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Ryder Zine

by Ryder Oliver-Green

Pages 2 and 3 of 13

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The Love For Land
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By: Ryder Oliver-Green
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he North Shore has been said to have a soul, a soul that has been silenced for seventy years. Like humans, one’s soul, one’s true essence, does not change throughout your life. Many believe we are just a floating soul, placed into a shell of a living being, changed by perception, altered by paradigm. The soul of the shore is unlike many others. A woven tapestry of patient forest, wise cliffs, and welcoming shores, all teeming with life. For a millennium, humans have co-existed with this soul, sharing life, shelter, and the joys of living with the land. As times changed so did the connection that supported the life of the area. It wasn’t until the post WWII era that this relationship had ventured through a fundamental change leaving residents of the North Shore deprived of the history of where they had settled, leaving behind a legacy of disconnection to the place that they called home. Today, to change our relationship with this landscape, we have to change how we understand it.
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Life before settlement was fundamentally different than what we know today. The occupants of this area are known as the Coast Salish peoples, consisting of the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw, xʷməθkʷəy̓əm, and səlilwətaɬ nations. The environment was just as much a part of them as they were of it. Traditionally they used its plentiful resources to feed their families, build homes, and celebrate. Life was said to be simple, enjoyable, and full. The common belief of the time was to do everything with six generations in mind. This meant leaving enough food, not catching too much fish, and making sure that when they passed on, the area they lived in was as healthy as when they were born. The body of water that we know as the Burrard Inlet was the səlilwətaɬ nation’s main source of food. Before colonization, the shores and waters were rich with sea life, providing plenty of food to live and provide for all of the people of the area.
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19th century, as well as the reservation system, the First Peoples of Canada
were being torn from their identity, both metaphorically and physically. This timeless connection to ancestors and Mother Nature was broken in areas such as the North Shore. The western relationship to land was much different than that of the Indigenous Peoples. Values of wealth, independence, and ownership dragged across the seas
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This relationship to land was not unique to the indigenous on the North Shore. This respect for the natural world is something that is seen throughout communities worldwide. This love for nature is
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The relationship to the land traditionally was one of respect, gratitude and community. The indigenous peoples believe the natural world provides and cares for them, making it rudimentary for it to be the same the other way around. The term “Mother Earth” was traditionally foundation of their relationship with the natural world. Like a mother, they see the environment as a caretaker, someone to protect them and maintain the beauty of life. They have a cultural, social, and traditional connection to the land. Nature provided for them, and all that came before them, influencing a spiritual connection to the area where they resided.






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“The landscape is infused with knowledge, story, and history.”
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with the first Europeans, leading to an ignorant and costly relationship with the encountered land. On the North Shore, the timber industry quickly grew when colonizers began to discover ancient forests of the area.
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something that should never be broken, but like many other places, the prosperity of connection was shattered, leaving behind a twisted trail of broken identity and loss.

The concept of Terra Nulius stated that if the people in a area didn’t “own” it, then it was acceptable to claim it as their own. This was a law that justified the Europeans coming to foreign areas and developing land to claim as their own. Since First Nations did not believe in land ownership, colonization took much of the area that they resided in. As years went by and the land for the indigenous peoples of Canada became smaller and smaller, new laws and systems were put in place to continue developing the landscape. On the North Shore, it wasn't until the late 1800s that this historic relationship truly began to change. In 1862, T.W. Graham and George Scrimgeor acquired a 194-hectare piece of land in what is now known as North Vancouver. This would be the start of a pivotal change of the North Shore identity and would alter how we relate to the environment today. What was once a provider, untouched by greed, profit, or development, soon transformed into a resource. After the start of residential schools in the late
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The abundant tree population in the area, leading to a slow and steady annihilation of the the forests. These were the forests that allowed the Coast Salish to travel great distances on canoes, the forest whose bark would cover a newborn baby to keep them from getting too cold. These forests were the pillars that held up the Indigenous Peoples, allowing them to live and thrive. As time moved on, the gaping mountains and beautiful waters were also discovered by the residents living on the other side of the burrard in Vancouver. After the war, the rise of the suburbs lead to a rapid influx of population on the fresh and naked landscape of the North Shore. The idea of land ownership spread like a plague in these times, and by the sixties, communities had formed throughout the area. Soon, the waters that were once abundant with life, became polluted by frequent exports and imports of goods