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Indigenous entrepreneur defends right to harvest salt after warning from Parks Canada

Indigenous entrepreneur defends right to harvest salt after warning from Parks Canada

CBC
Friday, April 15, 2022 02:34:12 AM UTC

An Indigenous entrepreneur in Fort Smith, N.W.T. wants recognition for her harvesting rights and an apology from Parks Canada after she received a letter from a warden asking her to stop collecting salt from Wood Buffalo National Park.

Melissa Daniels is a member of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation (ACFN). She uses the salt from Wood Buffalo's salt plains in a bath product for her line of skincare products. 

"Canada is trying to extinguish my treaty rights to harvest from my traditional territory, something that had been agreed upon with the Crown since 1899 but has, in practice, been in place since time immemorial," she told CBC Trailbreaker host Loren McGinnis. 

The letter, which Daniels posted on Twitter, was written by a Parks Canada warden and congratulates her on her successful small business. It then asks her to stop removing salt from the park, citing a national regulation and Parks Canada's responsibility to protect the "ecological integrity" of the salt plains.   

Daniels said the letter illustrates why her community has been pushing for an apology and reparations from Canada for the historic displacement and denial of their harvesting rights since the park's creation.  

A report on Wood Buffalo's history, released by the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation last year, said "the Park's current co-management strategies are not adequate to meaningfully address the Park's violent, fraught history and its direct and cumulative intergenerational impacts on Denésuliné peoples." 

ACFN Chief Allan Adam, in a press release, compared Daniel's situation to the "Salt March" led by Mahatma Gandhi in 1930, protesting a British colonial law that prohibited people in India from harvesting salt. 

"The law became a symbol for all that was unjust under the colonial system," Adams states. 

Daniels said the letter made no reference to the fact that she's a member of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation, adding she has "constitutionally affirmed and inherent Indigenous and treaty rights to use this land that actually supersede any park regulations." 

In a statement, Parks Canada spokesperson Tim Gauthier wrote that they prefer to handle "such issues" through dialogue with Indigenous partners, and regrets that didn't happen in this case.

However, the statement  maintains that "commercial harvesting of salt in the national park, which is also a World Heritage Site, is not currently permitted."

Daniels takes issue with the term "commercial," noting that business and harvesting practices are based in Dene law, and her products will never be mass-produced. 

She said the products, including her salt bath, are a way to reconnect people to the land, especially Dene who can't go out and harvest medicine for traditional use. The salt she harvests is only one part of one product produced for Naidié Nezų, Daniels said.

"The implication that my land based, hand-harvested practice is a threat to the natural environment is insulting to me, our nation, our ancestors and the land itself," she said.

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