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Stories That Celebrate Indigenous Voices and Culture

Stories have always been a powerful way to share culture, history, and identity—and this month is a meaningful time to listen, learn, and reflect. Indigenous voices offer perspectives shaped by deep roots, lived experiences, and rich traditions that continue to inspire today.

This curated list highlights books that celebrate Indigenous stories, from heartfelt journeys to powerful reflections. Each one invites readers to better understand the past, connect with the present, and appreciate the voices that deserve to be heard, shared, and remembered.

They Called Me 33 by Karen Chaboyer

A powerful story of survival, healing, and reclaiming identity.

Karen longed for acceptance, validation and love, but had no ability to form healthy, meaningful relationships. Born into a large family already suffering the effects of two generations of residential school, and surviving her own nine years at St. Margaret Indian Residential School, Karen (like everyone she knew) had been systematically stripped of her dignity, identity, language, culture, family and community support systems.

Not wanting to be alone as an adult, Karen tolerated unhealthy relationships with family and partners. Still, she was coping. But after suffering further trauma, Karen turned to alcohol and other addictions to numb her pain.

Eventually, Karen found the strength to reach out for help. She learned to grieve through layers of shame and was finally able to embrace her identity. Karen also discovered what has long been known in her culture – the healing power of sharing your story. Karen would now like to share this book, her story, with you.

Peaceful Relationships by Wendy Hill

A journey through Indigenous wisdom, healing, and finding peace within.

This book is a collection of teachings and experiences from a Native traditional healer. Wendy shares her people’s history and her own personal experiences of bringing peace into situations where it was desperately cried out for. It’s a self-help book to give you ideas and different ways of thinking to help bring you back to peace within. If you have never known peace then this book will explain how to achieve it, and how to be very defensive about maintaining this essence of the spirit.

Courage and Complicity (1st Edition) by Claudette Languedoc

A reflective story of idealism, loss, and a return to truth shaped by time and experience.

In August 1947, Mary Brock boarded a train in Toronto. She was headed for the wilds of Northwestern Ontario and a teaching job at an Indian residential school. Her family was horrified.
At the end of her first day of teaching, Mary was horrified too. This was not the exciting adventure she had imagined. But Mary wasn’t one to give up. Buoyed by her ideals and her pragmatism, she kept showing up.
She lasted the academic year. When she boarded the train for home, she knew she had failed; in every way that mattered. The ideals she had come with had shattered on her classroom floor, and a big piece of her heart lay buried behind a small log cabin in the woods.
Sixty years later, two unexpected gifts forced her to take a second look back and a more hopeful look forward. Maybe her ideals weren’t so naïve after all.

Strengthening Canadian Indigenous by Cathy A. Martin, Ed.D.

Mi’gmaq leader focused on education, governance, and community wellness.

Dr. Cathy Martin, Ed.D. is a Mi’gmaq woman who was raised and resided most of her life in the Listuguj First Nation. Dr. Martin has a Doctorate Degree in Educational Leadership from the University of Phoenix. Dr. Martin has been an elected member of council for three terms for the Listuguj Mi’gmaq Government; two of those terms she was elected Chief Councillor.
Dr. Martin has a wealth of experience interacting at the grassroots level. Her diverse academic and career experiences, have demonstrated her research abilities, facilitation, and co-ordination skills. In addition, to the research skills necessary to obtain a Doctorate in Leadership, Dr. Martin was the main writer/researcher for the development of the First Nations Health Directors Curriculum Manual; which was an eight-module curriculum for Health Directors Association of British Columbia. Dr. Martin has also facilitated, at the grassroots level within her First Nation Community of Listuguj, in the development of a Community Safety and Wellness Accord; and in the grassroots development of domestic violence research and recommendations for a reduction of abuse program in the same community.
Dr. Martin’s future goals include a return to consultation, research, writing and the facil
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