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Learn more about OpenSpaceOnline

January 31, 2005 By Chris Uncategorized

Gabriela Ender, the creator of OpenSpaceOnline has a new eBook available from her site talking about how OSO works and its various applications.

You can download the eBook for free here. Among the international Open Space practitioner community, there is general consensus that Gabriela’s software is the closest thing in cyber space to participating in a face to face Open Space Technology meeting.

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What it means to lose our languages

January 30, 2005 By Chris Uncategorized

Fort Rupert First Nation, BC

I’ve just read “Blindness” by Jose Saramago. It’s a harrowing story of a human dystopia that is brought on by a nearly complete plague of blindness that sweeps through the entire population. It is like a modern day Kafka tale that, as the blurbs say, sums up the deepest horrors of the twentieth century.

In the book, society quickly breaks down as everyone becomes blind and human morality and ethics follow suit. More frightening though is the resignation of the bands of people who wander around the city trying to find food, unsure of where they are, unsure of who is with them. It’s easy to become lost when there is no one to help you find your way home. Saramago plumbs the depths of this chilling scenario with a style that is detached so that his voice becomes one of a parable maker, a distant, dispassionate eye witnessing the unfolding scene.

It’s a disturbing book, but in some ways it is no more disturbing than the loss that I see around me right now. I’m in Fort Rupert today, a small First Nation on the north coast of Vancouver Island. As I write this I am sitting in the big house watching an Open Space meeting with about 50 First Nations youth unfold. There is a huge fire in the centre of the building, fed by logs that are 3 feet long. On either side of me massive carved poles 10 or 12 feet around rise into the smoky depths of the ceiling, some 40 feet above me. It is dark and smoky and cold inside and the only light comes from the fire and some soft lighting along the tops of the walls.

The youth are deeply engaged in issues that are important to them and one of those issues is language. One youth has posted a topic called “Without language who do we know who we are or where we are?” and it brought to mind Saramago’s book.

I wish I could write a novel that talks about the impact if the loss of Aboriginal language in a way that captures the same harrowing disorientation of “Blindness.” Here on the coast, the deepest knowledge of the land, of humans’ relations to it and to each other are bound up in the language, If you can’t use Kwa’kwa’kala to speak to one another, nothing makes sense.

The only way I can give you a sense of the impact of the loss is to have you imagine what it would be like to go through life without having words for anything. And imagine too that as you stopped calling things by their names, they fade away so that in a few short years you don’t even remember what it was you had – it’s all gone. Imagine that this would be true for everything you owned, everyone you love, everything you know.

And then imagine that you were granted a wish and that you did get a language, but it wasn’t yours. You are grateful for the chance to speak again and bring your world back, and you struggle to remember what it was you once knew. You try to describe your children with this new language and what reappears is some crude facsimile of your kids. You try to talk about what the land means and to remember how to live on it, but it’s just a rude approximation of what you once knew and so the land comes back looking different. You don’t recognize the animals and plants. You can’t remember what you once knew about them.

That’s the impact that losing Aboriginal languages is having on communities in this country. As the languages die out, a world fades away and the human community loses the capacity to speak about and understand the complex systems of the coastal forest and the societies that evolved within them. When we use English to describe this land now we miss 90% of what is really there. We can’t see it anymore, we can’t feel it and we certainly can’t connect with it.

Here in the big house, there is a living breathing culture, and Elders and some youth are speaking their language, dancing and singing their songs. The practices that have knitted together community and Nations have been undertaken almost unbroken for thousands of years here. But in the twentieth century, the ceremonies were banned and the language was drummed out of children at residential school and in a few short generations we have lost almost everything.

These youth and the Elders who are with them are living proof that there is something left and that it’s worth fighting for and hanging on to. Languages bring worlds into being and when we lose a language as a human community we lose a world. As we struggle on this planet to be with the massive changes all around us, we need as many world views as possible. We need the diversity to understand and make meaning from the complexity. Anything you can do to support that effort benefits us all.

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Series in motion

January 29, 2005 By Chris Uncategorized

Port Hardy, BC

Some of my smart blogging compadres are posting series. Dan Oestreich has just put up the third of his leadership practices: caring for self. And Jon Husband has finished his ten point manifesto for managing in a wired world with the posting of number ten: permanent whitewater is the new normal (great title!).

I love it when folks post things ina series. It gives us time to digest ideas as they are emerging and to see how they are evolving. It’s a fun way to write too.

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Wealth creation in First Nations

January 28, 2005 By Chris Uncategorized

Port Hardy, BC

While traveling up to Port Hardy here I ran into my friend Art Mercer who is charge of Economic Development for the Nisga’a Lisims Government. Art is one of the members of the Counsel on BC Aboriginal Economic Development, a group I have worked with a fair amount over the years. The Counsel is a body that is challenging the status quo with respect to economic development in First Nations in Canada. For the past two years they have been hosting an annual conference called “Strategic Conversations” named for the strategic plan we wrote together in 2002. The Counsel firmly believes in the power of conversations to transform the current mental models that limit many First Nations and government approaches to economic development. By encouraging strategic conversations with community members, economic partners, governments and markets, new models of sustainable economic and community development can emerge for First Nations.

We talked a little today, as we always do, about some of the amazing work going on out there, and Art pointed me to a report published by the Skeena Native Development Society called “Masters in our Own House.” The report came out of a think tank of the same name, looking at new models of wealth creation, prosperity, governance and development for First Nations. Clarence Nyce, who was one of the conveners writes in the preface of the report:

Over the course of the term of the Think Tank, we firmly arrived at the conclusion that there are definite identifiable elements that lead to economic prosperity in a free market. Conversely, there are also factors that inhibit and are destructive to economic growth. Common to such factors includes mixing politics with business, having an ill defined governance structure where little or no rules exist, having an absence of private property, assuming that all politics is equal to good economic sense, and having a system that is replete with high transaction costs. In short any model that encourages and creates dependency creates high expectations, instability, and discourages investment and business growth.

While there is tremendous resistance to change, it is imperative that we define ourselves outside of, and away from the Indian Act. While there may be some merit to retaining some aspects of our ?fiduciary relationship? with the federal government, it, nevertheless, remains our challenge to construct economies of prosperity that takes a different road then in the past.

The report itself is a combination of deep economic theory and straight forward practical tools and is worth downloading and reading if you are involved in economic development for First Nations or any small, rural and isolated community.

More evidence of how much good stuff there is right here under our noses.

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Victor Yushchenko’s inauguration address

January 28, 2005 By Chris Uncategorized

Victor Yushchenko gave his victory speech on January 23 after Ukranians finally and officially elected him to office. It stands in stark contrast to other inaugural addressess of recent days. In it, he lays out an optimistic and idealistic program for Ukrainian progress that talks about how he will meet the expectations his people have of him. Mostly he talks about honesty. After all, how can one respond to such profound living in truth without pledging to maintain the standards set by millions of his people?

Two months ago millions of people came to this Maidan, to the squares and streets all over Ukraine. Our brothers and sisters, parents and children, friends and neighbors were standing day and night in the cold. Ukraine was devouring every word sounded here. The heart of Ukraine was beating here. Free people of the whole world, our compatriots dispersed in distant lands, were standing shoulder to shoulder with us. On Independence Square Ukrainians have risen as a modern Ukrainian nation.

Stubborn resistance has stirred up our souls. All of us feel we are citizens. Our decency, generosity and kindness have awakened. Armed with faith and will the people won a glorious victory. This is a victory of freedom over tyranny, law over lawlessness and the future over the past.

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