Indigenous Land-Based Approaches to Well-Being: The Niska (Goose) Harvesting Program in Subarctic Ontario, Canada
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Study Design and Participants
Goose Harvesting (Spring and Summer)
2.3. Data Collection and Analysis
2.3.1. Salivary Cortisol
2.3.2. Photovoice and Semi-Directed Interviews
3. Results
3.1. Salivary Cortisol
3.1.1. Goose Spring Harvest
3.1.2. Goose Summer Harvest
3.2. Semi-Directed Interviews and Photovoice
3.2.1. Goose Harvesting Spring
“I would like to see this continue going… [the] program, you got to do to help the youth out… It’s always going to be good thing if you help somebody not to get hungry… That’s the most important thing… I lived through it, and it got me in trouble… I just moved on, I kept going and I just push myself”.(Participant 20, Elder)
Knowledge
“There’s (name omitted) (Figure 2), he’s a residential school survivor. You learn a lot of things from that guy”.(Participant 16, Youth)
“Where I lack knowledge, I can learn more from an older person”.(Participant 33, Expert)
“Run traditional ceremonies, the whole point is to become a teacher and to maybe one day teach about healing… Maybe one day someone is struggling with drugs or alcohol” .(Participant 16, Youth)
“Living off the land it’s a good thing for everybody cause everything is free out there you don’t have to buy nothing. It’s just up to you to do it… You have to encourage the youth to do that… but they need us at the same time… We need to have them follow us… I don’t know what’s going to happen… Once the government stops feeding us, then who’s going to feed you now? That’s the danger, cause right now we don’t have gardens… Nothing to sustain us for food… if something really happens, we’ll starve” .(Participant 20, Elder)
“You need to teach the young people when you take them out on the land. Sometimes you ask them, it’s so boring they say, but if you start teaching them how to listen… Being there in May, it’s the best time to take the kids out, and all these things are starting to come out… When you come back in June and these things are growing, this will be a medicine… You have to be able to recognize it when it grows… what it looks like when it’s full grown… also recognize it when after it’s done its job… You should be able to say that was the medicine that that I took home and used” .(Participant 3, Elder)
“It’s not like the old days… you can’t really take out the young people anymore because of language barrier… The Elders are passing away. They’re the only ones that speak Cree mostly like 24/7… That’s the first part of the culture cause without language you can’t talk to your Elders, right?” .(Participant 36, Elder, English Translation from Cree)
“I like this thing that’s going on, taking out young people… My dad talks to them and sometimes they understand, but they can’t speak… I’m like a middle person to translate, so it works out perfect” .(Participant 13, Expert)
“Well-being is like practicing your knowledge… then passing it down to someone else. It’s the way you teach somebody… He’s just looking at you… he’ll be able to figure it out… doing things by example eh? If I shoot a caribou and I start gutting it out and if it has a young caribou, then the first thing I do is… remove the young caribou… I take it out and I put it to the side and then I make a peace offering… I don’t say it, I just do that… Later on, I’ll talk about it right… at our tent, I’ll sit around, and I’ll say that I made a peace offering because I took a caribou and released the other spirit… Ever since I can remember our Elders did it… it’s always been done since time memorial, we don’t really know how it began but we still do it today” .(Participant 3, Elder)
Identity
“He did that all his life, trapping and hunting and it was good for his health, and he wouldn’t get sick cause he was always out in the wild, fresh air… He didn’t sit around or anything like that he was pretty active” .(Participant 36, Elder, English Translation from Cree)
“I got it from my old man… Taught me traditional way how to hunt… I was right out there. That’s how I learned… that’s how I mostly survived on, was wild meat, sometimes well store” .(Participant 17, Expert)
“I need hunting to have a good life, to go with our traditional ways… It’s important cause that’s how we lived our life” .(Participant 23, Youth)
3.2.2. Cultural Continuity
“For me… it would be to not get too much involved with… drugs, alcohol, bootlegging… it’s not well-being… Well-being would be go hunting and do your culture stuff… Teach kids how it’s done… Very important in their life if they don’t have that confidence then they’ll seem out of place or they’ll go in the wrong direction” .(Participant 20, Elder)
“Nobody does this anymore… That’s what they did all the time to survive. Go out on the river somewhere and live… That’s what I do for a living eh? Hunt” .(Participant 12, Expert)
“When you have opportunities like this, take it… It’s a good experience, you’ll have fun out there with yourself and maybe with other people, like friends or especially with, family… Being out there you could have good memories” .(Participant 16, Youth)
“There is always opportunities… This program is an opportunity… sometimes you create your own… You wanna help young kids so you teach them something, a life skill for example… Learn it and teach other people and they’re going to continue” .(Participant 3, Elder)
“These young generations. They are not really how I grew up. I was hooked on… hunting, fishing… since my childhood… People are starting to lose interest… We’re in a new century… Everything’s all easy for them. Everything’s all technology now” .(Participant 17, Expert)
“That guy there, he had this there that he can connect online out there… You know sometimes you got to leave your things behind… You’re somewhere else when you do that… you’re not aware of all the surroundings… You’re too busy spending time on them [devices] and you’re not recognizing your medicines” .(Participant 3, Elder)
“When we stopped my dad told me to tell him to put that thing away… his phone… He told me to tell him look around” .(Participant 36, Elder, English Translation from Cree)
Healing
“I’m brand new again, I’m revived… it clears your mind” .(Participant 23, Youth)
“It’s just so calm out there it’s just like an invisible medicine… It’s very healthy for the mind” .(Participant 33, Expert)
“I feel free when I’m out there, but here I kinda feel trapped” .(Participant 6, Youth)
“He’s sitting here the whole time, he’ll get sick… He’d go in the bush and in two days he’d get better… To be healthy, it’s just to go out there” .(Participant 36, Elder, English Translation from Cree)
“Healthwise, to stay active… walking and working, keeping your mind busy” .(Participant 13, Expert)
“What happened in the past it’s still going on today. What happened in residential schools… I don’t know what they were thinking. Trying to get the Indian out of us… We should have more events, more of this kind of thing [the program]” .(Participant 20, Elder)
“They’re (Elders) slowly passing away and not everybody knows the land and the rivers… For the young people you can’t really teach them anymore because of the drugs and alcohol… It clouds their mind” .(Participant 36, Elder, English Translation from Cree)
“Drugs and alcohol when they came, they started messing up our traditional ways” .(Participant 23, Youth)
“We can’t really go out together anymore because of… break and enters… too many drugs and alcohol in the community and one has to look after the fort” .(Participant 13, Expert)
“I don’t plan on going back there to my old life because I struggled a lot with drugs… doing speed made me feel depressed… I actually had three overdoses… Right now I’m on my healing journey… I haven’t done any drugs for over two months now… I didn’t even smoke cigarettes too, so I’ve been cold turkey for two and a half months”(Participant 16, Youth)
Land
“I like it out there, there’s peace and quiet. You’re out there with nature. It’s great being out there… I prefer the land but everything’s kind of here you know” .(Participant 17, Expert)
“That would be one of the best opportunities you could get. Getting wild meat or fish… I went on the boat on the weekend, I came home, and I slept all night… There’s a lot of fresh air out there, and there’s less stress… Your mind is clear… There’s a calmness there… I notice my blood pressure, is kinda high when I’m around here“ .(Participant 33, Expert)
“We can get out of society for a bit and feel better… if you go out for a night or so, you already feel better… I enjoyed it cause I love hunting geese” .(Participant 23, Youth)
3.2.3. Food and Other Resources
“Just look at my stomach man, that’s how I look at it… eating properly, not having an empty stomach… It’s kind of important in my culture. I gotta look at my family… make sure they don’t starve and keep doing that for the whole year” .(Participant 6, Youth)
“It’s good to eat wild meat… Not like from the store, lots of chemicals in there. They can hurt you… Give you diabetes… In the bush it’s free, good water, fresh air” .(Participant 12, Expert)
“You can tell by… the way people want food, and a lot of people at times here are mostly hungry… I can see people getting hungry all before the end of the month maybe before welfare comes. So, to have this kind of thing happening there (the program)… not just geese but caribou hunting, it would be good, fishing and moose hunting” .(Participant 20, Elder)
“There’s a lot of lack of outdoors… like parents taking their kids out camping… to learn their culture, or just to go experience… our traditional ways of life… People are relying on the stores… Nowadays the young generations are more reliant on buying stuff… I want them to know their culture” .(Participant 17, Expert)
“You’re going to harvest animals for your health… If you assist somebody, or if you harvest food and share it with other people (Figure 5) … you’re raising their well-being. They’re happy that you’ve given them something that you harvested… Most Elders will understand that it’s a lot of work when you hunt eh… So, for you to get them and you to share, they show a lot of respect, and they’ll say thank you very much” .(Participant 3, Elder)
“There’s always gonna be barriers… because of the way things are up here… There’s a lot of people who can’t get canoes… Cause there’s a lot of people that don’t work… not much work up here… Most of the people here are on social assistance” .(Participant 33, Expert)
“They don’t really have boats… or people to take them out there” .(Participant 14, Youth)
“They don’t have what they need… a lot of them they wanna go, but then they don’t have anything to use to go. It would be good if it was, the way we were… if they did that with the younger ones, and set them up” .(Participant 20, Elder)
“I was wishing, to make a camp… up the river along the traplines there, or up the trail… We know them by heart… I almost thought of having a bingo one time just to buy skidoos… and toboggans for the kids. I was gonna do that to have fundraising… I’m starting a little bit now with (name omitted). He’s looking after taking the kids out” .(Participant 20, Elder)
4. Discussion
4.1. Health and Well-Being
4.2. Food Security and Environmental Conservation
4.3. Transferability
4.4. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- Q1. What is well-being?
- Q2. What is important for your well-being?
- Q3. Can well-being be measured?
- Q4. Are there barriers to well-being?
- Q5. Are there opportunities to achieving well-being?
- Q6. Does being on the land contribute to well-being?
Theme | Representative Quotes | |
---|---|---|
Knowledge | “I’m doing my best, I’m still out there… That's all I can do… Nobody really communicates now… Nobody wants to pass on anything” (Participant 30, Expert) “It would be good for everybody… these young guys… It's hard to get them off their… cellphones, or their iPods. I didn't see that a long time ago… you'd see them running on the bank, outside… Kids leaving on the canoes with their families on the weekend, go back Friday come back Sunday night. Back to school Monday morning. You don't see that anymore” (Participant 33, Expert) “I try to stay off you know like digital things… I just try to keep my mind sharp” (Participant 13, Expert) “He wants to show them… through action not talking… it's better to do it, because when you do something, you'll remember” (Participant 36, Elder, English Translation from Cree) “There’s a lot of youth in the community that aren't in school, and they don't know what to do with themselves… They need to utilize programs like this one…We take the youth out with us… You teach them a skill, they'll use that skill… They'll start to build their self-esteem… Most youth have poor self-esteem, they don't think of themselves as important and that's what you have to try to address with the young people today” (Participant 3, Elder) | |
Identity | “It makes you feel good… That's what my father did in the past and my grandfather… We been doing this since long time ago” (Participant 4, Youth) “I want to see young people learn the songs from our people from long ago. I want to hear them play the drum, dance… It's important to know who they are. I think that's how we can bring about change especially because there's so many things that they face… like drugs and alcohol… When I grew up it wasn't like that, I didn't really face those things. But I faced a different threat which was staying in residential school. We faced a lot of abuse and so that's why some people are, I guess we can say wounded people… When I first came out residential school, the things I remembered I thought they were just a dream. I didn't know they were real… Until I started hearing stories and I’m thinking, that sounds like the same thing I witnessed, or I remember… I forgot about it for so long, and one day it just came out slowly” (Participant 3, Elder) | |
Cultural Continuity | “As long as you don't lose your grass roots, as long as you know who you are, you can still be that person but still keep your traditions… The way to do that is to orally pass them. You can't write them or record them. It's not gonna work… It's better to hear from your grandfather, or your dad, your uncle, and then you pass it on like that to the next generation and it just keeps going” (Participant 3, Elder) “It's following the culture… Not a lot of people go do that nowadays because of the technology… they don't really wanna follow the culture” (Participant 4, Youth) “By healing yourself through this program, and having more praying too, like smudging, get that involved in there… That's just the way of our religion, our identity… Just the way our lives are… I agreed to get this program up and get it going, it helps a lot” (Participant 20, Elder) | |
Healing | “Need more traditional food than processed… I don't think it's healthy to just be in the village like in the community, nobodies healthy anymore… Out in the bush, nature” (Participant 30, Expert) “To be happy… To go out into the land… There's more stress when you're coming back in the community” (Participant 33, Expert) “Well-being is to stay active, eat healthy, plenty of rest and try not to get sick… Being out there is healthy… I like hunting and walking… You know a lot of walking, less eating, less smoking. I think it did me good being out here… Not only for my body, but for my mind also” (Participant 13, Expert) “To be in good health… It's good for you if you go out in the bay and just feel the life in there… Drinking clean water, fresh air… I feel better over there” (Participant 12, Expert) “Stay focused like don't do stupid things like get drunk or do drugs or even stealing or stuff, like that's not well-being… You can heal yourself from all this… When you go out into the bay, or go out into the bush, it's a healing thing for a lot of us… That's what we basically need… we already have enough food and harvested for the whole year… It's a good thing that this helps out the community because I know a lot of people who get hungry before welfare… It's almost like my life… I didn't have no father, so it's pretty hard but I just got lucky, and I’ve been the bush out trapping, hunting… 35 years I’ve been clean now and no problems nothing, it helps me a lot” (Participant 20, Elder) “The only thing that slowed him down is that he got sick… he caught from here in the community, not from out there… if you stay in the community, you'll get sick, but if you go out there you'll be healthy” (Participant 36, Elder, English Translation from Cree) “There’re some people, their legs are amputated… They can't get out to the land because their sickness… If you can get help, some people help them to get out to the land… My friend (name omitted) he's not going out now… He lost his leg… But he still likes to go” (Participant 33, Expert) “It's also the environment you put yourself in… for people with diabetes, right? If they go in, let's say one of these stores here. There's nothing there eh? All you see is these chips, chocolate bars and everything else right? So, you're diabetic and you walk into an environment like that what are you gonna do? You're gonna buy something. Even though you know it's gonna bring your sugar up… What if the person knew what to use… So these [leaves] are one of the things that they can use… you can pick them off the ground, and you can boil them in water eh… you drink it and then it'll help you with your sugar level, it'll bring down your sugar” (Participant 3, Elder) “I think well-being is like having your life balanced, but there's always the negative stuff and the positive things. So, your life should be positive and sometimes we sort of, there are days where you tip the scale either way. But at the end of the day, it should always be balanced… In yourself both in your mind and all four parts of your aspects… I find it's easy to go out on the land to reach out and recharge eh.” (Participant 3, Elder) | |
Land | “I didn't feel any stress out there… feels better being out there… It's quiet… Just hearing all those geese, music to my ears “ (Participant 19, Youth) “There are times when I can't go out… going out in the bay… The wind is a factor… For the river… you can still go out when it's shallow, but you got to know your channels” (Participant 13, Expert) “Well-being… going out in nature I guess and just enjoying like that… It's pretty peaceful… It just makes you feel good when you're out there” (Participant 4, Youth) “I feel better over there… No noise, you just hear wildlife… Not like over here, it smells bad here, eh? Smells gas, plane, you smell that diesel though” (Participant 12, Expert) “Freedom… no stress… it's peaceful out there… I feel great out there. When I come back home, I feel heavy… I love it out there… keeps my mind busy, keeps you active. Instead of errands, running around, sit in the house, watching TV, Facebook, technology… That's why I go out of town, just to be out there with the nature… Mostly like every day, I try” (Participant 30, Expert) | |
Food and other resources | “Well-being is going out on the land… going out to the bay… I didn't do it as much when I was a kid… If I had the chance…I would probably be out there most of the time, makes me happy” (Participant 33, Expert) “They're losing their tradition… us Natives we go out and get the natural food… Instead of store-bought food like processed food. It's not healthy eating… I’m just hoping that their people should go out like more, teach their young kids… I taught my boys how to… I don't really want to eat that processed food… I know it creates like sickness or diabetes… I just want to encourage everybody to go out and go back to nature and like go back to the land” (Participant 30, Expert) “They don't have any boat to go out, or snowmobiles just to go out in nature… They have no skills, like hunting skills… I hunt all seasons, and nobody seems to follow my steps… Just to join or just to be there you know. They don't wanna do it… I don't know what's stopping them. They feel like maybe ashamed, like they have no skills, like they don't know how to hunt. But I can teach you know? They can observe and learn things… That would be nice” (Participant 30, Expert) “The other barriers is that, some people don't have… the access to take their kids out to the land… We need people to go out hunting and we take the young ones and teach them how to hunt and at the same time we show them things” (Participant 3, Elder) “They don't got no job… They don't they know how to hunt eh? It would be good to hunt. To survive their own selves” (Participant 12, Expert) “Whenever you get out there… it's good to have wild food… The store-bought food like canned foods not good. It's only good for a while but these could sustain most of the day, the wild meat and fish” (Participant 36, Elder, English Translation from Cree) |
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Project | Sample | Descriptives | |
---|---|---|---|
N | Mean ± Standard Deviation (SD) | ||
Goose Spring | Pre | 13 | 6.52 ± 6.67 |
Post | 13 | 7.49 ± 6.23 | |
Goose Summer | Pre | 12 | 8.87 ± 7.56 |
Post | 12 | 6.51 ± 5.91 |
Descriptive Themes | Subthemes | Analytical Themes |
---|---|---|
Knowledge | Learning from others; Sharing knowledge; Leading youth; Language | |
Identity | Being raised in the bush, Feelings of nostalgia | |
Cultural Continuity | More programs needed; Culture to improve well-being; Technology barrier; Systemic barriers | |
Healing | Mental health; Keeping busy and active; Colonization; Substances; Healing; Traditional food; Traditional medicine; Trauma; Spirituality | |
Land | Emotions related to being on the land/community; Geese harvesting | |
Food and Other Resources | Hunting for food and survival; Economic opportunities and challenges; Accessibility food/resources |
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Ahmed, F.; Liberda, E.N.; Solomon, A.; Davey, R.; Sutherland, B.; Tsuji, L.J.S. Indigenous Land-Based Approaches to Well-Being: The Niska (Goose) Harvesting Program in Subarctic Ontario, Canada. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 3686. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043686
Ahmed F, Liberda EN, Solomon A, Davey R, Sutherland B, Tsuji LJS. Indigenous Land-Based Approaches to Well-Being: The Niska (Goose) Harvesting Program in Subarctic Ontario, Canada. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(4):3686. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043686
Chicago/Turabian StyleAhmed, Fatima, Eric N. Liberda, Andrew Solomon, Roger Davey, Bernard Sutherland, and Leonard J. S. Tsuji. 2023. "Indigenous Land-Based Approaches to Well-Being: The Niska (Goose) Harvesting Program in Subarctic Ontario, Canada" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 4: 3686. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043686
APA StyleAhmed, F., Liberda, E. N., Solomon, A., Davey, R., Sutherland, B., & Tsuji, L. J. S. (2023). Indigenous Land-Based Approaches to Well-Being: The Niska (Goose) Harvesting Program in Subarctic Ontario, Canada. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(4), 3686. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043686