia.

You don’t see it from highways, & need a truck to get there. That seclusion has allowed forestry to destroy it, almost unchallenged. 2/
Logging here has been ceaseless since the 1990s. Bits left as reserves after the first, second, third, fourth round of harvests eventually get razed too. Nothing is spared. Gif from Google Earth Engine, 1986-2016. 3/
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Aug 19, 2018
*whispers*

The intensity of BC wildfires is directly related to industry-led mismanagement of forests that has been undermining the land’s resiliency for a century.

Don’t blame it all on climate change. Yet. 1/
For >100 years this land base has been operated by and for forest capitalists. A century of clearcuts, monoculture plantations and fire suppression brought us here.

Responsibility for forest management is a GIANT elephant in the BC wildfire room. 2/
Millions of continuous hectares of stunted, debris-choked and dead standing forests are burning, and we blame "Mother Nature", or climate change. Hold up.

Here's the Bonaparte Plateau, which burned last year, being "managed" from 1984-2016. Those are clearcuts. 3/
Read 9 tweets
Jul 20, 2018
“We didn’t get out of the Stone Age because we ran out of stones, we got smarter” - Enviro Minister @cathmckenna

<best ‘Well Actually, Minister’ voice>

The stone age was a wildly, ingeniously stable and successful human adaptation. 1/
The stone age (really the stone-wood-bone-antler-skin-bark-shell-etc age) persisted for 👉3+ million years👈

Since before we were really human.

Sustainable af, and not in buzzword sense. 13/10 on sustainability scale.

Should be of interest aspiring enviro leaders, Minister? 2/
Stone age technologies were steady for thousands, hundreds of thousands of years. Cos *they worked*. For most everyone. Without destroying the world.

The most persistent, successful ways we’ve ever had.

Claiming we smarted our way out is SOME hubris. (@RoyalBCMuseum diarama) 3/
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Jul 3, 2018
So the racist pieces of shit who did this are our Kamloops neighbours. Now what? #TRC #TruthBeforeReconciliation 1/
I heard @tult7 on CBC condemning this as “small minded hate crime”, saying he hopes this racism isn’t representative of Kamloops.

I don’t know if I can be as generous as Kukpi7 Ignace. The racism is real and everyday and ingrained. In Kamloops, and the rest of Canada too. 2/
I talk to community & business groups, educators & bureaucrats abt Indigenous history/rights/ all the time. It’s an *understatement* to say people are ignorant of Indigenous issues.

It’s better characterized as flat out denial. A preference for ignorance. And it fuels racism. 3/
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Jun 3, 2018
160 years of rampant land speculation and untethered state-led profiteering has finally paid off!

COME BACK WITH ME to 1858, when the BC real estate crisis began... #BCHist #vanre #bcpoli 1/
Meet Edward Bulwer-Lytton, colonial secretary, and James Douglas, the first governor of colonial BC.

BC as a colony was about 5 minutes old when these two kicked off the Great Land Grab of 1858 That Never Really Stopped. 2/
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May 24, 2018
Hey Kamloops. We need your help. We’d like to honour Kamloops veterans on memorial street signs this year, to mark the century since the end of WWI.

Can I have a word about remembrance? Honour? Respect? And yes, money. 1/
Kamloops Heritage Commission planned to replace about 50 signs this year, adding poppies to streets named for fallen WWI soldiers.

But city won’t pay the $8,500. Council opted to pay ZERO dollars and drag it out over a decade (watch here at abt 2:07 bit.ly/2s8WcRe) 2/
Some background: 189 men from the Kamloops area were killed in WWI, from a population of around 4,000 at the time.

That’s the equivalent of 4,250 Kamloopsians today.

Imagine if 4,250 of us were killed for our country and we decided honouring them cost too much? 3/
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