Becoming Good Relatives

In this one-and-a-half-day retreat, author and speaker Patty Krawec will use Anishinaabe teachings to help participants reflect on their social and individual histories in order to improve their capacity to have difficult conversations with others about Canadian history and current impacts on Indigenous people.

Jan 26 - Jan 27, 2024

Friday, January 26
4:00 - 11:59PM EST

Jericho House
10845 Rathfon Rd.
Port Colborne ON L3K 5V4
Canada

Get directions

Graphically designed image with light tone colours in the background to appear as painted, and the words Becoming Good Relatives Retreat on it. Graphically designed image with light tone colours in the background to appear as painted, and the words Becoming Good Relatives Retreat on it.

About the retreat

The workshop retreat is led by Patty Krawec and based on her book Becoming Kin: Unforgetting the Past and Reimagining the Future.
 
Unforgetting the past is more than learning history. It is deliberately seeking out the stories we were not told and then considering why those stories were withheld. Unforgetting looks for the connections between those things and the world we now live in. Using Anishinaabe teachings and activities that guide participants through reflecting on their own social and individual histories, this one and a half-day workshop invites participants to become the kind of people, churches, and organizations that Indigenous people want to be in relationship with. We take our histories out of isolation and see them as relationships, threads that connect us to people and places including people and events we may not want to claim. To that end, this workshop retreat also invites participants to examine their responsibilities to those unwanted kin, the social movements and structures who claim to be building a country where white Canadians will be safe.
 
Learning goals include increased knowledge of history and how it connects to present circumstances; improved capacity to have difficult conversations with others about Canadian history and current impacts on Indigenous people; and strategies for developing policy and responses that address the causes of harm.
 
Cost: $195.00 per person
 

About the speaker

A woman with glasses sitting at a table and smiling.

Through writing and speaking, Patty Krawec (Anishinaabe/Ukrainian) explores how we might live
differently in the relationships we inherit. She is a co-founder of the Nikinaaganaa Foundation and her book, Becoming Kin, was published in September by Broadleaf Books. Her work, centred on Indigenous identity and thought, has also been published in Sojourners, Rampant Magazine, Midnight Sun, Yellowhead Institute, Indiginews, Religion News Service and Broadview.