Qui nous sommes

Prononciation : BII-nah-ga-meh

 

L’initiative Biinaagami repose sur la collaboration. Elle réunit des conteurs, leaders autochtones, éducateurs, scientifiques, artistes, cinéastes et agents de changement. Nous nous devons tous de protéger les terres et les eaux du bassin versant des Grands Lacs et du Saint-Laurent.

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Cercle de leadership autochtone

Patrick Madahbee, ancien Chef du Grand Conseil de la Nation anichinabée et conseiller de Biinaagami, dirige la création du Cercle de leadership autochtone de Biinaagami, une alliance des Premières Nations et des tribus du bassin versant des Grands Lacs et du Saint-Laurent.

LINDA DEBASSIGE
LINDA DEBASSIGE
Biinaagami Shared Circle Member

Linda Debassige was born and raised in M’Chigeeng First Nation, where she grew up on the land and is active in the sustainability of Mother Earth. She is a mother to two children and grandmother to one. Linda graduated with honours from Civil Engineering Technology in Thunder Bay and she holds a Certificate in Negotiations from Osgoode Hall Law School. First elected to M’Chigeeng First Nation Council in 2013, Debassige was Chief from 2015-2023. During her tenure within the governance of M’Chigeeng, she participated in numerous portfolios, committees and boards locally, regionally and nationally and across many sectors including but not limited to treaty, infrastructure, water, housing, environment, policing, mental health and addictions, community safety, economic development, education, health, emergency management and community development. Linda is often called upon to provide advice and advocacy for Indigenous communities, organizations and leadership and is known for her strong leadership style, knowledge, dedication and passion for all First Nations People.

Notably, Linda was the first Indigenous Trustee to hold the position of Vice Chair of the Rainbow District School Board. She is a co-lead for the Assembly of First Nations on the co-development of the First Nation Safe Drinking Water and Wastewater Legislation.

WHITNEY GRAVELLE
WHITNEY GRAVELLE
Biinaagami Shared Circle Member

Whitney Gravelle is a citizen of the Bay Mills Indian Community “Gnoozhekaaning” (Place of the Pike) in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. After graduating from Michigan State University College of Law in 2016 with a Juris Doctorate and a certificate from the Indigenous Law Program, Gravelle worked for the Department of Justice with the Environment and Natural Resource Division in the Indian Resource Section, served as Chief Judge of Bay Mills Tribal Court, and again as In-House Counsel for Bay Mills Indian Community. Currently, she serves as President of the Executive Council on behalf of Bay Mills Indian Community and sits as a commissioner on the Michigan Advisory Council on Environmental Justice and the Board of Directors of the Inter-Tribal Council of Michigan. In 2022 Whitney Gravelle was appointed Chair of the Department of the Interior’s first-ever Secretary’s Tribal Advisory Committee (STAC) and in 2023 was appointed to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) new Tribal Advisory Committee.

KAHONTAKWAS DIANE LONGBOAT
KAHONTAKWAS DIANE LONGBOAT
Biinaagami Shared Circle Member

Kahontakwas, Diane Longboat is a member of the Turtle Clan and Mohawk Nation at Six Nations of the Grand River. She is a ceremonial leader, traditional teacher, and knowledge keeper. Diane is founder of Soul of the Mother, a healing and teaching lodge on the shores of the Grand River and founder of First Nations House, Office of Indigenous Student Services and Programs at the University of Toronto.

Diane is a professional educator with a master’s degree in education, and has worked with provincial and national Indigenous organizations in research and policy on education law, jurisdiction and sovereignty. She has advised two provincial Ministers of Education of Ontario on Indigenous education.

Diane is the Elder for CAMH and Senior Manager Strategic Initiatives in the Shkaabe Makwa Centre for First Nations, Inuit and Metis Wellness at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto, Canada’s largest mental health teaching hospital and a global research centre. Diane and her team are advancing systems transformation to improve patient outcomes, including the development of innovative healing models that harmonize traditional knowledge and medical expertise.

Diane is a passionate and collaborative person who works extremely hard to promote a better understanding of Indigenous knowledge systems, peace making and care of Mother Earth, both in Turtle Island, and through her sharing, to contribute to such understanding in other countries also.

PATRICK “Wedaseh” MADAHBEE
PATRICK “Wedaseh” MADAHBEE
Biinaagami Shared Circle Member

Patrick Madahbee is a widely respected leader who has dedicated over 50 years serving his First Nation and many others. He was the chief of Aundeck Omni Kaning (Mnidoo Mnising | Manitoulin Island) for 17 years and previously worked as a councilor for his Nation. Patrick served four terms as Anishinabek Nation Grand Council Chief before announcing his retirement in 2018. In 2020, the Anishinabek Nation Chiefs-in-Assembly appointed Patrick Madahbee as their new Commissioner on Governance. His dedication to the Anishinabek Nation has included numerous leadership positions such as Chairman for the Robinson-Huron Treaty Claim Legal Strategy Team and the Anishinabek/Ontario Fisheries Resource Centre. Patrick’s prior roles include Lake Huron Regional Grand Chief, Ontario Regional Chief and the Tribal Chair of the United Chiefs and Council of Mnidoo Mnising. Patrick was the first Grand Council Chief to co-chair the Great Lakes Guardian Council, alongside Ontario’s Minister of the Environment.

Patrick has served as Manager of Aboriginal Financial Services for TD and as a Regional Sales Manager for the First Nations Bank of Canada. He is the past Vice President of the Native Canadian Centre of Toronto and has held numerous other board positions, including the Ontario First Nations Sovereign Wealth Fund Board of Directors.

Patrick was a top-tier hockey player in his younger years and has been an active volunteer for the Little NHL hockey tournament since its inception 50 years ago. Patrick Madahbee is an inspiration and a role model to Anishinaabeg youth and is committed to improving the health and future for all children.

CHIEF DUNCAN MICHANO
CHIEF DUNCAN MICHANO
Biinaagami Shared Circle Member

Duncan Michano is the Chief of Biigtigong Nishnaabeg, a First Nation whose traditional territory lies on the northern shore of Lake Superior. He has a long political history with the band, having served as Band Councillor and Deputy Chief for over 24 years, holding education, social services and economic development portfolios. Michano earned a Fish and Wildlife diploma at Sir Sanford Fleming and over many years for the Department of Lands and Forests, Ontario Paper, Marathon Paper, and Kimberly Clark in Terrace Bay. Eventually, Michano settled into a job he loved with Parks Canada for over 35 years, serving as the Park Warden at Pukaskwa National Park among other positions.

Duncan is an experienced canoe tripper and guide and has led many wilderness trips over the years with a focus on getting youth out and connected with the land and waters. Michano has three children, nine grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

GHISLAIN PICARD
GHISLAIN PICARD
Biinaagami Shared Circle Member

Ghislain Picard is an Innu from the community of Pessamit, on the north shore of the Saint Lawrence River. Since 1992 he has been the Chief of the Assembly of First Nations Quebec-Labrador (AFNQL), a political organization regrouping 43 Chiefs of the First Nations of Quebec and Labrador. As AFNQL Chief, he sits on the Assembly of First Nations’ Executive Committee and Management Committee and he is the spokesperson for the Comprehensive claims, Urban population and International Issues portfolios. In 2014 Picard was unanimously appointed as the interim National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations (AFN) after the resignation of Chief Shawn Atleo.

Prior to his time as Chief, Ghislain held several leadership roles including media relations for the Conseil Atikamekw Montagnais, and President of the Quebec Native Friendship Center. In 1983, he co-founded the Société de communication atikamekw-montagnais (SOCAM) which broadcasts radio programs in Indigenous languages to all Atikamekw and Montagnais communities. Picard received the National Order of Quebec in 2003 and in 2005 he received the distinguished insignia of Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur from the Consul Général de France. In 2017, the City of Montreal made him an honorary citizen. In 2021 Ghislain became the first Indigenous person to be appointed as Chair of the Board of Trustees for the McCord Stewart Museum in Montreal.

CHIEF KAHSENNEHAWE SKY-DEER
CHIEF KAHSENNEHAWE SKY-DEER
Biinaagami Shared Circle Member

Kahsennenhawe Sky-Deer (Wolf Clan) is the elected Grand Chief of the Mohawk Council of Kahnawà:ke. She was first elected to Council in 2009 and is serving her community in her fifth straight three-year term of office. She was elected as the first ever female Grand Chief in July 2021 making history for Kahnawà:ke.

Grand Chief Sky-Deer’s current areas of focus in her role as Grand Chief are: External Government Relations (Kahnawà:ke/Canada Relations), Nation Building, Border Crossing and Indigenous Relations and Governance (MCK and Community).

Grand Chief Sky-Deer graduated from Vanier College in 1999 before moving to Florida to play women’s professional football. She later graduated with a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Psychology from the University of Central Florida in 2008. She returned to her community of Kahnawà:ke that year and has been living and working in Kahnawà:ke ever since.

Grand Chief Sky-Deer is very passionate about issues pertaining to the protection of inherent rights, the revitalization of the Mohawk Language and the survival of the Cultural Identity of her People. She spoke to the Standing Committee in the hearings for Bill S-3 and warned about the threat this posed to all First Nations People. Grand Chief Sky-Deer is also very interested in creating partnerships and ventures that will help the community develop in economic sustainability, job creation and diverse housing projects.

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Canadian Geographic et Swim Drink Fish

Ensemble, Canadian Geographic et Swim Drink Fish créent des outils de narration pour mettre en lumière les terres et les langues du plus grand système d’eau douce de la planète.

La Société géographique royale du Canada (SGRC) est l’un des plus grands organismes d’éducation bilingue du Canada dans le secteur à but non lucratif. Fondée en 1929, la Société s’efforce de mieux faire connaître le Canada aux Canadiens et au reste du monde. La Société est à la fois créatrice et conservatrice de contenu – elle communique avec les Canadiens par l’intermédiaire des médias imprimés, numériques et sociaux, y compris son magazine phare Canadian Geographic et sa branche éducative, Éducation Can Geo. À l’approche de son 100e anniversaire (2029-2030), la SGRC s’est engagée à renforcer la sensibilisation des Canadiens à l’égard d’une planète plus saine, ce qui constitue l’une de ses principales initiatives pour les dix prochaines années (2020-2030).

Fondé en 2001, Swim Drink Fish est un organisme caritatif canadien enregistré qui s’efforce de rapprocher les gens de l’eau, notamment en passant par la science citoyenne et les technologies de communication. Tout le monde a droit à une eau de qualité suffisante pour se baigner, boire et pêcher. L’un des mandats de Swim Drink Fish est d’apprendre aux gens à surveiller la santé de leurs plans d’eau locaux et de réclamer la protection et la restauration des lieux où ils vivent. Les applications et programmes Web de l’organisme rejoignent 171 communautés dans 11 pays et encouragent les gens à se rendre au bord de l’eau, les reliant ainsi à leurs plans d’eau et à leurs communautés.

Canadian Geographic et Swim Drink Fish ont travaillé en étroite collaboration avec les leaders autochtones, les gardiens du savoir et les locuteurs des langues du bassin versant pour donner un nom à Biinaagami et lancer un mouvement. Biinaagami prendra forme et se développera grâce à l’apport de chaque collaborateur, partenaire, organisme et personne qui y contribuera. Il faut un vaste réseau diversifié pour assurer la protection du bassin versant des Grands Lacs et du Saint-Laurent – et nous ne faisons que commencer.

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