Decolonizing Canada鈥檚 national game

Decolonizing Canada鈥檚 national game

Indigenous Hockey Research Network looks at hockey as a vehicle for reconciliation.

By Dave Rideout

March 5, 2019

Share

IHRN members at a pick-up game of hockey during the visioning gathering at 成人大片.
Indigenous Hockey Research Network members pause during their "visioning gathering" at Queen's for a pick-up game at the Leon's Centre in Kingston.

One of the first things that comes to mind when people think about Canada is ice hockey. For many Canadians, the sport is deeply linked to perceptions of national identity, and hockey stories help explain who they are and where they belong. But where do Indigenous peoples fit in these narratives about what it means to be truly Canadian? Queen鈥檚 University researcher, , helped create the Indigenous Hockey Research Network (IHRN) with hopes of illuminating, complicating, and developing how we view our national pastime.

鈥淕iven its popularity, we see hockey as a potential meeting place for community building and Indigenous empowerment,鈥 says Dr. McKegney, who received a $305,000 from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) in 2018 to conduct the IHRN鈥檚 work. 鈥淯nderstanding our shared and contrary experiences within the context of the sport could also shed light on a potential vehicle for the ongoing pursuit of reconciliation in our country.鈥

Through archival research, personal interviews, data analysis, and Indigenous community-led approaches, Dr. McKegney鈥檚 team looks to uncover and engage with the sport鈥檚 Indigenous past, present, and future to understand its role in relations between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people in Canada.

Hockey occupies a complicated space between Indigenous self-determination and ongoing settler colonialism in Canada, as in the past it served both oppressive and liberating roles for Indigenous people. According to Dr. McKegney, the sport was employed in residential schools and elsewhere as a tool of 鈥渃olonial social engineering鈥 designed to encourage Indigenous youth to shed connections with their traditional cultural values and enforce new, prescriptive identity formations. Conversely, many survivors of residential schools claim playing the game helped them endure the trauma of those years.

"This duality in hockey鈥檚 history could present a means through which to support Indigenous sovereignty, community well-being, and gender equality,鈥 he says, 鈥渁s well as to promote settler understanding of colonial history and potential pathways toward righting injustice. 鈥

From Friday, March 1 to Saturday, March 2, Dr. McKegney hosted 15 IHRN scholars and graduate students at the Queen鈥檚 Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts for a 鈥渧isioning gathering鈥. These experts in sport history, sociology, gender theory, narrative studies, and filmmaking, together with Indigenous and non-Indigenous community advisors, worked to hone the research objectives and methodologies of the multi-year project.

鈥淭here was so much knowledge and experience present at the gathering in Kingston. To have that focus and attention on our work makes our projects that much stronger,鈥 says Janice Forsyth, IHRN member and director of the First Nations Studies program at Western University. 鈥淭he network is and will be an important site for us to share information, and to test and refine our ideas and analysis, as well as a critical source of support for the graduate student members, who now have a well-defined research community to rely on for assistance and feedback.鈥

Vision gathering participants also took time to develop skills and expertise necessary to best share their future findings, during a daylong series of workshops facilitated by Abenaki filmmaker Kim O鈥檅omsawin. The IHRN team aims to produce a documentary film on the project as work progresses over the next five years.

In keeping with the project鈥檚 aim to promote community building, the vision gathering participants bonded further over a pick-up hockey game at the Leon鈥檚 Centre on the evening of March 1.

鈥淩esearch on Indigenous hockey is really important because if we鈥檙e able to figure out the keys to positive experiences and skills and passions that last a lifetime, then that鈥檚 great,鈥 says Mike Auksi, Ojibway/Estonian international and University of Toronto/Ryerson varsity hockey player. 鈥淥n the other end of that, if we can figure out what鈥檚 leading to negative experiences or leading people to stop playing the game, then we may have a small part to play in improving that as well.鈥

Learn more about Dr. McKegney鈥檚 research project: .

Arts and Science