National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.
National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.
Here are twelve volumes of Indigenous nonfiction I recommend to you on this first National Day For Truth and Reconciliation. I‘ll tag each title in the comments.
I thought this would be a dry slog. I was very wrong. The writing is engaging & the content is immensely enlightening. I‘m so glad that my friend Kathy agreed to buddy read this with me. The summary volume gives a good grounding in the complex ways residential schools have continued to affect Canada‘s Indigenous peoples. I now understand what reconciliation means & feel better equipped to speak up when I encounter racism in my daily life.
#CanadaDay
I am so sorry.
Articles from the UK Guardian newspaper.
#JulyJourneys
@Eggs @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks
Current buddy read with @KathyR — I‘m glad to be finally getting to this, which I‘ve been meaning to read since the report was released in 2015. It helps to have a reading buddy for difficult material that makes me sad or angry or both. #Indigenous
A must-read for everyone who lives in Canada. This lengthy summary of the TRC‘s final report is aimed at the general public, so there‘s little legalese. The uncredited writers lay out their findings and Calls To Action in plain language, with frequent input from from Survivors, relevant experts, and honorary witnesses. It‘s not an easy read. It‘s an essential one.
This week's library haul includes essential reading for all Canadians and a couple of cookbooks.
I wish I'd taken a better look at the cookbooks before I checked them out. CUT THE SUGAR isn't a baking book like I thought, and while the other should give me a rough idea of what this whole keto thing is about, my cursory look revealed a LOT of expensive recipes. Massive amounts of nuts and suchlike. I can't afford to eat like that.
Please remember that today is Orange Shirt Day. There's a ton of books out there about the history of residential schools and by Indigenous authors.