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Monday, December 15, 2025

Giving history a voice

New research at the University of Waterloo is centring Haudenosaunee voices in documenting the 1988 repatriation of eleven wampum belts to the Haudenosaunee Confederacy. Led by Tuscarora scholar Savannah Sloat and historian Dr. Talena Atfield, the project gathers first-hand community accounts to highlight wampum as living agreements tied to law, governance, and sovereignty.

PhD student Dale Bellaire’s research explores how culturally grounded connections can support the well-being of Indigenous Elders living in urban long-term care. Guided by a Medicine Wheel framework, her work emphasizes holistic health and centres Elders as collaborators in shaping meaningful, land-informed spaces and activities. The research contributes to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Calls to Action and aims to strengthen identity, belonging, and cultural resurgence for Indigenous older adults.

Water is not just a resource — it is sacred. It is our first medicine, as we are all born of water. It connects us to the land, to the ancestors, and to future generations. In Indigenous worldviews, water is a living relative that must be treated with reverence.

A special celebration took place in the Health Services building on Monday, February 10, 2025, to warmly welcome two new Indigenous staff members to Waterloo: Dr. Sarah Connors, Indigenous Naturopath and Brad LeBarron, Indigenous Student Wellness Navigator.

Thursday, November 7, 2024

Inuit Day: The Story of the Qulliq

Today is Inuit Day, an acknowledgement and celebration of Inuit culture and contributions, but most importantly, a day to affirm the voices of Inuit across the circumpolar world. Associate Vice President, Jean Becker (Inuk), a member of Nunatsiavut Territory of Labrador, tells the history of how Inuit culture was replaced with European culture in the centuries after John Cabot arrived in North America in 1497.