荔枝视频

Feb. 9, 2021

Modern medicine integrates Indigenous ways of healing

Traditional Indigenous perspectives on health and wellness explored in Feb. 11 webinar hosted by U荔枝视频
Students, faculty, and staff attend the official launch and celebration of ii鈥 taa鈥 poh鈥 to鈥檖 Riley Brandt, 荔枝视频

For centuries, Indigenous healers have used plant-based medicines and ancient techniques to promote better health and wellness among their communities. Could today鈥檚 health-care system benefit from traditional Indigenous knowledge?

鈥淭丑颈谤迟测 years ago, you wouldn鈥檛 find this knowledge in a medical health setting because these ideas at that time were not considered legitimate,鈥 explains assistant professor of psychology, Dr. Adam Murry, PhD.

Adam murray

Adam Murry, Faculty of Arts, Department of Psychology.

鈥淟ecture events discussing Indigenous health and traditional medicine are an essential part of a bigger conversation taking place in the world right now.鈥

Murry will moderate a panel discussion on traditional Indigenous perspectives on health and wellness Feb. 11, featuring Elders Reg and Rose Crowshoe, Piikani Nation, and Virgil Stephens, Stoney Nakoda Nation.

Piikani Elder and spiritual advisor Reg Crowshoe and Rose Crowshoe

Piikani Elder and Spiritual Advisor Reg Crowshoe and Rose Crowshoe.

Murry says that seeking the interconnectedness of everything during these times is more salient than ever. Yet, an Indigenous perspective of health illustrates the deeply held beliefs that a human鈥檚 condition is not just a separate state of mind and body. Instead, an Indigenous perspective views health as influenced by the entirety of the individual鈥檚 relationships, responsibilities, community, spirituality, and connection to the land.   

Drawing from personal experience, Murry is witnessing a hunger for more Indigenous speaker events among the campus community.

鈥淗aving Indigenous events, individuals and Indigenous Peoples who share these worldviews and values are reaffirmed about their ideas by hearing an elder speak because of the trust and sense of comfort associated with being near an Elder,鈥 he says.

鈥淭raditionally, this information is not discussed in an online platform. However, due to the circumstance, there is still the great opportunity for us to hear a body of wisdom we might not otherwise have access to,鈥 says Murry.

Through the traditions of an oral culture, traditional knowledge keepers are rooted in early education, mentorship, and passage rights, which account for their great regard for oral traditions and teaching through storytelling.  

Elders' Teachings Series: Indigenous Ways of Healing

Please join us for the second Elders' Teaching Series webinar, hosted by ii鈥 taa鈥檖oh鈥檛o鈥檖, U荔枝视频鈥檚 Indigenous Strategy, on Feb. 11 as we explore traditional Indigenous Ways of Healing from Elders within the Treaty 7 region of southern Alberta. This event offers teachings of restoration and resiliency from Piikani Elders Reg and Rose Crowshoe as well as Stoney Nakoda Elder Virgil Stephens, and will be moderated by Adam Murry.

The Elders鈥 Teaching Series provides a public platform for sharing traditional knowledge and knowledge systems as part of our path forward toward transformative reconciliation.

Thursday, Feb. 11
12-1:30 p.m. online

ii鈥 taa鈥檖oh鈥檛o鈥檖, the 荔枝视频鈥檚 Indigenous Strategy, is a commitment to deep evolutionary transformation by reimagining ways of knowing, doing, connecting and being. Walking parallel paths together, 鈥渋n a good way,鈥 U荔枝视频 is moving toward genuine reconciliation and Indigenization. 

For more information about the Indigenous Strategy and upcoming events, please visit the Office of Indigenous Engagement website.