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Former MP Robert-Falcon Ouellette to become Canadian military's 1st Indigenous Knowledge Keeper

Former MP Robert-Falcon Ouellette to become Canadian military's 1st Indigenous Knowledge Keeper

CBC30-01-2025
A former Cree member of Parliament and a longtime military member has been named the Canadian Armed Forces' first Indigenous Knowledge Keeper.
Warrant Officer Robert-Falcon Ouellette is set to be promoted to captain in a ceremony hosted by the military in Winnipeg on Thursday evening.
"It's about the inclusion of Indigenous Peoples fully within the institutions of our nation," Ouellette said in an interview ahead of the ceremony.
"We've moved in such a way with reconciliation that we have this opportunity to really demonstrate what the Canadian Forces can be."
Ouellette said he is a fourth-generation military member with nearly three decades of service. He started with the Navy League and Sea Cadet program and is currently with the Royal Winnipeg Rifles unit.
From 2015 to 2019, Ouellette represented the riding of Winnipeg Centre as a Liberal MP. He ran to become mayor of Winnipeg in both 2014 and 2022.
He is currently an associate professor of education at the University of Ottawa.
The military said the new position is part of its effort to embrace Indigenous spirituality. The Forces offer spiritual and religious care to members and their families through the Royal Canadian Chaplain Services.
There have been Indigenous chaplains in the past, including Lt.-Col. Catherine Askew, but this is the first time someone has been designated to provide spiritual teachings from an Indigenous point of view instead of a Christian one. Before this, chaplains would have to rely on a network of Indigenous representatives for spiritual and emotional support.
For many years, Indigenous Peoples were banned from practising their spirituality.
Ouellette can remember a time when he faced harassment for being Cree.
"There were times when I had terrible discussions with commanding officers and others within my unit. I have long hair and sometimes that would upset people who are older military members," he recalled.
"Today it's much different. People are much more accepting."
Indigenous soldiers have built their own network within the military, meeting for drum groups and traditional ceremonies, said Ouellette.
Indigenous people made up 2.9 per cent of the Canadian Armed Forces as of November 2022. Approximately 23 per cent of Canadian Rangers self-identify as First Nations, Inuit or Métis.
Ouellette said his role not only supports Indigenous people, but educates non-Indigenous members as well.
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Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account The Chiefs of Ontario, which represents 133 First Nations in the province, shared with The Canadian Press data on more than 20 years worth of federal funding provided to the Metis Nation of Ontario. It suggests that $819,836,061 went from Ottawa to the MNO – an organization First Nations leaders say has no legitimacy and threatens their rights. 'This data shows just how badly First Nations in Ontario are being harmed by the diversion of government funding to the MNO and away from the needs of First Nations and other legitimate groups,' the Chiefs of Ontario said in a media statement. 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First Nations and other Metis groups say the communities represented by the MNO have no claim to Metis heritage and Ottawa and Ontario have no right to recognize them. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Last month, history professor Leila Inksetter of the University of Quebec in Montreal released a report drafted on behalf of the Wabun Tribal Council that concluded there is no evidence of a mixed-ancestry community in the Wabun Tribal Council's territory in northeastern Ontario. The MNO rejected that report, saying that despite years of outside attempts 'to discredit' it, 'nothing has changed.' 'The facts of history will not change because a new 'expert' has been paid to peddle the same Metis denialism,' the group said in a media statement. 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