"Moose Factory is My Home": MoCreebec's Struggle for Recognition and Self-Determination

This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of MoCreebec people from the early Twentieth Century to the present. As Euro-Canadian hunters came onto the James Bay Cree territory and depleted the beaver population, and the Canadian state failed to pro...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kimura, Kota
Other Authors: Westman, Clinton, Waldram, James, Natcher, David, Beaty, Bonita
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: University of Saskatchewan 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10388/7382
id ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/7382
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK
op_collection_id ftusaskatchewan
language unknown
topic Indigenous peoples
treaties
land claims
and boundaries
spellingShingle Indigenous peoples
treaties
land claims
and boundaries
Kimura, Kota
"Moose Factory is My Home": MoCreebec's Struggle for Recognition and Self-Determination
topic_facet Indigenous peoples
treaties
land claims
and boundaries
description This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of MoCreebec people from the early Twentieth Century to the present. As Euro-Canadian hunters came onto the James Bay Cree territory and depleted the beaver population, and the Canadian state failed to provide adequate services to the Cree people, many Cree in the coastal area had no choice but to migrate to places where they could survive. Some of them moved from Quebec to Moose Factory, Ontario to find employment and receive medical attention from the regional hos-pital. These are the circumstance that led to the creation of Tent City where many of the MoCree-bec members lived. This thesis also looks at how the creation and enforcement of boundaries by the Canadian state have divided the Cree people by drawing on theories by authors such as Toby Morantz, Frederik Barth, and Glen Coulthard. The federal government deliberately excluded the Quebec Cree from Treaty 9 as the Quebec government pursued its own policy on Native people in the province and did not recognize Aboriginal rights. As a result, the Cree in Ontario received better service from the federal government while the Cree in Quebec lived in substandard housing. But things changed dramatically with the signing of the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement in 1975. By the 1980s, the Cree in Quebec had a far more advanced housing program and public infrastruc-ture than any other Indigenous communities in the region. The agreement subsequently became a role model for comprehensive land claims and self-government agreements in Canada. However, the Quebec Cree in Moosonee and Moose Factory were neither consulted nor invited to participate in the negotiation process because of their residency in Ontario. Section 3.2.7 of the agreement also limited the distribution of beneficiary rights to those residing in the agreement’s designated boundaries. Living conditions in Tent City remained substandard and social problems like alco-holism and inter-personal violence became rampant while their counterparts in Quebec enjoyed relative prosperity. As they had no recognized status as a band and received no government assis-tance, the MoCreebec people were forced to organize themselves and stand on their own feet. In the following decades, they successfully developed various entrepreneurial projects like Cree Village Ecolodge and Moose River Broadcasting Association to support themselves finan-cially. They have also experimented with the Clan Councils system as a model of governance al-ternative to the Indian Act-sanctioned band councils system, which they saw as a model more con-sistent with the traditional Cree governance. Through these projects, the MoCreebec people fos-tered self-sufficiency, which they saw as the core of Cree identity. However, despite their suc-cesses, Section 3.2.7 still bars them from accessing the benefits of the agreement. The section par-ticularly affects the young people as they are often forced to suspend their study and relocate to Quebec in order to reinstate their beneficiary status. The MoCreebec people are also seen as out-siders by both the Cree in Quebec and their Moose Cree neighbours because of their residence in Moose Factory as well as their lack of status in Ontario. In response, the MoCreebec people have persistently asserted their claim to Moose Factory as part of an undivided Cree homeland. I be-lieve my thesis will make a particular contribution to the James Bay literature through its critical analysis of the JBNQA and the impact of territorial boundaries on James Bay Cree and Indigenous Peoples in general.
author2 Westman, Clinton
Waldram, James
Natcher, David
Beaty, Bonita
format Thesis
author Kimura, Kota
author_facet Kimura, Kota
author_sort Kimura, Kota
title "Moose Factory is My Home": MoCreebec's Struggle for Recognition and Self-Determination
title_short "Moose Factory is My Home": MoCreebec's Struggle for Recognition and Self-Determination
title_full "Moose Factory is My Home": MoCreebec's Struggle for Recognition and Self-Determination
title_fullStr "Moose Factory is My Home": MoCreebec's Struggle for Recognition and Self-Determination
title_full_unstemmed "Moose Factory is My Home": MoCreebec's Struggle for Recognition and Self-Determination
title_sort "moose factory is my home": mocreebec's struggle for recognition and self-determination
publisher University of Saskatchewan
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10388/7382
long_lat ENVELOPE(-80.616,-80.616,51.267,51.267)
ENVELOPE(-81.281,-81.281,50.810,50.810)
geographic Canada
Indian
Moose Factory
Moose River
geographic_facet Canada
Indian
Moose Factory
Moose River
genre Moose River
Moosonee
James Bay
genre_facet Moose River
Moosonee
James Bay
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10388/7382
TC-SSU-7382
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spelling ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/7382 2023-05-15T17:13:15+02:00 "Moose Factory is My Home": MoCreebec's Struggle for Recognition and Self-Determination Kimura, Kota Westman, Clinton Waldram, James Natcher, David Beaty, Bonita 2016-08-05T16:22:38Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10388/7382 unknown University of Saskatchewan http://hdl.handle.net/10388/7382 TC-SSU-7382 Indigenous peoples treaties land claims and boundaries Thesis text 2016 ftusaskatchewan 2022-01-17T11:53:12Z This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of MoCreebec people from the early Twentieth Century to the present. As Euro-Canadian hunters came onto the James Bay Cree territory and depleted the beaver population, and the Canadian state failed to provide adequate services to the Cree people, many Cree in the coastal area had no choice but to migrate to places where they could survive. Some of them moved from Quebec to Moose Factory, Ontario to find employment and receive medical attention from the regional hos-pital. These are the circumstance that led to the creation of Tent City where many of the MoCree-bec members lived. This thesis also looks at how the creation and enforcement of boundaries by the Canadian state have divided the Cree people by drawing on theories by authors such as Toby Morantz, Frederik Barth, and Glen Coulthard. The federal government deliberately excluded the Quebec Cree from Treaty 9 as the Quebec government pursued its own policy on Native people in the province and did not recognize Aboriginal rights. As a result, the Cree in Ontario received better service from the federal government while the Cree in Quebec lived in substandard housing. But things changed dramatically with the signing of the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement in 1975. By the 1980s, the Cree in Quebec had a far more advanced housing program and public infrastruc-ture than any other Indigenous communities in the region. The agreement subsequently became a role model for comprehensive land claims and self-government agreements in Canada. However, the Quebec Cree in Moosonee and Moose Factory were neither consulted nor invited to participate in the negotiation process because of their residency in Ontario. Section 3.2.7 of the agreement also limited the distribution of beneficiary rights to those residing in the agreement’s designated boundaries. Living conditions in Tent City remained substandard and social problems like alco-holism and inter-personal violence became rampant while their counterparts in Quebec enjoyed relative prosperity. As they had no recognized status as a band and received no government assis-tance, the MoCreebec people were forced to organize themselves and stand on their own feet. In the following decades, they successfully developed various entrepreneurial projects like Cree Village Ecolodge and Moose River Broadcasting Association to support themselves finan-cially. They have also experimented with the Clan Councils system as a model of governance al-ternative to the Indian Act-sanctioned band councils system, which they saw as a model more con-sistent with the traditional Cree governance. Through these projects, the MoCreebec people fos-tered self-sufficiency, which they saw as the core of Cree identity. However, despite their suc-cesses, Section 3.2.7 still bars them from accessing the benefits of the agreement. The section par-ticularly affects the young people as they are often forced to suspend their study and relocate to Quebec in order to reinstate their beneficiary status. The MoCreebec people are also seen as out-siders by both the Cree in Quebec and their Moose Cree neighbours because of their residence in Moose Factory as well as their lack of status in Ontario. In response, the MoCreebec people have persistently asserted their claim to Moose Factory as part of an undivided Cree homeland. I be-lieve my thesis will make a particular contribution to the James Bay literature through its critical analysis of the JBNQA and the impact of territorial boundaries on James Bay Cree and Indigenous Peoples in general. Thesis Moose River Moosonee James Bay University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK Canada Indian Moose Factory ENVELOPE(-80.616,-80.616,51.267,51.267) Moose River ENVELOPE(-81.281,-81.281,50.810,50.810)