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Peacebuilders Volunteer Newsletter (December 2019)

by Asad Siddiqui | Dec 15, 2019 | Volunteers

Happy Holidays from the team at Peacebuilders...

Peacebuilders Volunteer Newsletter (November 2019)

by Asad Siddiqui | Nov 15, 2019 | Volunteers

Learn more about what’s happening at...

Peacebuilders Volunteer Newsletter (October 2019)

by Asad Siddiqui | Oct 15, 2019 | Volunteers

Looking back at this month’s Volunteer Appreciation...

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  • In Loving Memory of Ken Lewis
  • Peacebuilders Canada Applauds Bill C-22
  • Celebrating Black History Month at Peacebuilders
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Head Office:

585 Dundas Street East, Suite 300
Toronto, ON M5A 2B7
info@peacebuilders.ca
416-960-0105

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Ontario Court of Justice
311 Jarvis Street
Toronto, ON M4B 2C4
416-960-9778

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Peacebuilders acknowledges that the land in which we live, and work has been the site of human activity since time immemorial. The land in which Peacebuilders organization is located and operates, is the traditional and ancestral territory of the Huron-Wendat, the Seneca and most recently the Mississauga’s of the Credit River. The territory was the subject of the Dish With One Spoon Wampum Belt Covenant and agreement between the Iroquois Confederacy and the Confederacy of the Ojibway and allied nations to peacefully share and care for the resources around the Great Lakes.

We are all treaty people. Many of us, have come here as settlers, immigrants, newcomers in this generation or generations past. We are mindful of broken covenants and we strive to make this right, with the land and with each other, and honour the rights of Indigenous people. As settlers, this recognition must be connected to our collective commitment; to not only acknowledge historical implications of violence and intergenerational trauma that residential schools, broken treaties and practices of colonization has had on the cultural traditions, identities and the lives of indigenous peoples.

We also acknowledge those of us who came here involuntarily, particularly as a result of the Trans-Atlantic Slave trade. And so, we honour and pay tribute to the ancestors of African Origin and descent whom also continue to live the impacts of colonization in solidarity with Indigenous peoples.

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