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Outing a pretendian: How four M茅tis scholars redefined Indigenous identity policy

This article was originally published on The Conversation, an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Disclosure information is available on the original site.

This article was originally published on The Conversation, an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Disclosure information is available on the original site.

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Authors: Chelsea Gabel, Associate Professor, Indigenous Studies Department & Department of Health, Aging and Society, McMaster University; Bobby (Robert) Henry, Associate Professor, Indigenous Studies, University of Saskatchewan; Caroline Tait, Professor and Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Health Equity and Inclusion, University of Calgary, and Janet K. Smylie, Professor, DLSPH and DFCM, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto

Addressing the pretendian issue in Canada is deeply personal, for us, because we are the academics who uncovered and exposed Carrie Bourassa鈥檚 Indigenous identity fraud.

We are four Red River M茅tis scholars who hold M茅tis citizenship with our familial connections to the Prairies. We are Indigenous health researchers, and our relationship began 20 years ago through the Network Environments for Indigenous Health Research.

In 2018, we discovered that Bourassa had fabricated her M茅tis identity, a deception dating back to her graduate studies at the University of Regina. An anonymous email from a former student exposed inconsistencies in her claims of M茅tis, Anishinaabe and Tlingit ancestry.

Confronting Bourassa led us to investigate further, resulting in a detailed review of her public presentations and publications. Several Indigenous and non-Indigenous genealogy experts also confirmed the discrepancies in her claimed ancestry.

We then filed a complaint of research misconduct against Bourassa with the University of Saskatchewan where she was a professor in the College of Medicine and the 91原创 Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) where she was the scientific director of the Institute of Indigenous Peoples鈥 Health. We also raised concerns at a second university actively recruiting Bourassa.

Our complaints were dismissed, so we contacted different media outlets. It was CBC鈥檚 investigative journalist, Geoff Leo who brought our story forward.

As we near the three-year anniversary of his groundbreaking article, we reflect on the time, effort and challenges invested into exposing Bourassa.

Building a career on Indigenous identity

On Oct. 27, 2021 CBC News published 鈥淚ndigenous or Pretender鈥, exposing Bourassa鈥檚 unverified claims of Indigeneity.

It marked a pivotal moment in Leo鈥檚 journalism career.

He wrote similar stories involving other high-profile individuals like prominent lawyer Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond and musician Buffy Sainte-Marie.

Leo was a finalist for the Michener Award, which recognizes excellence in public service journalism, for 鈥淚ndigenous or Pretender鈥 in 2021 and for 鈥淒isputed History鈥 in 2022.

After the CBC story received global attention, the University of Saskatchewan commissioned Jean Teillet, a M茅tis lawyer, to write a report to detail the scope and propose some solutions on Indigenous identity fraud.

It has since become a key resource in Canada.

While Leo and Teillet continue to advance their careers, those of us who brought the truth forward have faced criticism and scrutiny, and at least one of us made the difficult decision to leave their university due to a lack of support from senior administration.

Initially, the University of Saskatchewan and CIHR publicly supported Bourassa. A press release included quotes from the university鈥檚 Indigenous provost and the president of CIHR backing her.

It was deeply upsetting and left our group feeling demoralized and powerless.

However, once Bourassa revealed to the Saskatoon Star Phoenix that 鈥渟he did not have evidence she was Tlinglit and was working to piece together part of her ancestry,鈥 both institutions forced her to resign.

Moving beyond self-identification

While the revelation of Bourassa鈥檚 identity fraud brought tremendous hurt and feelings of betrayal to the M茅tis and broader Indigenous community, we did not anticipate our complaint would transform identity politics.

In Canada, universities, governments and other agencies are now implementing ancestry-verification policies. Individuals are required to show proof of membership, connection or citizenship to an Indigenous community when applying for opportunities reserved for Indigenous Peoples.

This replaces the self-identification approach.

Federal research funding agencies like the CIHR, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council also released a report identifying a potential path forward with respect to Indigenous citizenship and membership.

The official Tri-Agency Indigenous Citizenship and Membership Affirmation Policy is to be released this Oct. 1, 2024.

Key insights on addressing Indigenous identity fraud

Since the CBC story, there are several things we need to consider.

First, outing a pretendian requires time, effort and resources. We spent years piecing together Bourassa鈥檚 evolving narrative. We corroborated our findings through public discussions and publications. These efforts distracted us from our core work as M茅tis citizens and academics working to advance Indigenous health and social interests through community partnered teaching, research and scholarship.

Second, many who claim an Indigenous identity manifest it around trauma and violence. In the introduction of Listening to the Beat of Our Drum, Bourassa describes her experiences as a M茅tis child, which includes claims of being bullied and called 鈥渉alf breed鈥 and 鈥渟quaw.鈥 Such claims are deeply harmful to the Indigenous Peoples who continue to face anti-Indigenous racism.

Third, even when it is clear someone has concocted their Indigenous identity, disbelief and opposition are common. We encountered resistance from Bourassa and others, including our own colleagues, who argued her deceit shouldn鈥檛 overshadow her 鈥済ood work.鈥 Not only do people support pretendians, but institutions often back them as well.

We must ask ourselves: 鈥渨hat happens when there is no media coverage and public scrutiny?鈥

Without the media, Bourassa would likely still be employed at the University of Saskatchewan and CIHR.

Our complaint and years of research had no impact on either institution. It was only when extensive negative media attention occurred that change began.

Three years later, more individuals are being held accountable for their false claims of Indigeneity.

Some individuals are also advancing their careers on the topic of pretendian activism while simultaneously attempting to silence those who worked to uncover the truth. For example, we鈥檝e encountered individuals who initially claimed our efforts would lead nowhere and thought we were foolish to proceed, but they now speak about the issue on national and international platforms.

We adhere to our M茅tis values, including traditional buffalo hunt laws, which hold individuals accountable for causing harm to the community. We will not erase the memory of Bourassa. This is now part of our story, and we must remember how we arrived here and where we aim to go.

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Chelsea Gabel receives funding from the 91原创 Institutes of Health Research and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Robert Henry receives funding from the 91原创 Institutes of Health Research and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council

Caroline Tait receives funding from the 91原创 Institutes of Health Research and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

Janet K. Smylie receives funding from the 91原创 Institutes of Health Research.

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This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Disclosure information is available on the original site. Read the original article:

https://theconversation.com/outing-a-pretendian-how-four-metis-scholars-redefined-indigenous-identity-policy-236755

Chelsea Gabel, Associate Professor, Indigenous Studies Department & Department of Health, Aging and Society, McMaster University; Bobby (Robert) Henry, Associate Professor, Indigenous Studies, University of Saskatchewan; Caroline Tait, Professor and Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Health Equity and Inclusion, University of Calgary, and Janet K. Smylie, Professor, DLSPH and DFCM, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, The Conversation