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Musings on Memory
Memory is never exact or accurate because we all react to things or remember things the way we like or want. Events that happen and words said impact us in different ways. What happens to one person impacts another person in a totally different way. I wish I understood memory and how it works. How…
Read MoreMusings-Telling My Stories
By: Christine Miskonoodinkwe Smith I believe that in my healing journey, I’ve finally been able to sit down, put pen to paper and tell my stories. Stories are an integral part of who we are and who we can be. In telling my stories, I want to give voice to the experiences no one should…
Read MorePoem- Let My Words Bleed
By: Christine Miskonoodinkwe Smith Let my words Bleed From the pages They touch Let the words Seep through The pages And leave Their mark
Read MorePoetry- The Past
By: Christine Miskonoodinkwe Smith Alone, in a corner I sit The tears roll down my face My body shakes with anger My body shakes with the memories of my painful past My stomach is in knots My fists are clenched My screams go unheard Pain shows on my face but the anger is kept on…
Read MoreBETWEEN THE LINES BOOKS RESPONDS TO CALL FROM GERALD STANLEY’S LAWYERS TO HEAR HIS SIDE OF THE STORY: PLEASE READ AND SHARE!
Book Launch
Book Review- Read.Listen.Tell
Review-Read, Listen, Tell Indigenous Stories from Turtle Island Edited by Sophie McCall, Deanna Reder, David Gaertner and Gabrielle L’Hirondelle Hill Reviewed By: Christine Miskonoodinkwe Smith Read, Listen, Tell is an anthology of short stories written by Indigenous authors from all over Turtle Island (North America). Each story told in this compilation are unique in the…
Read MoreNO JUSTICE NO PEACE
Once again a jury has found a white man not guilty of second degree murder. This time of a 15 year old Indigenous girl in Winnipeg-Tina Fontaine. This is the second time in less than two weeks that juries have deliberated and found a white man not guilty of the murder of an Indigenous youth-the…
Read MorePoetry- Standing on Barren Land
Standing On Barren Land By: Christine Miskonoodinkwe Smith Substandard housing Concrete floors These are not Warehouses Yellow lighting Bulbs burnt out Hanging from cords I squint Unseeing Winds whistling through Rushed buildings Down to the foundations Flood prone lands That threaten to Displace Inmates huddled Behind Treaty walls While empowered eyes Dissect and disgrace 2012
Read MoreRacism and Colton Boushie-When Does it Stop
By: Christine Miskonoodinkwe Smith Racism is defined as “the unequal treatment of a population group purely because of its possession of physical or characteristics socially defined as denoting a particular race. Racism is the deterministic belief system which sustains racialism, linking these characteristics with negatively valued social, psychological, or physical traits” (5 Satzewich) Canada is…
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