Welcome to CharityVillage Connects – a series that highlights topics vital to the nonprofit sector in Canada. CharityVillage is a resource to over 170,000 charitable and nonprofit organizations in Canada. This series, hosted by President Mary Barroll, will provide in-depth conversations with experts in the nonprofit sector. We’ll examine diversity, equity and inclusion, innovations in fundraising, the gap in female representation in leadership and many other subjects crucial to the growth and development of charities throughout Canada.
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Welcome to Charity Village Connects. I'm your host Mary Barrell.
That's the sound of a hummingbird pollinating our world and making it a better place. The hummingbird is Charity Village's logo because we strive, like the industrious hummingbird, to make connections across the nonprofit sector and help make positive change. Over this series of podcasts, we'll explore topics that are vital to the nonprofit sector in Canada. Topics like diversity, equity and inclusion, mental health in the workplace,
the gap in female representation and leadership, and many other subjects crucial to the sector.
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To mark Canada's fourth annual National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, in this episode, we're checking in with Indigenous non -profit leaders from across the country to hear what they have to say about whether any progress has been made in how the non -profit sector supports, funds, and collaborates with Indigenous -led organizations. When we had received funding from each of the level of government,
There were restrictions. If we're going to give you this much money, then you spend it on these activities. We have always been told what we need, what's good for us, what's best for us, where we should live, how we should live. We take the view that money is medicine for restorative purposes. We welcome you and we welcome individuals also to support us monthly or one time giving as they can.
through this lens of reconciliation. How have you benefited from colonization and how have we as Indigenous folks lost? And so we're really taking this restorative view and trying to break down the transactional relationships that have historically been a part of philanthropy. Philanthropy as a sector is not mentioned in the TRC calls to action, but then we have the declaration.
which is specific to philanthropy. And so these resources provide a roadmap for us. Digging into the resources that exist out there allowed us to get to a place of readiness where it was a natural decision. It was clear from the feedback we heard that this has to be more than just conversations. People wanted to see something substantive. People wanted to see something that was endorsed by the board of directors and senior staff to demonstrate that it had teeth.
and that it was a commitment that United Way was stepping into. I think what really stands out for me was that really profound significant visit by the Pope a of servers ago where he issued this public apology to residential school survivors. It was during this period that the consciousness of the Canadian settler public experienced an awakening to the realities of what Indigenous people across the country have suffered historically.
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and continue to face on a daily basis. That consciousness was heightened by the shocking discovery of unmarked Indigenous graves on former residential school grounds, providing stark evidence to the testimony given by survivors to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which resulted in the 2015 publication of the 94 Calls to Action. But many Indigenous leaders say those calls to action
fell on deaf ears until recently, when the dramatic events of the past few years became instrumental in provoking this growing public awareness and the recognition that more funding and support for Indigenous people is essential. Join us for Charity Village Connects, a continuing series of discussions, ideas, and potential solutions. In this 24th episode in our series, join us for an assessment.
of whether the nonprofit sector has made any progress in how it provides support to Indigenous -led organizations. We'll talk to Indigenous philanthropic leaders as well as settler organizations working with them. To learn more about the services provided by Charity Village, listen to Charity Village Connects wherever you find your favorite podcasts and visit CharityVillage .com.