
07/01/2025
Today is July 1st. Canada Day.
But for many of us, it’s not a celebration. It’s a remembering.
Today, I don’t wave a flag. I light a fire.
I don’t sing an anthem. I offer to***co.
I don’t wear red and white. I wear the colors of my ancestors — earth, blood, bone, and sky.
Because before there was a Canada, there were Nations.
Nehiyawak, Anishinaabeg, Haudenosaunee, Dene, Inuit, Tlingit, Mi’kmaq, and so many more — Peoples of the land, the stars, and the stories. We had laws. We had languages. We had lifeways that nourished body and spirit long before any Queen ever drew a line on a map.
So when they call today “Canada Day,”
I hear the echo of Treaties misunderstood and misused.
I hear the cries of children who never came home.
I hear the silence of stolen tongues, and the roar of rivers dammed without consent.
But I also hear the drum.
The drum that keeps beating. The languages returning. The grandmothers teaching. The youth rising. The sovereignty that never left — just forced underground for a time, like roots waiting for the thaw.
Today, I remember the ones who survived. The ones who resisted. The ones who carried the lodges, the pipes, the songs — even when it was forbidden. And I honour those still fighting for clean water, for land back, for truth, for justice, for our rightful place.
Let others have their fireworks.
We’ll have our sacred fires.
Ekosi.
—Kanipawit Maskwa
John Gonzalez
Standing Bear Network
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