Healing Circle at Xaxli’p First Nations

Please join us for an afternoon of healing and women’s empowerment

HEALING CIRCLE at Xaxli’p First Nations

Presented by Battered Women’s Support Services Brandy Kane and Angela Marie MacDougall would like to invite women from the community to a healing circle. Let’s spend some time together to reflect on what is important in our community and how we can achieve the healing that needs to take place. Learn by coming together supporting one another and breaking the cycles of violence.

APRIL 14 2014 • 2 – 5 pm*
At Xaxli’p First Nations
Contact Barb at 250-256-4800 to register
* Food to follow

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To learn more about BWSS Indigenous Women’s Program, please visit this page.

Elder Women’s Support Circle

Elder Women’s Support Circle

We invite Elder Indigenous women to join us for this 10 session support circle.

10 Week Closed Group

Every Monday, Mar 3rd to May 5th, 2014 • 12:00 to 2:30 pm

The sessions will close with a blanketing ceremony and feast to show our respect for the women’s contributions to the group.

In the group, women will:
• Create a space where they can share their traditional knowledge and skills
• Explore topics such as self-esteem, healing from trauma, and traditional plant and herb lore
For more information and/or to join the group, please call 604-687-1867 ext. 308 or email buffie@bwss.org.

Elder support Circle

You can download the poster here.

To learn more about BWSS Indigenous Women’s Program, please visit this page.

Intrinsic to women’s empowerment, support groups at BWSS are made possible with the financial contributions from people like you.

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Sisters’ Circle: Healing the Grief with the Medicine Wheel

Sisters’ Circle: Healing the Grief with the Medicine Wheel 

Closed Group for Indigenous Women and Girls
8 Weeks, Every Friday • Feb 21 to Apr 11

In the group, women will:

  • Create a traditional medicine wheel to work with
  • Learn the teachings
  • Assess their strengths/challenges
  • Connect to the grounding energy of Mother Earth and each other
  • Identify their collective wounding experiences
  • Acknowledge the grief from traumatic/wounding experiences and that of our ancestors, family members that has been passed on
  • Practice using the tools we acquire

The group is starting on Friday, February 21st, 2014 and will be held from 12:30 to 2:30 pm at BWSS office or in nature when weather permits.

The Medicine Wheel can be a powerful tool we can call upon to assess the influences and/or challenges affecting us on a mental, emotional, physical and spiritual level at any given time throughout our life cycle.

In order to be respectful of ceremony and the process of each woman that enters the circle, this will be a small closed group. A requirement will be an openness and willingness to honour the interconnectedness of “all my relations”.

For more information and/or to join the group, please call 604.687.1867 or email terriea@bwss.org.

BWSS Sisters' CircleYou can download the poster here.

To learn more about BWSS Indigenous Women’s Program, please visit this page.

Intrinsic to women’s empowerment, support groups at BWSS are made possible with the financial contributions from people like you.

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BWSS Indigenous Women’s Program

by Thunder Eagle Woman, Brandy Kane, Manager of Indigenous Women’s Program

The Indigenous Women’s Program at Battered Women’s Support Services would like to acknowledge the unceded traditional territories of the Coast Salish People, and the Squamish, Tsawwassen, Musqueam , and the Tsleil-Waututh First Nations.

I would like to take this opportunity to introduce myself, my ceremonial name is Thunder Eagle Woman and my colonial name is Brandy Kane. My family comes from Lillooet, BC, which is in St’at’imc territory.

BWSS Indigenous Women’s Program (IWP)offers direct services through Elders, Ceremonial people, Talking Circles, a Women’s hand drum group, and   Pipe ceremony, Sweat Lodge ceremony, cold-water baths, and Grandmother Moon ceremonies to our Indigenous sisters accessing our services, as a way of healing. We also offer Stopping the Violence counselling, outreach, crisis intervention and a variety of support groups.

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Without the legacy of residential school, colonization, and assimilation Indigenous people would have healthy relationships with their families, connection with their culture, land and knowledge of their language. They may not have experienced complex trauma such as sexual abuse, family violence, and alcohol and drug addiction. These abuses have had a profound effect on our people. It has been said that it will take seven generations to heal the damage that has been done, and we are coming into that seventh generation now.

Culture, tradition, and ceremony are a huge part of the IWP at BWSS. It is extremely important that we use wholistic practices using decolonizing and reclaiming practices that I know work for our people. The healing that takes place in a ceremony you can’t find in an office. The spirit that comes into the ceremony isn’t something you can get from a one-hour session alone. Ceremony is important to the healing process of Indigenous people and their connection to the spirit and Mother Earth. Additionally, we implement the four quadrants of the Medicine Wheel, looking at the physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual aspects of healing. We also follow the 7 sacred principles, fortitude, humility, courage, honesty, gratitude, generosity and respect. An Indigenous wholistic healing practice is what work for Indigenous peoples and implement a sense of identity. Reclaiming Indigenous ways is how we are going to recover as individuals, families, and nations.

We as women are reclaiming our identity by attending ceremonies, learning about roles, and taking our place on the female side.  There are certain roles that women have at ceremony and in life. Women are honoured and recognized for these roles and this is shown in the teachings around the significance of women wearing skirts at ceremonies.   The skirt represents the hoop of life and our connection to Mother Earth. Women have a special bond with Mother Earth and our relationship to nature is sacred. It is very important to pass these values on to our children and youth.  Our mother, the Earth, takes care of us; she nourishes our body mind and spirit. In turn, we give her the highest respect.

Building a sense of identity, community, and belonging is a goal of the IWP. We, as a community, need to heal together. We need to be able to take care of our children, of our Elders, and of ourselves. These are just some of the teachings and ceremonies that are implemented into the programming at BWSS.

In the Spirit of Healing,

Thunder Eagle Woman, Brandy Kane

Learn more about the Indigenous Women’s Program here.

 

Battered Women’s Support Services responded to over 10,000 crisis calls from women and girls to get help and end violence in 2012. We could not provide this essential support without your contribution.

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The Truth about the “Truth and Reconciliation Process”

by Terriea Harris, BWSS Indigenous Women’s Outreach Counsellor

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She was taken by Indian Agents from her community and put on a bus towards a destination unknown. Upon arrival, her hair was cut, her traditional clothes changed to a generic uniform, she is forbidden to speak her language, sing her songs or deal with the abuse by the hands of priest sand nuns.  As she recounts  her story, a camera shines its glaringly bright lights, while another media camera weaves in and out amongst the witnesses, zooming in for a close ups of reactions to the horrific details she shares.  She gets to the part where she speaks of the ongoing impact of the abuse she endured and breaks down, crying uncontrollably.  I cannot hold in my tears any longer, watching an elder’s body physically collapse to the point where she needs to be held up by supporters is too much too bear.  A woman comes over and asks for my tissue with my tears in it; the tissues are to be burned in the sacred fire. The tears keep flowing and I acknowledge that my sadness is only secondary to my anger.

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As some have argued, it should not be the responsibility of survivors to educate the rest of society of the institutionalized abuse and neglect they experienced because of racist, colonial, governmental policies executed by the church. While, the Indigenous Women’s Program at BWSS was present at the Truth and Reconciliation events held at the Pacific National Exhibition, it was not without reservation as to how the “retelling”- done in a way that more resembled “reliving” of the traumatic experience- could be re-victimizing for residential school survivors.

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Being mindful of the potential impact for re-victimization, the Indigenous Women’s Program (IWP) was present throughout the events to support.  We integrated traditional healing modalities such as smudging with the opportunity for women survivors to connect one-on-one throughout the 4 days.  Women that access the IWP program at BWSS, as well as, women that access BWSS’ Women’s Safety and Outreach Program expressed gratitude to be able to smudge or connect whenever needed.

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As the Indigenous Women’s Outreach Counsellor, part of my work is to connect with women from the Downtown Eastside (DTES) Community.  Indigenous women are overrepresented in the community. When we analyze Indigenous Women’s experience in the context of the collective trauma experienced as a result of Colonization and its ongoing racist power over mandate, we have a population of women and girls that are constantly being “overlooked” thereby, making them vulnerable to predators.  I believe this is why some of the women that I connect with shared that they found the truth and reconciliation process to be a positive experience. .  For 4 days, during The Truth and Reconciliation, women did not have to justify coping with substances or justify the reasons why she engages in survival sex work or be asked about the pattern of abusive relationships.

Indigenous women and girls of the DTES community experience violence and abuse at disproportionate rates.  When women of the community engage with our Women’s Safety and Outreach Program as to what their needs are, violence is too often viewed as “the norm”, therefore, support around her experience of violence is minimized in favour of getting her basic needs met such as housing and food. During the TRC, the spotlight was on her experience of racist Colonial practices of the residential school system and the impact it has on her today. She was given space to feel as though she would not be judged or blamed for her experience, rather her experience could potentially be understood and facilitate a dialogue within the context of Colonial practices.

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             This space to be “listened to” and to “not be judged” is of a high priority for all the programming we engage in at BWSS, but is fundamental to the Women’s Safety and Outreach Program. In this program, we engage with women where they are at- literally and figuratively.  We recognize the many intersecting oppressions that women of the community are navigating. We provide services that are low barrier and survivor-centric. During the Truth and Reconciliation, the IWP collaborated with The Women’s Safety and Outreach Program (WSAOP), to ensure that support services were available both day and evening. Some women shared that they needed to be in nature, and the WSAOP accompanied them to Stanley Park where they could have time to reflect on the day’s events.

 

Last year, Battered Women’s Support Services responded to over 10,000 crisis calls from women and girls to get help and end violence. We could not provide this essential support without your contribution.

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Women Elders Lunch

Battered Women’s Support Services Indigenous Women’s Program cordially invites Women Elders to a luncheon

Monday, October 21st 2013

from 12 to 2pm

We would like to hear your thoughts on what resources are needed for health and healing. We want to design a program for women elders that addresses the heart, body, mind, and spirit. We need your input!

BWSS Women's Elder Luncheon

For registration contact Brandy at 604-652-1867 ~ seating is limited. Lunch will be prepared.

BWSS Indigenous Women’s Program

A Direct Services Program for Indigenous Women who have experienced violence and/or abuse to heal from trauma of colonization, the effects and intergenerational effects of residential school.

More about BWSS Indigenous Women’s Program:

Indigenous Women’s Program

Wildflower Women of Turtle Island Drum Group

Sister’s Empowerment Talking Circle