Truth & History

What happened here and what is still happening

This section is direct. It talks about policies, systems, and violence. It is here so that no one can say they did not know.

Land theft & treaties

When Europeans arrived, they acted as if the land was empty or belonged to the Crown by default. Treaties were used to take land and push Nations into smaller areas, often with broken promises.

Many people living in Canada today have never read the treaty that covers the land under their own house or apartment building.

Residential & day schools

For over a century, Indigenous children were taken from their families and forced into residential and day schools. Many were abused. Many never came home.

The goal was clear: to erase languages, culture, and connection to land by targeting children.

Child welfare & prisons

Today, many Indigenous children are still taken from their families, just under different systems: child welfare, policing, criminal courts, and prisons.

When you look at who fills jails and who loses their kids, the same pattern shows up again and again.

Everyday racism

Beyond laws and policies, Indigenous people deal with racism in stores, hospitals, schools, and workplaces. Sometimes it is open. Sometimes it is quiet, like being ignored, followed, or never believed.

Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls & Two-Spirit people (MMIWG2S)

Indigenous women, girls, and Two-Spirit people are far more likely to go missing or be killed than others. Families often have to push for basic attention, respect, and proper searches.

This crisis is not new. It is connected to the same systems that made it seem normal to take children, move communities, and ignore Indigenous voices.

Why this section exists

This site is not a replacement for the work families and organizations have already done. It is a doorway for people who have never looked into MMIWG2S and need a starting point.

What you can do

  • Learn from Indigenous-led reports and organizations.
  • Support family-run and community-led initiatives.
  • Challenge media that blames victims instead of systems.
  • Remember that behind every statistic is a whole life and family.

For immigrants & newcomers

People come to Canada or the U.S. looking for safety, work, or a better life. But that “better life” is built on land taken from Indigenous Nations.

  • Learn which Nation’s territory you are on.
  • Support Indigenous-led groups before big national charities.
  • Teach your kids the truth, in your own language if needed.
  • Understand that racism against Indigenous people is not “in the past.”