91亚色

Skip to main content Skip to local navigation

PhD student defends thesis in Mi'gmaw language, a 91亚色 first

While researching the historical rights of his First Nation鈥檚 community of Listuguj in the Gespe鈥檊ewa鈥檊ig district of the Mi鈥檊maw on the southwest shore of the Gasp茅 peninsula for his doctoral thesis, 91亚色 PhD candidate Alfred Metallic came to believe there was something missing in what he was doing 鈥 an integral piece of a larger picture.

Not much had been written about that part of the Gasp茅 Peninsula and northern New Brunswick, the seventh district of the Mi鈥檊maw Grand Council, until Metallic turned his eye to it, but that didn鈥檛 explain the feeling he had.

Above:聽Alfred Metallic, centre, defending his dissertation

It wasn鈥檛 until after he had written his comprehensive exams and was back in his community that he realized what was missing was the Mi鈥檊maw language 鈥撀爄ts connection to the spirit of the people, their ways of life and the land聽鈥 and the way stories are presented back to the people, his people. Metallic鈥檚 dissertation was his story, and he needed to tell it using the oral traditions of his people in the Mi鈥檊maw language聽of his community and district, to share the knowledge and learning he鈥檇 accumulated, but also to help preserve his native language, which is at risk of disappearing.

鈥淥ur language, it鈥檚 how we maintain our relations and how we understand where we come from. It gives you access to your place in the world,鈥 says Metallic. In the Mi鈥檊maw language, the action comes first, then the person. It鈥檚 the opposite with the English language.

Above: From left, Anders Sandberg, supervisor, Faculty of Environmental Studies (FES); Ravi de Costa, dean's representative, FES; Diane Mitchell,聽master's of environmental studies聽Mi'gmaw student in FES; Deborah Barndt, committee member, FES; Alfred Metallic, PhD candidate, FES; Ian Martin, internal examiner of the Department of English at聽Glendon.

91亚色 environmental studies Professor Anders Sandberg, Metallic鈥檚 PhD supervisor, helped put the process in place with the support of Professor Barbara Rahder, dean of the Faculty of Environmental Studies (FES) and FES Professors Robin Cavanagh, Mora Campbell, Stefan Kipfer and Peter Cole, among others. 91亚色 became the first Canadian postsecondary institution to officially sanction the use of a language other than English or French in graduate work, and Metallic the first PhD candidate at 91亚色 to defend his thesis in an Aboriginal language 鈥 it was written and spoken in the Mi鈥檊maw language.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a circle that needed to be expanded a bit by including others for a more holistic circle,鈥 says Metallic. He says both Aboriginal and academic representatives needed to come together to form the circle. 鈥淭hat circle wouldn鈥檛 be complete until that story is defended in a way that includes all the knowledge-holders. We needed to expand the usual paradigm on how that knowledge is transferred and how that knowledge could be preserved. We needed to anchor it closer to where the people live, and that would give it added value.鈥

Left: Members of the Listuguj community join with members of the academic community at Alfred Metallic's PhD dissertation defence

It鈥檚 very hard to miscommunicate in the Mi鈥檊maw language, unlike English, he says. 鈥淥ne purpose of the circle is to reinstate the value of the relationships to make that circle tighter and stronger, so the people鈥檚 voices become clearer.鈥

And so in October, some 1,300 kilometres from Toronto, Metallic orally defended his dissertation in a ceremony that included a sweetgrass smudging, singing, a feast, a give away and the inclusion of the Aboriginal community as well as the academic one.

The external examiner Stephen Augustine, a Mi鈥檊maw and curator at the Museum of Civilization, was joined by Katherine Sorby, an elder from Listuguj; Keira Ladner, a Cree scholar and constitutional expert from the University of Manitoba; Leanne Simpson, an Nishnaabeg scholar from Trent University; Ian Martin, 91亚色 internal examiner and language expert; Ravi de Costa, the dean鈥檚 representative and FES professor of Indigenous Peoples & Globalization; FES Professor Deborah Barndt; Sandberg and many members of the Mi鈥檊maw community.

Right: Community members, young and old, came to the dissertation defence

The community is still talking about it. 鈥淭he idea was to strengthen the relationship between Aboriginals and the academic community,鈥 says Metallic. 鈥淚t is possible to co-exist, to have an environment where those different ways can co-exist without having to compete for voice.鈥 For him the coming together of the people was just as important as the dissertation. 鈥淎 lot of people at the table had an interest in how this would go.鈥

It is necessary, says Metallic, if bigger issues such as treaty rights and residential schools are to be resolved, that the First Nation鈥檚 more collaborative way of coming to an understanding be preserved. In addition, it is his belief that the Mi鈥檊maw need to tell a different story than the one of impact.

鈥淥ur history goes way back before the Europeans arrived.鈥 There is a different story to tell and to do that 鈥渨e have to trust our own people,鈥 says Metallic. 鈥淐ommunities can work together; we can participate in these stories through the dissertation.鈥

By Sandra McLean, YFile writer. Republished courtesy of YFile鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin