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    Press Release

    Manitoba Minister Recognizes Importance of Trapping for Aboriginal Youth

    Ottawa, Ontario, February 10, 2006 - The Honourable Stan Struthers, Manitoba Conservation Minister, attended a meeting in Winnipeg yesterday, in support of the Reconnecting with the Land program for Aboriginal youth, led by the Fur Institute of Canada and the Manitoba First Nations Education Resource Centre. The program is the initiative of ten First Nations communities, education departments and hunting and trapping associations, to reinforce traditional culture and land based activities, through local elders and educators. Subjects include hunting, fishing, trapping, language skills and traditional ecological knowledge.

    Minister Struthers sat in on Working Group discussions and heard about the importance of trapping and hunting to Aboriginal people throughout Manitoba, and concerns about the lack of traditional skills being passed on to youth. Bailey Colon, former Chief of Bunibonibee Cree Nation, stated, "This program is very important for our youth and for the cultural survival of our people."

    Strong support has been received for the development of provincially recognized curriculum models that can be used by communities, from Manitoba First Nations communities and from Minister Struthers, the Honourable Eric Robinson, Minister of Culture, Heritage and Tourism, and the Honourable Oscar Lathlin, Minister of Aboriginal and Northern Affairs. Minister Struthers stated, "It is my belief that this alternative land based learning curriculum will provide an excellent education tool for Manitoba youth." He went on to say, "The program will serve to enhance participation in traditional activities related to the harvesting of natural resources, as well as increase ecological awareness."

    Noting the Fur Institute of Canada's three years of experience developing programs in the Northwest Territories for at-risk youth, Executive Director Rob Cahill said, "The program is based on respect. Respect for self, family, elders, peers, the community and the land." He added, "We have witnessed remarkable changes in kids, where a local elder is the teacher and the environment is used as a classroom."

    The Fur Institute of Canada, a national non-profit organization based in Ottawa, was established in 1983 on the initiative of the Federal, Provincial and Territorial Wildlife Ministers. Its overall mission is to promote the sustainable and wise use of Canada's fur resources.

    For more information, please contact:

    Robert B. Cahill, Executive Director, Fur Institute of Canada
    130 Slater Street, Suite 605, Ottawa Ontario K1P 6E2
    (613) 231-7099 x 226
    Additional Information for Editors:

    The members of the Reconnecting with the Land Working Group in Manitoba are:

    Dean Berezanski, Manitoba Conservation
    Billy Joe Flett, St. Theresa Point First Nation
    Stu Jansson, Manitoba Trappers Association
    Gabriel Hart, Chief, Bunibonibee Cree Nation
    Ed Hudson. Poplar River First Nation
    Don McCaskill, Frontier School Division
    Garry Robson, Manitoba Education
    Greg Sadowski, Norway House
    Ron Spence, Nisichawayasihk Cree Nation
    Mike Sutherland, Peguis First Nation
    Alister Weeneusk, Bunibonibee Cree Nation
    James Wilson, Joe A. Ross School, Opaskwayak
    Bailey Colon, Bunibonibee Cree First Nation
    Florence Paynter, Manitoba First Nations Education Resource Centre
    Elizabeth Cundill, Fur Institute of Canada

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