‘What our ancestors meant:’ Canada, First Nations create new park reserve
LUTSEL K’E, N.W.T. — A deal on a vast new national park reserve in the North is being called a model for future relationships between First Nations and Canada.
“This is what our ancestors meant when they entered into treaty with Canada,” said Steve Nitah, who represented Indigenous groups in talks that led to the Thaidene Nene National Park Reserve in the Northwest Territories.
“We agreed to share the land, its resources, the responsibility for management, and to benefit together.”
Thaidene Nene — Land of the Ancestors — protects 26,376 square kilometres of pristine waters and healthy forest in and around the east arm of Great Slave Lake. The agreement to be signed Wednesday between the federal and territorial governments and four First Nations gives Indigenous people an unprecedented role in the park’s operation.