Settlers, here are the questions leaders in reconciliation and decolonization want you to spend National Day for Truth and Reconciliation asking yourself

Leaders in philanthropy, advocacy, climate action, and more share big and tangible questions for settlers in the sector

Why It Matters

A majority of social purpose organizations are settler-led but work with and serve Indigenous people and communities every day. It’s imperative that these organizations meaningfully engage in decolonizing and embedding reconciliation principles into their work, to work with Indigenous communities in more informed and respectful ways.

var TRINITY_TTS_WP_CONFIG = {"cleanText":"Settlers, here are the questions leaders in reconciliation and decolonization want you to spend National Day for Truth and Reconciliation asking yourself. This Thursday is the first ever National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.\u00a0 Many in Canada\u2019s social impact sector will have the day off, with time to reflect and learn about what reconciliation means in their lives and work. With that in mind, Future of Good asked 10 leaders working in reconciliation and decolonization for questions they\u2019d suggest their settler peers spend the day asking themselves. Here\u2019s what they told us. \u00a0 On transferring power\u23f8 \u201c How are you giving up\/transferring power to Indigenous youth, Nations, and organizations within your work?\u201d as

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