BOOK LAUNCH: Indigenous Waterviews

Event Date: 
Friday, December 5, 2025 - 2:00pm to 4:30pm EST
Event Location: 
Orsi Family Commons, Simcoe Hall, 500 University Ave, Orillia, Ontario and 💻 Virtual attendance available for all communities

This event welcomes Elders, artists, educators, water walkers, and community members. It is a space to celebrate water, honour our shared responsibilities, and uplift Indigenous knowledge.

About the Anthology

Indigenous Waterviews: Song, Story, and Protocol for Water Ethics brings together diverse Indigenous authors grounded in ceremony, governance, and ancestral teachings. The collection centres water as a being with spirit, agency, and memory. As one passage reflects:

“Water is the first medicine, the first sound we hear in the womb, and the first teaching of how to care for life.”

Another contributor writes:
“When we speak to the water, she remembers us. When we care for her, she cares for our future generations.”

The anthology is lovingly dedicated to the memory of Nookomis Beedaasige-iban, Josephine Mandamin, whose water walks around the Great Lakes continue to shape and inspire global water ethics.

“Her footsteps ripple through all waters,” the book reads, “reminding us that every act for water is an act for future generations.”

Her teachings and example are foundational to this work.

A Teaching From Site 41 – Water That Travels the World

We also carry forward the teachings of water through our ongoing efforts connected to Site 41 in Tiny Township, Ontario, which Dr. William Shotyk has tested and documented as some of the cleanest water in the world. Since 2009, my family—the Monague Family of Christian Island—has worked to send this water to Indigenous communities and movements across the globe in love, prayer, and solidarity.

This water has travelled with Indigenous Peoples during Indigenous Liberation Walks in South Africa, and has been carried to Mauna Kea in Hawai‘i, as well as through India, Nepal, Japan, New Zealand, and Australia. I have also personally taken this water to the Lenca community in Honduras. We send this water to support Indigenous Peoples who are standing up to protect the earth, the waters, and their rights.

In the spirit of this work, the Site 41 water will next travel to Colombia with Dr. Juan Sánchez, who will carry our love and prayers—held by the water—to various Indigenous communities. At the in-person book launch, those who wish to pray with the water will have the opportunity to do so in a good way.

Featured Indigenous Voices

We uplift Indigenous contributions with deep gratitude, including:

  • Elder Mona Polacca (Hopi/Tewa/Havasupai) – International Leader in Indigenous Water Governance

  • Dr. Darlene Sanderson (Cree/Euro-Anishinaabe) – Scholar of Indigenous Water Ethics
  • Renee Gurneau (Anishinaabe) – Knowledge Keeper
  • Vicki M. R. Monague (Anishinaabe) - Educator and activist

These voices bring forward Indigenous thought, teachings, water memory, women’s roles in water care, and the responsibilities of the next generations.

A Gift for Your Community

Through the support of the Ontario Arts Council and the Indigenous Environmental Network, we are pleased to offer both the eBook and printed copies of the anthology as gifts.

If your community, school, youth program, or organization would like free printed copies, please complete our short request form:

 Book Request Form: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdVo3p178YeZIRybRySxlBOOZSaVBtSYRCHJums5LaENuE6GQ/viewform

Honouring Your Work

Our website uplifts frontline water protection groups under “Indigenous Water Defense.”
With your permission, we would like to include your organization’s website in this list:
https://indigenous-message.org/protecting-water/

Please let us know if this is okay.

Share Your Stories With Us. We welcome:

• photos from the launch
• community responses to the book
• teachings shared with youth and Elders
• reflections or community stories
• interest in hosting readings, teachings, or talks

Your voice strengthens this global network of Indigenous water protectors.

We Hope You Will Join Us

This book launch is not simply an academic event— it is a gathering of nations, a celebration of water, and an offering for all our communities.Your presence would mean a great deal to us. Please share this invitation widely across your community networks. If you have any questions or wish to coordinate a community reading, please contact our project director:

Dr. Juan SĂĄnchez-MartĂ­nez
jsanch13@lakeheadu.ca

Miigwech for your time, your leadership, and your ongoing work for the water.

New Social Justice Fall Course!

Event Date: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 8:30am EDT to Monday, September 15, 2025 - 11:30am EDT
Event Location: 
Thunder Bay campus
Event Fee: 
Please contact Student Central for course fees.

SOCJ 5011 FB: Social Justice on the Margins

 
This course delves into the complex and interconnected issues of structural racism, housing insecurity, and health disparities within the Canadian context to critically examine how entrenched systems of power and exclusion profoundly shape the lived realities of individuals experiencing homelessness, with a particular focus on those from racialized and marginalized communities. Emphasis will be placed on unraveling the historical and contemporary conditions that generate and perpetuate inequality including how patriarchy functions to maintain and reproduce men's power within society, and how white supremacy operates to justify and perpetuate racial exploitation.
 
In Person Course
Sept. 2nd December 2nd, 2025.
Tuesdays: 8:30-11:30 am
Instructor: Ashley Wilkinson
 

Social Justice Research Presentations & Beadwork and Maps

Event Date: 
Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - 11:00am to 1:00pm EDT
Event Location: 
RC 1001 and Virtual (Zoom)
Event Fee: 
No cost (this event is free)
Event Contact Name: 
Elaine (SJS Admin)
Event Contact E-mail: 

Please join us in-person (Regional Centre 1001) or via Zoom (link above) for three research presentations prepared by SocJ MA students in the Research Stream: Hilary Rogers (Criminalizing Indigenous Dissent through Discursive Media Accounts: A Critical Discourse Analysis of State and Media Representations of Tyendinaga Mohawk Solidarity Actions); Stefani Woods (Education Reconciliation: Strategic Response to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Calls To Action 62, 63, and 65 from Three Atlantic Canadian Universities); Amber Saville (Exploring the Disordered Eating Experiences of Larger Women and Gender Diverse People).

Maya Oversby (Creative Stream) (Confronting Land Disposition through Kinship and Beadwork) will talk about her work and lead participants in beading maps from 12-1. Participants must be in RC 1001; the interactive component of the Beadwork and Maps will not be available on Zoom, but attendees are welcome to stay online, watch, and interact.

 

Click the link or scan the QR code to join
Join Zoom Meeting /Meeting ID: 932 4885 6673