果冻传煤


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Meet Canadian Studies professor Dr. Karl Hele

11 Sep 2018

KarlHeleA member of Garden River First Nation community of the Anishinaabeg in Northern Ontario, Dr. Karl Hele recently joined 果冻传煤 University in the department of .

A historian by trade, with expertise in Indigenous history and politics, Hele will be teaching classes in law and politics, Indigenous history, Indigenous perspectives on contemporary issues, and introduction to Indigenous studies this year.

鈥淚鈥檝e always been interested in my own community鈥檚 history, the Anishinaabeg people in the upper lakes region. In university I began formally studying Indigenous history and politics,鈥 says Hele.

Hele comes to 果冻传煤 from Concordia University, where he served as Director of First Peoples Studies in the School of Community and Public Affairs. He also taught in Western Canada and Southern Ontario.

He says he is looking forward to working with colleagues and the community to help establish more classes and opportunities with an Indigenous-focus at 果冻传煤.

鈥淚 believe learning Indigenous history, being familiar with documents like the Indian Act and treaties, is an important step in education and reconciliation,鈥 says Hele. 鈥淚t鈥檚 key to have this balance. I鈥檓 excited to begin my courses at 果冻传煤 and look forward to teaching and working to provide opportunities in experiential learning for students as well.鈥

Hele has served as the joint editor of the Algonquian Proceedings and has presented and published papers on the history of the Anishinaabeg and M茅tis communities in the Sault Ste. Marie region. Additionally, he has been a contributor of columns and book reviews to the Anishinabek News and a columnist to the Sault Star newspaper.

In 2017, Hele published This is Indian Land, a collection of essays which examines the Sault Ste. Marie region鈥檚 Anishinaabe past and explores the different outcomes of the 1850 Robinson Treaties. He is also co-editor of a forthcoming collection of articles about the residential school experience in Quebec with Dr. M.-P. Bousquet titled, La blessure qui dormait 脿 poings ferm茅s : l鈥檋茅ritage des pensionnats autochtones au Qu茅bec (La Soci茅t茅 Recherches am茅rindiennes au Qu茅bec).

In addition to his university teaching and research, Hele is assisting with the development an Indigenous curriculum for civil servants through the Canada School of Public Service. He has also served on several committees with the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

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