Enya
Jack
Julian
Zayan
Thamil
100

The quilts that we are introduced to in the beginning of this text is used as a form of __________for indigenous people

Expression

100

This podcast shows that Indigenous literature can take the modern form of __________

Podcasting

100

Many young people are trying to learn __________ knowledge of the land to understand it better.

Indigenous

100
The proposed nuclear facility facing legal opposition is called

Chalk River nuclear waste facility

100
  1. The podcast provides ______ hand narratives of indigenous individuals such as Andrea Landry, an Anishinaabe activist who rejected Canadian political systems completely.

First-hand narratives

200

Indigenous literature is important because it opens a ___________ into the trauma that many Indigenous people have dealt with

Window

200

Indigenous people are often judged through a __________ lens, even when they are included in conversations

Colonial

200

Youth say they learn __________, traditions, land care, and culture from Indigenous Elders.

Stories

200

This river, sacred to Indigenous Peoples, is near the proposed Chalk River Waste Facility

Ottawa River

200

The stories in the podcast help Indigenous individuals preserve culture, challenge oppression, and ______ their identity

Reclaim

300

 Learning about these traumas and the consequences it has is extremely important so that the issues they've dealt with and are still dealing with are not __________

Overlooked

300

The podcast works to __________ colonialism by centering Indigenous voices

Decentering

300

When people say, “we are __________ on this land,” they are showing respect for Indigenous people.

Guests
300

This international declaration protects Indigenous rights, including free, prior, and informed consent.

UNDRIP (United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples)

300

Rosanna Deerchild contributes to the ________ of Indigenous literature by presenting a national platform for Indigenous voices as she helps present messages to _________Indigenous groups through media forms such as radio and podcasting

Development / Empowerment

400

 Their hurts from the past, and the trauma they still have to this day have led to _________ and _______

Addiction / Abuse

400

Indigenous authors struggle to share stories of __________ due to colonial expectations

Joy / Love

400

Indigenous youth connect to their culture through language, ceremonies, and __________-based programs.

Land

400

The Indigenous leaders quoted in the article 

Lance Haymond and Francis Verreault-Paul

400

Rather than relying on just activism or preserving their culture for ______generations, they are also engaging with various political movements to protect their community and ________ policies.

 future, reform

500

This article especially touches on the ending of my response to the inquiry question, which was the part that ________ my opinion on why Indigenous literature matters the most

Captured

500

The part that most __________ my thinking on why Indigenous literature matters was how it shows Indigenous people as leaders and creators

Impacted

500

Indigenous knowledge is important for climate solutions because it teaches __________ for nature.

Respect
500

This term describes the waste disposal method planned at Chalk River

Near-surface disposal

500

This presents the idea where indigenous identities and voices are developing to move smarter and make their voices heard without _______the systems, so the government cannot _______.

disregarding, interfere