Ojibwe land rights activist finally gets her due with new plaque by Xavi Richer Vis Nahnebahnwequay and her community lost their land in a contested 19th-century treaty. She never stopped fighting to get it back.
How Qualicum First Nation woke up its language by Julie Gordon A chief’s dream, an extraordinary historical find and a determined community are stirring pentl’ach out of dormancy
Are controversial monuments making a comeback? by Xavi Richer Vis The return of John A. Macdonald’s statue in Toronto is part of a growing push to restore toppled historical figures
Outgoing United Church moderator Rt. Rev. Carmen Lansdowne reflects on her historic term by Emma Prestwich Lansdowne shares her hopes for a fractured Indigenous Church and the denomination's future
Indigenous resistance doesn’t begin or end at the Canada-U.S. border by Maggie Dieter As Canadians react to cross-border tensions, many Indigenous communities stay focused on more systemic struggles
The growing malaise with ‘Indian Missions’ by David Kim-Cragg What a 1909 Methodist article tells us about church complicity in colonization
The Indigenous United Church: a journey to right relations by Teresa Burnett-Cole Members call for autonomy and healing in a relationship shaped by colonialism
This Vancouver bookstore is more than a business — it’s a platform for justice by Madeline Liao Patricia Massy created Massy Books to reclaim history and speak truth to power, no matter the cost
‘North of North’ tells a story rooted in Inuit joy by Meral Jamal The new comedy series explores Arctic culture, family and resilience in the fictional town of Ice Cove
Tanya Talaga’s new book is her most personal one yet by Alison Tedford Seaweed The award-winning Indigenous journalist uncovers her great-great-grandmother’s residential school story in "The Knowing"