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引用次数: 0
摘要
这篇文章探讨了我在不列颠哥伦比亚大学(UBC)作为一名城市克里和社会工作专业学生的个人经历。从这一定位出发,我思考了将个人和职业身份,包括仪式和精神,作为我们与他人互动方式,特别是与土著人民互动方式的一部分,将社会工作本土化意味着什么。我提供我自己的旅程,通过与土著植物药物的合作,将我作为一个城市克里人的身份联系起来。特别是,我将重点介绍我在xwm æ θkw æ y æ æ m [musquam]人的被盗和祖先领土上的xwm æ θkw æ y æ æ m花园的经历。也被称为UBC农场的土著健康研究和教育花园,xwc niic nis nim在h æ n niq nik nim nim中的意思是“我们生长的地方”。xwc ic s m体现了一个空间,在这里,土著人民可以与人类和植物亲属联系,分享故事,使用传统药物,并在一个由我们自己和为我们自己的空间中进行治疗。
This article explores my personal journey as an urban Cree and social work student at the University of British Columbia (UBC). From this positionality, I reflect on what it means to Indigenize social work by privileging personal and professional identity, including ceremony and spirituality, as integral to the ways we interact with others, particularly between Indigenous Peoples. I offer my own journey connecting to my identity as an urban Cree person through working with Indigenous plant medicines. In particular, I will highlight my experiences at xwc̓ic̓əsəm—a garden on the stolen and ancestral territories of the xwməθkwəy̓əm [Musqueam] people. Also known as the Indigenous Health Research and Education Garden at the UBC Farm, xwc̓ic̓əsəm means “the place where we grow” in hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓. xwc̓ic̓əsəm embodies a space where Indigenous Peoples can connect with both human and plant relatives to share stories, engage with traditional medicines, and heal in a space by us and for us.