Join Quill Christie-Peters for this overview of settler colonialism on Turtle Island, with a focus on what reconciliatory practices can look like for organizations.
Quill Christie-Peters is an Anishinaabe educator and self-taught visual artist currently residing in Northwestern Ontario. She is the founder and director of the Indigenous Youth Residency Program, an artist residency for Indigenous youth that engages land-based creative practices through Anishinaabe artistic methodologies. She holds a Masters degree in Indigenous Governance on Anishinaabe art-making as a process of falling in love and sits on the board of directors for Native Women in the Arts. Her written work can be found in GUTS Magazine and Tea N’ Bannock and her visual work can be found at @raunchykwe.
This discussion is part of Confronting Colonization: The work before the work – a community project hosted by 10C
Through this project we are looking to improve access to resources, perspectives and learning opportunities to support settler-led organizations in addressing colonial underpinnings in their organizations.