Cree-Métis educator
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Is there an essence to inclusion for communities? Dr. Lori Campbell, professor of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion at Grant MacEwan University, speaks on foundational concepts around inclusion. ORDER OF SERVICE Chimes Welcome and Announcements Land Acknowledgement Prelude Chalice Lighting – Be Longing by Chad Snyder Hymn 6 – Just As Long As I Have Breath Sharing Our Abundance – CUC Sharing Our Faith Hymn 402 - From You I Receive (Sing 2X) Story - Strictly No Elephants written by Lisa Mantchev and Illustrated by Taeeun Yo (not recorded) Hymn of the Month – Belonging by Christopher New Service Leader Reflection – Rev. Rosemary Morrison Hymn 170 - We Are a Gentle Angry People Message - What Do You Mean By Inclusion? – Dr. Lori Campbell Meditation Meditation Music - Hymn 123 - Spirit of Life Candles of Joy and Concern Hymn 1018 - Come and Go With Me Extinguishing the Flame Benediction Carry the Flame Postlude
LVWITHLOVE.com Thank you to our Partners! Lehigh Valley Health Network WDIY Wind Creek Event Center Michael Bernadyn of RE/MAX Real Estate Molly’s Irish Grille & Sports Pub Banko Beverage Company VIDEO VERSION: https://youtu.be/tGwN5fX5xFA Hello and Welcome to the Lehigh Valley with Love Podcast, I’m your host, George Wacker, In this episode, we meet with the Greater Lehigh Valley REALTORS (GLVR) to talk more about their innovative pilot program aimed at enhancing youth education on financial literacy. Joining us are Lori Campbell, GLVR’s 2024 President, Michael Bernadyn, 2024 President Elect, and Justin Porembo, CEO of GLVR, who I used to play wiffle ball with in college believe it or not. GLVR’s initiative seeks to partner with local school districts to introduce essential concepts of savings, credit, and homeownership to middle and high school students. Through interactive presentations and thoughtfully crafted materials, GLVR aims to inspire the next generation to shape their financial literacy, foster community development through property ownership, and nurture future leaders within our community. Tune in as we explore the goals, action plan, and potential impact of this forward-thinking program, designed to empower youth with the knowledge and skills necessary for a financially secure future. GUESTS Lori Campbell, GLVR 2024 President, Michael Bernadyn, GLVR 2024 President Elect Justin Porembo, CEO of GLVR LINKS www.greaterlehighvalleyrealtors.com
A month has passed since the investigation into Buffy Sainte-Marie rocked the Indigenous community. The CBC's Fifth Estate aired the investigative documentary on Friday, October 27th. It cast doubts about the iconic musicians Indigenous identity. In the end the report labeled her a “Pretendian," the term used to describe people whose claims of Indigenous identity have been found false or built on distant family lineage. The report was a bombshell and it hit the Indigenous community hard. Those with connections to Indigenous communities say the story has caused harm and division. Today, we make space for grief: to mourn what Buffy meant in the Indigenous community, to learn why stories like this do so much harm and find out where the Indigenous-led solutions lie to find our way forward. Lori Campbell is using her roles as the Associate Vice-President of Indigenous Engagement at the University of Regina and as a community Aunty to keep dialogue open, and counter the negative comments and conversations that divide. Michelle Cyca is a journalist who has been part of identity investigations in the past. She wrote an exposé for Maclean's magazine about Gina Adams, artist and former professor at Emily Carr University of Art and Design. But now she says she's growing increasingly uncomfortable with the way the media – and the world – delivers and digests pretendian investigations while ignoring the bigger issues. Shaneen Robinson is the Indigenous Music Development Coordinator at Manitoba Music. In her industry, Indigenous music makers are coming together to talk about the pain and the solutions to the pretendian problem in the music world.
When the Buffy Sainte-Marie news broke last week, people were stunned. A CBC investigation was accusing the legendary singer-songwriter of lying about her Indigenous roots. Sainte-Marie had already come out on social media and said she had been claimed by the Piapot Cree First Nation in Saskatchewan - something the Piapot First Nation confirmed. And from earlier conversations about “pretendians” - those faking an Indigenous identity - it was clear kinship ties were maybe even more important than genealogy when it comes to establishing Indigeneity. In today's episode, Lori Campbell, Associate Vice President of Indigenous Engagement at the University of Regina, speaks to Vinita about how this story rolled out, and why it matters to everyone following it.Read Lori Campbell's story in The Conversation Canada:Revelations about Buffy Sainte-Marie's ancestry are having a devastating impact on Indigenous communities across Canada:https://theconversation.com/revelations-about-buffy-sainte-maries-ancestry-are-having-a-devastating-impact-on-indigenous-communities-across-canada-216602Episode show notes:https://theconversation.com/how-journalists-tell-buffy-sainte-maries-story-matters-explained-by-a-60s-scoop-survivor-216805
Lori Campbell, Associate Vice President (Indigenous Engagement), University of Regina Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We're celebrating four Indspire Award recipients who create, educate, and inspire The Indspire Awards represent the highest honour the Indigenous community bestows upon its own people. Every year, a dozen First Nation, Metis and Inuit people are chosen for their outstanding achievements across Turtle Island and beyond. Nations Skate Youth is where Joe Buffalo and his team teach kids to skate, as a way to empower, inspire and instill pride. Joe is a legend in the skate community. Not just for his gravity defying feats on a board but also because of his incredible story of survival and resilience. He survived one of Canada's last residential schools, confronted substance abuse in his life, and after picking up his first skateboard turned pro and became a legend. This year the Samson Cree man was recognized with a Sports Indspire Award. One of this year's Youth Recipients is Willow Allen. She is a fashion model, a cultural content creator with over a million followers and a soon to be social worker. After being discovered on Instagram, the Inuvialuit beauty has walked runways from Singapore to New York for big name brands like Clinique, Louboutin Beauty, and Canada Goose. But because home is where her heart is, Willow, who is from Inuvik, Northwest Territories also teaches people online about life in the north – just as her dad taught her on the land. Building cabins with her grandfather inspired Reanna Merasty to build a career as an architect focused on holistic homes. Now, Reanna is an architectural intern. She also co-founded the Indigenous Design and Planning Students Association at the University of Manitoba. Reanna is a recipient of a Youth Indspire Award for her advocacy and dedication to changing the field of architecture. Lori Campbell is a 60s Scoop adoptee: one of about 20-thousand Indigenous children who were removed by the government and adopted into mostly non-Indigenous families. She was lost - disconnected from her culture until she enrolled at the University of Regina. There she found a community of “aunties and uncles” that guided her on a journey of self-discovery. Now, as the Associate Vice President of Indigenous Engagement of the same university, she is on a mission to make universities a resource for other Indigenous people who want to find their way home.
AUNTIE: Wa'tkwanonhweráton Sewakwé:kon – on this episode of The Aunties Dandelion we visit with Lori Campbell a formidable justice warrior, Intergenerational residential school survivor, Indigiqueer Auntie… she's scholar and and recent contender on the reality show Canada's Ultimate Challenge. Lori is a member of Montreal Lake First Nation Treaty 6 Territory and spent decades on a quest to piece her family back together after she and her siblings were taken from her mom by Canada's government. It's estimated 20 thousand Indigenous children suffered the same fate as the Campbells in what's known as Canada's Sixties Scoop. Lori walks us through the details of her grueling journey which eventually let the assurance she encountered when she finally met her birth family. LORI: All those times that I was sitting wondering if anybody thought of me. You know I would say to anybody out there who has been separated from their family never doubt that our people don't think of us. That they are not longing for us and missing us and loving us and wanting the best for us. AUNTIE: Lori takes her Auntie role seriously and she competed in Canada's Ultimate Challenge in order to reveal a more complete narrative of Indigenous people than the media typicall shows us. LORI: People weren't just seeing me but they were seeing… our people and the strength that we bring right? Not our victimhood. But our strength. AUNTIE: Despite suffering a devastating injury – Lori made us all proud and amazed with her determination. So make sure you keep listening. We are Yéthi Nihsténha ne Tekarónyakénare. The Aunties Dandelion. We're focused on revitalizing our communities through stories of land, language, and relationships. And we want to say Nyá:wenkò:wa – or big thanks – to Canada's Indigenous Screen Office – teyonhkiwihstekénha – for making this podcast possible through their New Media fund. We make space here for real conversations to unfold like we're visiting in our communities. So take a breath, make some tea – and listen to your Aunties. And when you are done – please follow us, provide some feedback, and share these visits with others. It helps us continue these visits together.
This week on Discovery, host Cal Steiger, introduces us to a new series from the University of Regina, “Travel Far, Together”. The series explores the contributions of researchers at the University of Regina to some of today's most challenging issues. In this episode, host John Lagimodiere invites Lori Campbell, a 2 spirited Indigi-Queer PHD candidate to share her story of growing up outside her culture and her 25 year search for her primary family. Lori's story is both an inspiration and an emotional journey through the process of reconciliation with the past and present.
IT WORKED OUT SO WELL our 50th episode happen to be one of the best horror films of all time! We watched Freddy Vs Jason this week BUCKLE UP! M- 10/10 j- 8/10 Each week we choose a movie from one of the horror genre to discuss the following week. Follow along each week by keeping up with the movies we are watching to stay in the loop with the movie club! Check out other podcasts, coffee and pins at www.darkroastcult.com ! THANKS TO ANDREW FOR MAKING THE INTRO SONG. (soundcloud.com / andoryukesuta)@andoryukesuta Freddy VS Jason 2003 It's been nearly ten years since Freddy Krueger terrorized people in the dreams, and the towns folk want to keep him erased from their memory. Freddy still has one more plan on getting back to Elm Street. He resurrects Jason Voorhees and sends him off to kill. The more bodies which fall to the ground, the stronger in which Freddy becomes. This is until, Freddy realizes that Jason isn't going to step aside easily, and must be taken down himself. Freddy vs. Jason is a 2003 American slasher film directed by Ronny Yu and written by Damian Shannon and Mark Swift. It is a crossover between the A Nightmare on Elm Street and Friday the 13th franchises, being the eighth installment in the former and the eleventh in the latter. The film joins the two series in a shared universe and pits their respective antagonists, Freddy Krueger and Jason Voorhees, against each other. Freddy is weakened and forgotten because the citizens of his home town Springwood have defeated him by using medications that repress dreams. Freddy awakens Jason to stir up fear and grow his powers so that he may return and kill again. Jason turns out to not be as easily controlled as Freddy initially thought, and the two supernatural mass murderers come into conflict. The film is chronologically set after Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991) and Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday (1993), and is the last film in each franchise before their respective reboots. Freddy vs. Jason was released in the United States on August 15, 2003. The film received mixed reviews from critics but grossed over $116 million worldwide, making it the highest-grossing film in each series. The film marks Robert Englund's final cinematic appearance as Freddy Krueger. A sequel and crossover with the Evil Dead franchise was planned, but it was ultimately scrapped and turned into a comic book limited series, Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash, and its follow-up The Nightmare Warriors. Since his last defeat, Freddy Krueger has been in Hell and unable to invade children's dreams, as the adults of Springwood have gone to extremes to make sure their children have forgotten him. Using his remaining power, Freddy resurrects Jason Voorhees. Appearing as Jason's mother, Pamela Voorhees, he manipulates Jason into killing the teens of Springwood to create fear in the townsfolk that Freddy has returned, which would allow him to regain his strength. Meanwhile, Lori Campbell, who lives with her widowed father, has a sleepover with her friends Kia and Gibb. They are later joined by Trey, Gibb's emotionally abusive boyfriend, and his friend Blake. Jason enters the house and murders Trey, and the police suspect Freddy. After a nightmare, Blake awakens to find his father decapitated by Jason, who then kills Blake himself. The police call it a murder–suicide the following day, hoping to conceal Freddy's return from the rest of the town.
Lori Campbell, University of Regina's associate vice-president of Indigenous engagement. Campbell is a Two-Spirit nēhiýaw āpihtāwikosisān and is a band member of Montreal Lake First Nation, Treaty 6 territory See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On Toronto Today we are talking about National Day for Truth and Reconciliation. Greg is joined by Lori Campbell sharing her powerful story on her grandmother at a residential school. Toronto Star columnist Bruce Arthur on where Canada missed the mark, ED for the National Center for Truth and Reconciliation Stephanie Scott on what we need to learn, and Globe and Mail columnist Caroline Alphonso on rapid testing in schools. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On Toronto Today we are talking about National Day for Truth and Reconciliation. Greg is joined by Lori Campbell sharing her powerful story on her grandmother at a residential school. Toronto Star columnist Bruce Arthur on where Canada missed the mark, ED for the National Center for Truth and Reconciliation Stephanie Scott on what we need to learn, and Globe and Mail columnist Caroline Alphonso on rapid testing in schools.
How was your Mother's Day? When are cable cars coming back to San Francisco?If you see a dryer sheet in your mailbox, here's what it means.Breeze listener Lori Campbell shares a very special Brighter Side about Big-O-Tires.Things you only wash once a year!Ranch pickles?!?!?!?
Lori joins host Billie Franks as they discuss women's ranch rodeo events past and present.
In 2003, the Friday the 13th and Nightmare on Elm Street worlds collided, and this star was at the center of it all. Tune in to hear our interview with final girl Monica Keena (aka Lori Campbell) as she spills new details about making the film and surviving not one but TWO super villains. “Freddy vs. Jason - place your bets!”
Director of the Indigenous Student Centre at the University of Waterloo, Lori Campbell is a child of the Sixties Scoop and an intergenerational survivor of the residential school system in Canada. In this episode, Lori speaks about violence against Indigenous women and girls, while opening up about her childhood and sharing her personal experience as a Two-Spirit woman and a survivor of domestic violence. Join in the conversation! Use the hashtag #SheIsYourNeighbour and connect with us on social media at @WomensCrisisSWR. Learn more at www.sheisyourneighbour.com.
We go over good friend Julie Carter's list ranch wife 101. Lots of laughs. Thank you Julie for your insights and reminders for the young and old ranch wife alike.
Breeze listener Lori Campbell continues to give back to Bay Area residents!
Mask fines in Contra Costa go into effect today!UC Berkeley students are stuck in leases. Breeze listener Lori Campbell surprises a family with a CAR. KC Chiefs guard Laurent Duvernay Tardif is a doctor in his offseason and makes and announcement. Target will be closed on Thanksgiving for the first time. Google extends the work-from-home policy through next summer.
Noa Daniel welcomes Indigenous educators Colinda Clyne, Jody Alexander, Pam Agawa and Lori Campbell to the OnEdMentors show to speak about the marking of National Indigenous Peoples Day.
Noa Daniel welcomes Indigenous educators Colinda Clyne, Jody Alexander, Pam Agawa and Lori Campbell to the OnEdMentors show to speak about the marking of National Indigenous Peoples Day.
Lori Campbell and I spoke via Skype about various Social Issues, living in K-W and more. Music by Bob Guido.
Guest host, Stephen Hurley gathers a panel of TEDx participants for a conversation about the exciting event coming up on Saturday, February 22 at Laurier University. Tonights guests include event organizer Andrew Biersonski, Will Gourley, Lori Campbell and Noa Daniel
Guest host, Stephen Hurley gathers a panel of TEDx participants for a conversation about the exciting event coming up on Saturday, February 22 at Laurier University. Tonights guests include event organizer Andrew Biersonski, Will Gourley, Lori Campbell and Noa Daniel
Dr. Jodi L. Abbott and Lieutenant-Colonel Jeff Wilson are joined by Dr. Lori Campbell to share their thoughts on the importance of inclusivity and how leaders can incorporate inclusion into their organizations. If you or your organization is interested in services the Colbourne Institute for Inclusive Leadership can provide, please contact Dr. Lori Campbell at 780.644.6757 or Lori.Campbell@norquest.ca.
Lori Campbell is a “visionary gerontologist” and author of Awaken Your AgePotential: Exploring Chosen Paths of Thrivers. She has created a plan for a “new vision for aging” which is about living abundantly, no matter what our age is. Her book describes how to thrive as we grow older, and includes profiles of 10 people who are great role … Read more about this episode...
Join us as we'll discuss:Debunk 5 Myths of Aging.4 Inner Secrets of mastering the art of aging well.Tips to get into the driver seat of your health/aging journey. Lori Campbell is a visionary gerontologist, best-selling author and speaker with dual expertise in wellness and aging who helps people master the art of aging. She wrote the book, Awaken Your AgePotential, after spending a decade+ years among thriving older adults learning the key to aging is not in the genes but in pliable things we can influence and control. Lori is here today to introduce an emerging trend called AgePotential.
On Wednesday, October 24th 2012 Care together cafe meets again at Swirl Wine Bar from 3 - 5 PM and the topic is "Bring it On, How to Age Like Betty White." with guest speaker Lori Campbell.
KLBB recently sat down with Lori Campbell to discuss Age Potential and to preview her presentation at the Brightstar Care-Together Cafe on October 24th from 3 to 5 PM at Swirl Wine Bar in Afton, MN.
Ray Lorenzo found out that his ex-wife's ex-boyfriend stole his identity and committed felonies in New York- since he is a computer specialist, he is unable to get a job in his field because background checksshow him as a convicted felon. This has ruined his career and destroyed his marriage to his 2nd ex-spouse. Listen to thew fascinating story of what he is doing to get his life back.In the second half hour you will hear the heartbreaking story of Lori Campbell who was convicted of a felony that her imostor did. She is desperately trying to get a new trial to prove her abosolute inosense. When you hear these interviews, you will see how this mightmare could happen to you and you'll learn ways to deal with it if it does.