Members of the Keewaytinook Okimakanak's KIHS and K-Net program are travelling to Thunder Bay to present information about their programs and services at the Matawa First Nations 2008 Education Conference.
The Matawa team is webcasting (see live stream below) and archiving portions of this conference live with sponsorship and funding support from TBayTel and KO's Regional Management Organization (K-Net).
From Canada's Policy Research Initiative (www.policyresearch.gc.ca)
Volume 10 Number 1
Horizons
March 2008
Losing Our World's Languages
Every 14 days a language dies. By 2100, more than half of the more than 7,000 languages spoken on Earth—many of them never yet recorded—will likely disappear, taking with them a wealth of knowledge about history, culture, the natural environment, and how the human brain works.
AHF press release
Click here to download the entire publication
Prepared for the Aboriginal Healing Foundation By
Marlene Brant Castellano, Linda Archibald and Mike DeGagné, 2008
Dedication
A 90 KM prayer walk was completed by over 30 young people who risked the harsh wilderness life.
GET Youth Ministries, a group from North Caribou Lake began their walk late friday night at 12:30 AM with a determination to arrive in Muskrat Dam on Saturday evening. The walk took over 20 hours. The purpose of this prayer walk was to pray for issues that are affecting most of the northern communities.
The following article about the urban-based debate on "net neutrality" is just another example of how urban groups are insisting that that everyone be treated equal for the things they want while on the other hand it is often these same groups who are preventing the telephone companies from rolling out the broadband deferral fund that will provide the necessary telecom supporting infrastructure upgrades so the folks in the remote and rural communities might access equitable online services.
Applications for this year’s CIAF program are now open and local or provincial not-for-profit organizations are encouraged to apply. This year, the McGunity government is again providing $7.5 million for projects that will help remove barriers to physical activity, said Minister of Health Promotion Margarett Best.
The Oshki-Pimache-O-Win Education & Training Institute is an innovative, independent institution that offers post-secondary education and training programs to the people in Nishnawbe Aski Nation (NAN) and other learners. These programs are primarily offered through distance delivery with minimal on-campus sessions in Thunder Bay. We offer choice, accessibility, flexibility, opportunities and support services for our students.
KI Press Release ...
THUNDER BAY, ON, Feb. 28 - Chief Donnie Morris and five other leaders of the were recently held in contempt of a court injunction which prohibits them from interfering with a mineral exploration program by Platinex Inc. on KI's territory.
In a strange development, Platinex released a statement on February 26 in which they deny seeking the incarceration of KI leaders: