dispossessed
disabled
artists
demanding housing


land acknowledgment

We acknowledge our privilege to live on traditional territory shared with us by many nations who have lived here and cared for it before and since settlers came. We live in Tkaronto/Toronto.

We acknowledge our discomfort with the 1787 Toronto Purchase, the 1805 Indenture, the 1923 Williams Treaties and possibly also with the 2010 $145 million settlement between Canada and the Mississaugas of New Credit First Nation and with Treaty No. 13, because they imposed settlers' concept of land ownership and extinguished rights. In that sense, we consider the possibility that we are on a territory that was never considered through an equal nation-to-nation relationship and never ceded.

We acknowledge that our work on finding our home in Tkaronto/Toronto closely touches on land ownership. We largely favour public land ownership, but we acknowledge also that, be it private or public, especially in Tkaronto/Toronto where the City has not started a decolonizing process, land ownership does not recognize the spirit and concepts with which the land is considered and cared for by Indigenous communities, Indigenous philosophy and knowledge.

We acknowledge to have knowledge that Tkaronto/Toronto is in the "Dish With One Spoon Territory".




Image of the Medicine Wheel suggested by Alec Whitewolf Butler, one of ddadh's members who is of Mi'kmaw, French, Irish and Afro descent, originally from Cape Breton Island aka Uni'Maki aka "Island of Fog".
information about the Medicine Wheel
image credit: commonswikimedia.org


The Dish With One Spoon is a treaty between the Anishinaabe, Mississaugas and Haudenosaunee that bound them to share the territory and protect the land. Subsequent Indigenous Nations and peoples, Europeans and all newcomers have been invited into this treaty in the spirit of peace, friendship and respect.

The "Dish", or sometimes it is called the "Bowl", represents what is now southern Ontario, from the Great Lakes to Quebec and from Lake Simcoe into the United States. *We all eat out of the Dish, all of us that share this territory, with only one spoon. That means we have to share the responsibility of ensuring the dish is never empty, which includes taking care of the land and the creatures we share it with. Importantly, there are no knives at the table, representing that we must keep the peace.

This was a treaty made between the Anishinaabe and Haudenosaunee after the French and Indian War. Newcomers were then incorporated into it over the years, notably in 1764 with The Royal Proclamation/The Treaty of Niagara.

We acknowledge our extremely limited capacity in respectfully enacting this treaty.

The settlers among us address our apology to all Indigenous individuals involved or encountering this project and all Indigenous communities who are still suffering.


Native Land
Archives of Space
Topographies of a homeplace by rudi aker
Ogimaa Mikana: Reclaiming/Renaming



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