[IPSM] 'The warrior spirit is in all of us', plus more

shelly luvnrev at colba.net
Sun Apr 23 06:25:23 PDT 2006


 
'The warrior spirit is in all of us'
Clan mothers play significant role
Mohawks claiming major victory 
Peter Edwards - Staff Reporter
Toronto Star
April 22, 2006. 01:00 AM 

[SISIS note: The following mainstream news article is provided for reference only, as an example of how mainstream media treats indigenous resistance to genocide. Mainstream media often presents biased and distorted information, lacking pertinent facts and/or context. Inclusion of this article on our site should not be considered an endorsement by SISIS.]

CALEDONIA-There's no end in sight to the aboriginal occupation of a housing development south of Hamilton, but the Mohawks are already claiming a major victory.

Representatives from the traditional longhouse government are sitting at the negotiating table in ongoing talks with provincial and federal officials, a fact that thrills their spokeswoman, Hazel Hill.

"It's monumental," Hill says. "It's big. I can't even explain the enormity of what's happening." 

While Hill can't contain her excitement, she can explain it. 

She notes that the traditional longhouse form of government was declared illegal in 1924, when the federal Indian Act was imposed.

Now, it's at the centre of talks with the two levels of government, and elected Chief David General of the Six Nations Council has deferred to the longhouse government as having the lead role at the table.

"It's history in the making," an elated Hill says. "You're living it. I'm living it." 

It's certainly a far cry from the years following the imposition of the Indian Act, which pushed women to the sidelines of decision-making, denying them the vote for years.

"It's all about paternalism," says Janie Jamieson, another longhouse representative. 

By outlawing the central role of the so-called clan mothers in Mohawk communities, "it took away the true voice of the people," Hill says.

"In our teachings, all forms of life come from the women," adds Jamieson. "All responsibilities towards life come from the women."

Mohawks like to note that Thomas Jefferson, while helping to frame the U.S. Declaration of Independence, borrowed from the "Great Law of Peace" that governed the Iroquois Confederacy, which stretched from southern Ontario into Quebec.

They particularly like to joke that there were some ideas in longhouse government too revolutionary even for the fathers of the American Revolution.

One was that women should be treated equally, or society would pay dearly in its homes and places of government.

The Canadian Indian Act wasn't any better when it came to respecting women's rights, especially in its attempt to snuff out the role of traditional clan mothers, Hill says.

A clan mother is a native version of "first among equals." 

She's a woman respected for sensing group values and needs and being able to articulate them. In the old days, clan mothers nominated the chiefs, who were then held to rules the women set.

Clan mothers are often elderly, and it's considered rude to push them to negotiate into the evening. 

"We meet from the morning until about 3 o'clock," says Hill, who's not a clan mother herself. 

A clan mother must be spiritual as well as respected by her peers. She also has to be tough.

"They have to have skin seven layers thick," Hill says.

Clan mothers are chosen by the other women of the clan, and to refuse the role is unheard of.

In the end, clan mothers and other traditional people must bring issues back to community members before any decisions are made, she said. 

This means that any potential agreement reached at the negotiating table can't be imposed; it has to be ratified by the community, much the way a labour agreement must be ratified by union members. 

Longhouse Mohawks have followed the traditional consensus style of decision-making since the occupation began 53 days ago. 

"Everything that has happened to this day in this site has been based on consensus," Hill says. 

"There's no such thing as more powerful, because we're all equal."

She says mainstream society misunderstands the term "warrior," associating it with gun-toting males. 

"The warrior spirit is in all of us," Hill says. "It's not a male thing. It's not a female thing. It's about love. It's about harmony." 

Hill, a grandmother, appears to be in her mid-40s, but laughs when asked for her exact age. 

She laughs even louder when asked if she considers herself a tough woman, in the longhouse tradition. 

She notes that she was involved in an altercation with Ontario Provincial Police on Thursday morning, when 16 of the protesting Mohawks were arrested in a pre-dawn raid and charged with mischief and assaulting police. 

"It took five of them to get me down," Hill says with a smile. "So you tell me."

CAW's Hargrove Calls On PM To Ensure Peaceful Resolution To Six Nations Land Claim 

  PORT ELGIN, ON, April 22 /CNW/ - CAW president Buzz Hargrove is urging Prime Minister Stephen Harper to ensure a responsible, peaceful and immediate end to the land claim dispute in Caledonia, Ontario.

      Hargrove blasted Harper for escalating the overwhelming police presence in the dispute by having large numbers of RCMP officers dispatched to Caledonia.

      "These actions have only served to inflame the peaceful actions of the native community who are defending their rights to reclaim their land," Hargrove states in an April 21 letter to Harper.

      "Have the governments of the day not learned anything from the many previous disputes over native land claims? Peaceful negotiations, not police harassment and intimidation, is the way to proceed," Hargrove said.

      Hargrove is calling on Harper's government to:


    a.. ensure all armed RCMP officers are withdrawn from the area immediately;

    b.. stop issuing illegal possessions of land;

    c.. set up a time-table for peaceful negotiations with the Six Nations people regarding their Caledonia land claim;

    d.. set a fast track to work toward resolving all unsettled land claims in Canada. There are more than 600 unsettled land claims in Canada.

      "Historically the native community has been often discriminated against and no fair minded government should allow this shameful treatment of people to continue," Hargrove said.

      Hargrove is also demanding that Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty remove the OPP presence and peacefully end the dispute immediately.

      More than 800 delegates from coast to coast at CAW Council who are meeting in Port Elgin, Ontario have voted to have governments remove police and find a peaceful solution to the dispute.

  For further information: contact CAW Communications director Jim Pare, 
  (cell) (416) 723-2224

Solidarity Picket in Akwesasne 




"Members of the Akwesasne reserve near Cornwall, Ont., staged a small protest near the Canada-U.S. border, holding picket signs and drawing honks of support from passing motorists. "



Are Military Forces Operating From Hamilton Airport in Six Nations Standoff?
Submitted by Anthony on April 22, 2006 - 10:25pm. A&S News Wire | Caledonia / 6 Nations Breaking News 
Are Military Forces Operating From Hamilton Airport in Six Nations Standoff?
Officials "not aware" of military involvement in Six Nations crisis, but won't deny reports
by Anthony Fenton and Dru Oja Jay, The Dominion

A military force of unknown size and capacity seems to be operating out of the Hamilton airport, according to information gathered by the Dominion. The deployment of military forces would be a major escalation in the standoff between native protesters and the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP). The OPP has tried once, unsucessfully, to remove demonstrators occupying a housing development that Six Nations Kanienkehake (Mohawks) say is illegal under Canadian, Haudenosaunee and international law.

In an interview, an Airport official initially confirmed that Canadian Forces were at the airport in a "back up support" capacity. Mary Beth Horvath, Marketing/Commuications Coordinator for the Hamilton Airport, first told the Dominion that Canadian Forces were not "using it (the airport) as a staging ground. I haven't heard it regarded in that term."

Asked later to confirm, Horvath repeated that "there is some backup support there." When asked to specifically to confirm if Canadian Forces were on site, Horvath responded that "I don't know if, again, I don't know to what extent or to what, so I'm not, I really don't want to be quoted on that because I'm not there to actually see it, physically."

(Update: A resident of Caledonia who asked not to be identified told the Dominion he saw an unmarked grey van travelling in his neighborhood, blocks away from the standoff, with eight Canadian Forces personnel. "They looked like Rangers," the source said.)

Horvath referred the Dominion to two other officials, neither of which denied that Canadian Forces were operating from the Hamilton Airport.

"I know nothing about that," said Haldiman County official Bill Pierce when asked about a military staging ground at the airport.

Dave Rector, a spokesperson for the Ontario Provincial Police, said "I am not aware of the presence of any Canadian armed forces."

Eyewitness and press reports have confirmed that RCMP are assisting the OPP, and some reports cite the Airport as the Federal police force's staging area. An RCMP spokesperson confirmed that RCMP are playing a supporting role, but would not comment on any specific locations or activities.

As of this writing, the Dominion could not find any officials willing to deny the deployment of military to the airport.

Federal Involvement?

The deployment of military would mark the involvement of the Federal Government, marking a departure from what officials have repeatedly insisted is a Provincial matter.

The last time Canadian Forces were deployed against native demonstrators was during the 1990 Oka crisis, when Kanienkehake citizens occupied land that was slated for a golf course development. The land had been stolen a century earlier by the Catholic Church, and a century of Kanienkehake protests had not changed the situation. Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa invoked the National Defense Act, requesting "military aid to the civil power". The deployment of the Canadian army ended with one dead soldier, two civilian deaths, and reports of torture and unjustified tactics earned Canada the condemnation of the International Federation of Human Rights and a place on Amnesty International's list of violators of human rights.

Provincial officials requested the deployment of Canadian Forces--specifically, the elite Joint Task Force Two--during the 1995 Gustafsen Lake standoff, but were officially denied. According to court testimony by police officers, police took flack jackets to a firing range and fired guns at them in order to create the appearance that police had been shot by the small group of natives occupying the site. Internal police video showed commanders stating the need for a "disinformation and smear campaign" against the native occupiers. With 77,000 rounds of ammunition shot by police, the deployment of amoured vehicles, and the use of a land mine against a truck driven by one of the demonstrators, Gustafsen lake has been cited as the largest paramilitary deployment in Canadian history.

Ottawa Citizen reporter David Pugliese, in his book Canada's Secret Commandos: The Unauthorized Story of Joint Task Task Force Two, wrote that officially, JTF2 "wasn't deployed to the standoff."

"But civilian police officers privately confirm that JTF2 operators were at the siege, helping them in covert intelligence gathering as well as determining the lay of the land in case the entire unit was needed for an assault on the native encampment," Pugliese wrote. "Some of the native protesters also insist that it was members of JTF2, and not the RCMP, who engaged them in a gun battle in early September."

Federal officials have denied that the current standoff at Six Nations has anything to do with land. "This is not a lands-claim matter," Deirdre McCracken, a spokesperson for the Minister of Indian Affairs Jim Prentice told reporters. McCracken also said that the blockade "has nothing to do with the federal government."

The presence of Canadian Forces on the ground, if confirmed, will be a stark change from the government's stated policy.

VIDEO INTERVIEWS AND FOOTAGE 
All videos were filmed on April 20th at Six Nations encampment at Caledonia. Please mirror and distribute this content. Video is in MPEG4 format. 

 Interview with Elder Jaqueline House
 Interview with Mohawk Warrior
 Interview with Mike D. on Police Attack
 Interview with Six Nations resident Robin Williams
 Building of the Highway 6 Barricade


Filming and Production by Tom K. Web hosting from the oat.tao.ca crew. 

If you have material (photos, links, etc) that you think should be added to this page, please login to the site and add comments below with your material. We will then move it up to the main part of this page. 

This Resource Page was created to provide coverage of events unfolding on 6 Nations land near Caladonia, Ontario. Members of the 6 Nations took over a planned subdivision on February 28th, 2006 and have held the land ever since. On the morning of Thursday April 20th, 150 heavily armed OPP officers raided the camp but were pushed back. The standoff continues.

For info on how the Ontario government plans to bring unprecedented growth (3.7 million people) into the "Greater Golden Horseshoe" area check out the "Places to Grow Act" passed in June 2005.

June 13, 2005: The province of Ontario passes the Places to Grow Act. The act provides a legal framework for the provincial government to designate any area of land (including unceded First Nations land) as a "growth plan area" and decide on its development. A regulation was also passed identifying the "Greater Golden Horseshoe area" (which includes unceded Six Nations land) as the first area for which a growth plan will be prepared. The act is online at: http://www.pir.gov.on.ca/userfiles/HTML/cma_4_40890_1.html

November 24, 2005: The Ontario Ministry of Public Infrastructure Renewal releases the Proposed Growth Plan for the Greater Golden Horseshoe. Unceded Six Nations land is part of this development plan. The plan is online at: http://www.pir.gov.on.ca/userfiles/HTML/cma_4_40902_1.html

Protest began with a potluck 
Woman's event marked 1784 grant
Thomas Walkom - National Affairs Writer 
Toronto Star
April 22, 2006. 09:56 AM 
CALEDONIA-The roots of what is being called Canada's latest Indian crisis are deep yet personal, institutional yet quirky.

They lie partly in the 18th century politics of Canada and the American Revolution. Those who didn't know that part of their country's history received a crash course Wednesday night when protestors set fire to an abandoned minivan near this small southwestern Ontario town and hurled it off a bridge to make their point.

They lie, too, in the much more recent decision of Premier Dalton McGuinty's Liberal government to foster urban growth in selected parts of southern Ontario. 

But they also lie in Janie Jamieson's decision last October to hold a potluck supper to commemorate the history of her Six Nations people. 

As always, all of these things are intimately related. But before getting to that, it is probably worth pointing out that the latest Indian crisis isn't a crisis - at least not yet. 

Rather, it is a carefully calibrated and well-organized protest designed to get maximum media attention without causing any serious physical damage. 

No one has been killed. No one has been seriously hurt. Little has been vandalized (the incinerated minivan was donated by one of the demonstrators). 

A small housing development has been stalled; a town has been inconvenienced and a few trains in eastern Ontario have been delayed. 

Which brings the story back to Janie Jamieson, the American Revolution, Dalton McGuinty and how this whole thing started. 

Most Canadians today cannot appreciate how different the constellation of political forces was in 18th century North America. At that time, European settlement - particularly in what is now Canada - was fragile, dependent for its survival on alliances with rival Indian nations.

One of the most enduring was the alliance between British newcomers and the Six Nations Iroquois Confederacy, based in what is now upper New York State. This alliance helped Britain defeat the French in North America in the 1760s. 

A few years later, when the American colonies rose up in the rebellion of 1776, Britain again called on its Iroquois allies. For this, the Six Nations paid a bitter price. George Washington's revolutionary army razed their villages and burned their crops.

In 1783, commanding Gen. Frederick Haldimand and his defeated loyalists retreated north across the Great Lakes into what is now southern Ontario. The Six Nations were part of this trek. In recompense for their service to the Crown, Haldimand awarded them all the land for 10 kilometres on each side of the Grand River, from its mouth on Lake Erie to its source, northwest of what is now Orangeville.

All in all, it was about 385,000 hectares - a sizeable chunk of the best land in Ontario.

Ken Young's ancestor Theobold Young, an Englishman with ties to the Iroquois, was part of that retreat. The Simcoe-area farmer was at the barricade in Caledonia this week to show support for old allies.

The story of what happened to that 385,000-hectare grant is depressingly familiar. Most of it was lost to European settlement - legally, says the Canadian government; illegally, say the Iroquois. The Six Nations have filed a host of land claims, some of them 20 years old, none of them resolved.

To make matters even more complicated, the people of the Six Nations reserve are split in their political loyalties. 

Some support the elected band council, first introduced in 1924. Others support an older competing council of hereditary chiefs chosen through a complex system of clan lineage. To many supporters of the hereditary chiefs, the elected councillors are sellouts and usurpers - puppets of the federal government that created them. 

Jamieson is a spokeswoman for the hereditary chiefs. Last October, she was trying to come up with a way to commemorate the 221st anniversary of the original Haldimand grant.

It was at about that time that work was being started on a new housing development just outside of Caledonia, on land which the developer owned clear title to but which many of the neighbouring Six Nations members felt had been illegitimately taken from them. 

To Jamieson, the development exemplified two problems.

One was the longstanding land grievance. The other, she explained yesterday, was the McGuinty government's decision to encourage intensive population growth in parts of southern Ontario. 

"They were talking about twice the population of Toronto," she said, and "5,000 families in this area alone." 

"Think of all of the social problems. We already have a water shortage on the reserve."

So she decided to hold a one-day protest on the site. She would organize a potluck supper (in the end, it was catered) and a social. 

As it turned out, the protest lasted two days and was a smashing success.

Situated next door to part of the reserve, the new subdivision symbolized to many residents 221 years of failed promises.

In November, Jamieson and her allies handed out pamphlets near the site. 

In February, they received permission from the hereditary chiefs to occupy it indefinitely.

The rest followed inexorably: a court injunction ordering the protestors to leave; negotiations with the province that went nowhere; the eventual OPP decision this week to enforce the injunction, leading to a dawn raid by police and the inevitable reoccupation by reserve residents angered at police tactics.

Now the entire reserve is on side with the protestors. Even the rivalry between the elected and hereditary councils has been papered over for the purposes of this struggle.

"This is coming from my heart," group home worker Wayne Miller told me. "It's nothing else. This is for my 11 grandchildren."

How will it end? No one I talked to seemed to know. All acknowledged that it would be unrealistic to expect the return of all of the original Haldimand grant (which includes portions of Brantford and Cambridge).

Many sympathized with developers Don and John Henning. The two brothers are well liked locally. Indeed, some protestors work for the Hennings.

All said the federal government would have to become more actively involved if there is to be a settlement.

But in the meantime, they wait. "It's already been more than 200 years," said Sam Longboat, a garage owner and artist. 

"We're used to it." 

  
SIX NATIONS UPDATE - HOW TO SURVIVE A SEIGE

MNN.  April 23, 2006.  The source of the false alarm was discovered.  Someone, in this case, a native, seems to have instigated another false alarm.  This person is acting as a tool to disrupt all attempts to achieve a peaceful solution.  

The deliberate attempt to disturb people's sleep and make us live in constant fear is a familiar tactic.  We saw it before at the seige of Kanehsatake/Oka in 1990.  Now that Six Nations/Caledonia is under seige, it is worth remembering what was done to us then.  

The master mind brought in by the Canadian government was a Col. Musgrave.  We saw his picture in the papers.  This little Eichmann even had a little mustache like Hitler.   He had sharpened his claws by becoming Britain's expert on psyhchological warfare tactics used against the Irish.  He announced that it would take 3 weeks to break us down mentally and psychologically.  We weren't duped.  It just didn't work.  It didn't seem to have worked for the Irish either.  They sent him packing back to Britain.  

But that doesn't seem to be stopping them from trying the same shit again.  They used it at Gustafsen.  They used it at Burnt Church.  The OPP think they got it right at Ipperwash when they shot and killed Dudley George in 1995.  They're trying it again here.   

Let's take a look at the Kanehsatake/Oka prototype.  They flew helicopters over our heads all night long and shon blinding bright lights through our windows to disturb our sleep.  They flew jets low over our heads.  Apparently if any women were pregnant they could miscarry.  They knew we had a television in there, so they made misleading news reports.  They showed big bunkers, 50 calibre machine guns and all kinds of weaponry we never knew we had.  This was designed to scare the public.  We were laughing.  If we had that kind of firepower and their kind of mindset, we could have wiped out the whole city of Montreal.  Remember, they were attacking us.  We weren't attacking anybody.  They were trying to provoke us to take the first shot.  We never did.  Part of their attack included cutting  off or interfering with our communications with the outside world.  (They've already done this at Six Nations/Caledonia).  Based on our experience we can expect more harassment and interference.  At Oka they turned our water and electricity off and on.  They stopped food from coming in.  When they did let some through, it was old and rotten and the soldiers had peed in the juice.  (That's right, they urinated in the food we were expected to feed to our children).  What could we do.  We took the rotten eggs and threw them right back at them.  

Their dirty tricks weren't limited to adolescent pranks.  Snipers were assigned to take out anyone they thought might be a leader.  They did not hesitate to use weapons on children.  One 14 year old child was bayoneted in the chest right next to her heart while protecting her 4 year old sister.  When we came out of the Treatment Center, they gave us all a darn bad beating.  Harassment continued against us for years.  

It wasn't just police and army violence we had to watch out for.  False media information was used to incite violent attacks against us by red necks and psychologically unstable members of the general public.  At one point in the crisis, we had organized an evacuation of elderly people and children from Kahnawake.  The rabble rousing media found out about this.  They called out to all the hooligans in the neighborhood to rush out there at the end of the Mercier Bridge and to do their worst.  The Quebec police kept the convoy trapped on the bridge for hours until a large crowd gathered.  When the captives finally drove off the bridge, the cops stood and watched as the crowd stoned, beat the people and crushed their cars.  One elderly man died of a heart attack the next day.  Another a few days later.  All for the sin of thinking that the Canadian forces would act with minimal standards of decency.  Despite the public outcry about what happened in kahnawake, the same tactics were used at Burnt Church to sic French fishermen on their Native neighbors.  We are already seeing the same tactics at Six Nations/Caledonia where local drunks have attacked the people at the barricades.     
   
In Kanehsatake we had a doctor's phone which they could not disconnect.  We found one place in the field where we could make an emergency call.  We carried on.  
    
The person who set off today's false alarm let themselves become tools of the colonizers?  Maybe they want to feel important.  Maybe they're bored and want excitement in their lives.  This is a dangerous game.  It can cost lives.  In the fairy tale, the boys who played wolf sent out so many false alarms that no one would listen.  This made it possible for the wolf to move in for the kill undisturbed.  That's what the military tacticians are hoping they'll be able to do here.   We know they're set to move in.  The reports that the army has taken over a hangar at Hamilton airport are real.  The reports that children in Caledonia were kept out of school on Friday were real.  The attack would have happened then if they thought they could get away with it.  Don't be fooled.  The wolf is still lurking in the forest.  Six Nations remains under seige.   

If Canada was really interested in a peaceful solution, it would withdraw the troops, raise the white flag, withdraw the troops and leave.  They don't even need to negotiate with us.  All they need to do is to pull out their archival documents and look for the root of their title that they used to give Henco Industries the right to move onto our land.  All we've ever been asking for is, "Let's put our documents on the table".  They don't want to do this.  We know why.  They could not give Henco a valid title because they did not have one themselves.  They have been perpetuating a fraud that began almost 200 years ago.   They have violated the honor of the Crown by failing to keep the promises made by General Halidimand in 1784.  

If Ontario needs to negotiate with anyone, it should be with Henco.  They're the ones who gave him the false title.  

Canada is not likely to seek an honest and peaceful solution.  Let's take stock of where we stand now.  Democracy is under seige.  The rule of law is under seige.  We have to figure out how to survive this.  We need your support.   The more non-native supporters there are, the safer it will be for us and the safer it will be for the rule of law and world peace.    

These sleepless nights and the endless fear of not knowing when we will be attacked or who might be killed, is not helping matters one little bit.  We have at least one youth still in prison simply because the only name he has is Mohawk.  They want him to produce a colonial birth certificate.  He's being denied his inherent right to his Indigenous identity in violation of international law.  When Canada is showing itself so willing to violate international law, when Canada has a history of using violence and armed force against Indigenous people, how can anyone sleep at night, how can we hold off our heart attacks.  

Living under seize is an art.  What we learned at Oka is that humor is the best medicine.  We looked at things from our perspective.  That helped us to see that Canadian behaviour was silly, as well as dangerous.  We remembered our ancestors.  We continued our ceremonies.  We remembered the faces that were coming to us in the next generations.  We survived and so did our friends and allies.  Our children grew up together.  Many of us have grandchildren now.  They know what we did.  They're proud of us.  When we were under seige, our brothers, sisters, friends and allies on the outside kept up the pressure and saved our lives.  Thank you.

Supporters, if you wants to send us a flag from your country to show your support, we will be honored to hoist it alongside the Indigenous unity and Confederacy flag.  Sign it and send it to Haze Hill, RR#6, Hagersville, Ontario Canada N0A 1H0.  Deliver it in person.  We'd be glad to meet you.

Kahentinetha Horn
MNN Mohawk Nation News
kahentinetha2 at yahoo.com

Contact:  Dick Hill at 519-865-7722; Hazel Hill at 519-865-7272, 519-445-0719, 519-445-1371 thebasketcase at on.aibn.com; Janie Jamieson at 905-517-7006; Jacqueline House at 905-765-9316 jacqueline_house at hotmail.com 


-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.resist.ca/pipermail/ipsm-l/attachments/20060423/2c0b0a2c/attachment.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: CRN102_154954-154959_Provincial_04-22-06_UN2F2AQ.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 26631 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.resist.ca/pipermail/ipsm-l/attachments/20060423/2c0b0a2c/attachment.jpg>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: jaqueline_house.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 34312 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.resist.ca/pipermail/ipsm-l/attachments/20060423/2c0b0a2c/attachment-0001.jpg>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: warrior.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 34214 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.resist.ca/pipermail/ipsm-l/attachments/20060423/2c0b0a2c/attachment-0002.jpg>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: miked.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 37045 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.resist.ca/pipermail/ipsm-l/attachments/20060423/2c0b0a2c/attachment-0003.jpg>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: robin.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 31275 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.resist.ca/pipermail/ipsm-l/attachments/20060423/2c0b0a2c/attachment-0004.jpg>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: gravel.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 32414 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.resist.ca/pipermail/ipsm-l/attachments/20060423/2c0b0a2c/attachment-0005.jpg>


More information about the IPSM-l mailing list