Land acknowledgement explained

A land acknowledgement or territorial acknowledgement is a formal statement that acknowledges the original Indigenous Peoples of the land, spoken at the beginning of public events. The custom of land acknowledgement is a traditional practice that dates back centuries in many Indigenous cultures.[1]

By country

Australia

In Australia, the Welcome to Country or Acknowledgement of Country is a ritual performed which is intended to highlight the cultural significance of the surrounding area to a particular Aboriginal Australian or Torres Strait Islander clan or language group. It has been performed since the 1970s, becoming more common since the early 2000s.[2] Significantly, a Welcome to Country must be performed by a Traditional Owner/Custodian of the land that you are currently on. It is important as a rejection of the colonial idea of terra nullius, which was overturned by the Mabo decision in 1992.[3] [4]

Canada

In Canada, land acknowledgments became more popular after the 2015 Truth and Reconciliation Commission report (which argued that the country's Indian residential school system had amounted to cultural genocide) and the election of a Liberal majority led by Justin Trudeau that same year.[5] By 2019, they were a regular practice at events including National Hockey League games, ballet performances, and parliament meetings.

United States

In the United States, the practice of land acknowledgments has been gaining momentum as well.[6] Early adopters included arts institutions, museums, institutions of higher education, non-profit organizations, local governments, and churches.[6] After the 2020 Oscar land acknowledgment statement by Taika Waititi,[7] [8] the practice has received more attention, both positively[9] and negatively.[10] Native Governance Center has resources on the topic of land acknowledgment,[11] [12] as do a number of sites geared toward colleges and universities.[13] [14]

New Zealand

In New Zealand, land acknowledgments recognize the indigenous Māori and Moriori peoples. Māori words are commonly used in greetings of public speakers, acknowledgments of publications, and legislation to recognize their presence.[15] [16] Usage of Māori place names before English place names similarly acknowledges Māori relations with the place.[17] In 2022, Te Pati Māori delivered a petition with 70,000 signatures to the New Zealand Parliament which called to change the country's official name to its Māori name, Aotearoa.[18]

Criticism

Land acknowledgements have been criticized by both conservatives, who have described them as excesses of political correctness, and by those on the political left, who have expressed concerns that land acknowledgements amount to empty gestures that avoid addressing the issues of Indigenous communities in context. Ensuring the factual accuracy of acknowledgments can be difficult due to problems like conflicting land claims or unrecorded land exchanges between Indigenous nations.

Graeme Wood has argued that a land acknowledgement delivered in any context besides the actual return of land is nothing more than a "highwayman's receipt", "moral exhibitionism", and "a counterfeit version of respect", and that such statements should be limited to occasions "that preserve their dignity and power".[19] To argue that genuine reconciliation requires the return of stolen land, Cutcha Risling Baldy has drawn an analogy between a land acknowledgement and a thief who steals a laptop, refuses to give it back to the true owner, and then attaches a plaque to publicly admit his crime, so that every time he uses the laptop in public, everyone will know that it used to be the victim's computer—which is cold comfort to the victim.[20] Kevin Gover has noted how such statements can be inadvertently disempowering towards the very peoples to whom they are supposedly offered as a gesture of respect, by publicly highlighting the involuntary absence of those peoples from their traditional lands.[21] However, Baldy has also pointed out that land acknowledgements can be used in positive ways short of accompanying the return of land, such as highlighting specific, concrete actions the audience can take to assist Indigenous Peoples.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Honoring Original Indigenous Inhabitants: Land Acknowledgment . 2023-11-22 . National Museum of the American Indian . en.
  2. Web site: Bolger . Rosemary . How Welcome to Country rituals are changing to make all Australians take note . . 12 November 2020 . 10 December 2021.
  3. Web site: Watson . Joey . How the Acknowledgment of Country became a core national custom - and why it matters . ABC News. . 18 March 2020 . 10 December 2021.
  4. Web site: Welcome to Country . Aboriginal Victoria. Victoria Government . 27 October 2019 . 1 August 2020. Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
  5. News: Coletta. Amanda. Canada pays tribute to indigenous people before hockey games, school days. Some complain it rings hollow.. en-US. Washington Post. 2020-10-04. 0190-8286.
  6. Land Acknowledgement: A Trend in Higher Education and Nonprofit Organizations. Thomas E. Keefe. May 25, 2019. 10.13140/RG.2.2.33681.07521.
  7. Web site: Eric. Zorn. 2020-02-11. Column: Taika Waititi sings a new song at the Oscars: This land was their land. Chicago Tribune.
  8. Web site: The Oscars acknowledged the indigenous land Hollywood sits on. Anagha. Srikanth. February 10, 2020.
  9. Web site: Acknowledging Native Land is a Step Against Indigenous Erasure. Mariah. Stewart. December 19, 2019.
  10. The Dissonance of a Land Acknowledgment at the Oscars. Nick. Martin. February 10, 2020. The New Republic.
  11. Web site: 2019-10-22 . A Guide to Indigenous Land Acknowledgment . 2023-11-22 . Native Governance Center . en-US.
  12. Web site: 2021-09-21 . Beyond Land Acknowledgment: A Guide . 2023-11-22 . Native Governance Center . en-US.
  13. Web site: An Introduction to Indigenous Land Acknowledgements for College and University Leaders. Corrie. Pelc. December 13, 2021. Every Learner Everywhere.
  14. Web site: Association for the Study of Higher Education. www.ashe.ws.
  15. Magallanes . Catherine Iorns . 2011-08-01 . The Use of Tangata Whenua and Mana Whenua in New Zealand Legislation: Attempts at Cultural Recognition . Victoria University of Wellington Law Review . en . 42 . 2 . 259–276 . 10.26686/vuwlr.v42i2.5134 . 1179-3082. free .
  16. Web site: June 2022 . Acknowledging Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people of Australia and Māori of Aotearoa New Zealand . 4 December 2023 . Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists.
  17. Web site: Feb 2022 . Practicing Ethically with Respect to the Rights and Interests of Indigenous Peoples . 4 December 2023 . Environmental Institute of Australia and New Zealand.
  18. News: Frost . Natasha . 19 August 2022 . Could New Zealand Change Its Name . The New York Times . 4 December 2023.
  19. News: Wood . Graeme . 'Land Acknowledgments' Are Just Moral Exhibitionism . September 10, 2023 . The Atlantic . November 28, 2021.
  20. News: Lee . Robert . Ahtone . Tristan . Land-Grab Universities . High Country News . March 30, 2020 . April 20, 2020 . April 19, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200419170100/https://www.hcn.org/issues/52.4/indigenous-affairs-education-land-grab-universities . live .
  21. News: Veltman . Chloe . So you began your event with an Indigenous land acknowledgment. Now what? . September 10, 2023 . NPR . March 15, 2023.