1975
Declaration of Dene Nationhood
passed at the Second Joint General Assembly of the Indian
Brotherhood of the Northwest Territories, at Fort Simpson
July 19, 1975
Statement of Rights. We the Dene of the Northwest
Territories insist on the right to be regarded by ourselves and the
world as a nation. Our struggle is for the recognition of the Dene
Nation by the Government and peoples of Canada and the peoples and
governments of the world.
As once Europe was the exclusive homeland of the
European peoples, Africa the exclusive homeland of the African
peoples, the New World, North and South America, was the exclusive
homeland of Aboriginal peoples of the New World, the Amerindian and
the Inuit.
The New World like other parts of the world has
suffered the experience of colonialism and imperialism. Other
peoples have occupied the land - often with force - and foreign
governments have imposed themselves on our people. Ancient
civilizations and ways of life have been destroyed.
Colonialism and imperialism are now dead or
dying. Recent years have witnessed the birth of new nations or
rebirth of old nations out of the aches of colonialism.
As Europe is the place where you will find
European countries with European governments for European peoples,
now also you will find in Africa and Asia the existence of African
and Asian countries with African and Asian governments for the
African and Asian peoples.
The African and Asian peoples - the peoples of
the Third World - have fought for and won the right to self-
determination, the right to recognition as distinct peoples and the
recognition of themselves as nations.
But in the New World the Native peoples have not
fared so well. Even in countries in South America where the Native
peoples are the vast majority of the population there in not one
country which has an Amerindian government for the Amerindian
peoples.
Nowhere in the New World have the Native peoples
won the right to self- determination and the right to recognition by
the world as a distinct people and as Nations.
While the Native people of Canada are a minority
in their homeland, the Native people of the Northwest Territories,
the Dene and the Inuit, are a majority of the population of the
Northwest Territories.
The Dene find themselves as part of a country.
That country is Canada. But the Government of Canada is not the
Government of the Dene. The Government of the Northwest Territories
is not the Government of the Dene. These governments were not the
choice of the Dene, they were imposed upon the Dene.
What we the Dene are struggling for is the
recognition of the Dene nation by the governments and peoples of the
world.
And while there are realities we are forced to
submit to, such as the' existence of a country called Canada, we
insist on the right to self- determination as a distinct people and
the recognition of the Dene Nation.
We the Dene are part of the Fourth World.- And as
the peoples and Nations of the world have come to recognize the
existence and rights of those peoples ,who make up the Third World
the day must come when the nations of the Fourth World will come to
be recognized and respected. The challenge to the Dene and the world
is to find the way for the recognition of the Dene Nation.
Our plea to the world is to help us in our
struggle to find a place in the world community where we can
exercise our right to self-determination as a distinct people and as
a nation.
What we seek then is independence and
self-determination within the country of Canada. This is what we
mean when we call for a just land settlement for the Dene nation.