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Olive Dickason's First Nations |
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The Series and Bio-docAbout OliveStory SummaryGallery
Dr. Olive Dickason: A Brief Bio
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TORONTO, ONTARIO - At this point in her life, highly honoured Ottawa-based Dr. Olive Dickason continues to write ground-breaking material that gives back to First Nations people the most important thing they lost: their own history. Her own life has become a metaphor for the bridge she has created between First Nations communities and Canada.
Dickason is a Métis, born of French, English and First Nations ancestry. Her parents went broke in the Thirties and wound up living off the land in Northern Manitoba. To fend off starvation, Olive learned to fish, hunt and gather from her Métis mother. Learning was another form of hunger in Olive's life. She learned Greek, Latin and philosophy from a Scottish immigrant who moved into the bush nearby.
She became a protege of Fr. Athol Murray, founder of Notre Dame College in Wilcox, SK.. A Bachelor of Arts degree in hand, she pursued a career in journalism, winding up as the women's editor of The Globe and Mail. At 50, her children grown, (divorced, she had raised them on her own), she returned to her love of academic life, winding up at University of Ottawa where shebegan work toward her Masters and Doctoral degrees. She started out with an interest in French colonial history. She soon discovered her subject -- European-Amerindian contact history. It was the very stuff of her own genetic heritage.
There had never been a doctoral dissertation based on the premise of First Nations history. There was no specialist in Canada who could direct and adjudicate such a thesis. Olive cleared her way through it all, gathering aboriginal peoples' oral histories as well as unearthing volumes of texts in the archives of the erstwhile European colonizers, learning to read French and Spanish in the process. She published breakthrough books that have become curriculum texts across the country.
Her book The Myth of the Savage (1984) looked at the history of early contact between the French and the aboriginal peoples of North and South America. Canada's First Nations (1992) rounded up the entire history pre-and post-contact of Canadian First Nations peoples.
Dickason believes that Canadians knowing and claiming this history will constitute a major enrichment of the country's national identity. Canada is much older than the 136 years since Confederation and all Canadians share both the tragic and beneficial results of a cross cultural encounter which began 500 years ago and continues to evolve today.
Dickason has been honoured many times: the Order of Canada, numerous honorary doctorates, the First Nations Lifetime Achievement Award, Métis woman of the Year Award, the Sir John A. Macdonald History Prize. She has an award named after her: Dr. Olive Dickason Achiever of the Year (University of Calgary Native Studies). She is a sought-after speaker and consultant. Industry Canada invited her to explain the current situation of First Nations Canadians to its community of business leaders. The CBC, in its recent Canadian history project Canada: A People History broadcast in the Fall of 2000, hired her as aboriginal peoples history consultant to advise on the First Nations point of view in Canadian colonial history.
Dickason is now in her 80s and working on a new book. She is a significant figure in Canadian history; a national treasure whose accomplishments and contribution will be honoured and disseminated in this timely documentary.
For More Information:
Dawn Deme, Producer
Villagers Media Productions- Toronto Office
110 Cottingham St.
Toronto, ON M4V 1C1
T. (416) 323-3228
F. (416) 323-1201
E. ddeme@villagersmedia.com
W. www.villagersmedia.com
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