Laurie • The Baking Bookworm's Reviews > All Our Relations: Finding the Path Forward
All Our Relations: Finding the Path Forward
by
Tanya Talaga is an Anishinaabe author and journalist whose fight for Indigenous inclusion, acknowledgement and truth is well known in Canada. I read her previous book Seven Fallen Feathers a few years ago and decided to listen to this audiobook which was offered on Audible.ca.
This heartbreaking and candid lecture, which was part of her 2018 Massey Lecture series, describes the suicide epidemic within our Indigenous population - now the leading cause of death in Canadian First Nation communities. As Talaga shows, it is prevalent not only among Canadian Indigenous youth, but within many other Indigenous communities across the world.
At the heart of this suffering is the impact of colonialism, the genocide of Indigenous peoples and the horrific abuse Indigenous children suffered at the hands of their government and religious institutions at residential schools. Talaga provides many stats and facts, which sometimes became a bit overwhelming, but the content is important and heartbreaking.
This lecture should be considered a starting point for people to learn more about the issues facing our Indigenous peoples. We cannot move forward without acknowledgement of what has happened. It was only last week that the Pope finally acknowledged the Catholic Church's part in Indigenous residential schools. It's a good start - a baby step, but unless it is followed up by real action (*ahem, Canadian government) and justice for our Indigenous peoples, I fear little will change.
This 5-hour lecture is not an easy listen, but Talaga's passion and knowledge of the issues are clear. I come away from this audiobook, narrated by the author, with a better understanding of how colonialism has impacted the globe and encourage people to listen to it and consider it a first step in understanding the long-lasting impact of colonialism on Indigenous peoples around the world.
by
Laurie • The Baking Bookworm's review
bookshelves: audiobook, canadian, indigenous, non-fiction
Apr 05, 2022
bookshelves: audiobook, canadian, indigenous, non-fiction
Tanya Talaga is an Anishinaabe author and journalist whose fight for Indigenous inclusion, acknowledgement and truth is well known in Canada. I read her previous book Seven Fallen Feathers a few years ago and decided to listen to this audiobook which was offered on Audible.ca.
This heartbreaking and candid lecture, which was part of her 2018 Massey Lecture series, describes the suicide epidemic within our Indigenous population - now the leading cause of death in Canadian First Nation communities. As Talaga shows, it is prevalent not only among Canadian Indigenous youth, but within many other Indigenous communities across the world.
At the heart of this suffering is the impact of colonialism, the genocide of Indigenous peoples and the horrific abuse Indigenous children suffered at the hands of their government and religious institutions at residential schools. Talaga provides many stats and facts, which sometimes became a bit overwhelming, but the content is important and heartbreaking.
This lecture should be considered a starting point for people to learn more about the issues facing our Indigenous peoples. We cannot move forward without acknowledgement of what has happened. It was only last week that the Pope finally acknowledged the Catholic Church's part in Indigenous residential schools. It's a good start - a baby step, but unless it is followed up by real action (*ahem, Canadian government) and justice for our Indigenous peoples, I fear little will change.
This 5-hour lecture is not an easy listen, but Talaga's passion and knowledge of the issues are clear. I come away from this audiobook, narrated by the author, with a better understanding of how colonialism has impacted the globe and encourage people to listen to it and consider it a first step in understanding the long-lasting impact of colonialism on Indigenous peoples around the world.
Sign into Goodreads to see if any of your friends have read
All Our Relations.
Sign In »
Reading Progress
March 25, 2022
–
Started Reading
March 25, 2022
– Shelved
March 25, 2022
– Shelved as:
non-fiction
March 25, 2022
– Shelved as:
indigenous
March 25, 2022
– Shelved as:
canadian
March 25, 2022
– Shelved as:
audiobook
March 25, 2022
–
25.0%
March 26, 2022
–
60.0%
March 28, 2022
–
Finished Reading