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PROGRAM GUIDE - American Humane Association

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Honouring the Circle, Connections and Wisdom<br />

Original Talking Circles<br />

TRACK 6<br />

Aboriginal Practices<br />

LEVEL<br />

Intermediate<br />

Charlene Avalos, Shirley Gillis-Kendall and Kathy Kneegan, Native Child<br />

and Family Services of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada<br />

Between the years 2000 to 2003, the team members of the Mooka’am<br />

Program at Native Child and Family Services of Toronto (NCFS)<br />

developed and implemented a Native Family Healing Model. This<br />

model is based on the philosophy that the healing needs of the clients<br />

can best be served by weaving the use of effective contemporary<br />

therapeutic techniques with Aboriginal traditional teachings, values<br />

and practices. Through a process of participation, observation and<br />

dialogue that involved the entire Mooka’am team, NCFS developed a<br />

clearer understanding of how best to work with Aboriginal families<br />

in a healing capacity. In 2004, NCFS became a provincially mandated<br />

child welfare agency. Through the process of becoming a governmentmandated<br />

agency, this supportive, clinical and culturally effective<br />

Aboriginal service program for Native families changed. Today,<br />

members of the original Mooka’am team at NCFS are revisiting the<br />

Native Family Healing Model in order to see how it can be used as a<br />

model for integration between healing and child welfare work. This new<br />

program is called the Original Dispute Process. In this presentation, the<br />

facilitators would like to share this story, the lessons learned, and the<br />

work in progress.<br />

Whu Neeh Nee (Guiders<br />

of Our People): Building<br />

Models of Decision Making<br />

that Match the Needs of<br />

Communities They Serve:<br />

A Carrier Sekani First<br />

Nation Example<br />

TRACK 6<br />

Aboriginal Practices<br />

Travis Holyk and Warner Adam, Carrier Sekani Family Services, Prince<br />

George, BC, Canada<br />

This presentation will focus on the processes that Carrier Sekani<br />

Family Services (CSFS) used to successfully implement a Carrier-based<br />

model of FGC. In particular, the presenters will discuss the research<br />

completed regarding traditional practices and subsequent training<br />

of facilitators that make Carrier Sekani practice distinct. The process<br />

provides a focus on rebuilding families and communities devastated by<br />

years of adversarial contact with the western court system, attempting<br />

to provide opportunity to resolve conflict in culturally appropriate ways<br />

and directly involve the community in decision making.<br />

LEVEL<br />

Foundational<br />

1 st Canadian Conference for Family Group Conferencing 23

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