A Day To Listen Podcast
1) From Goose Bay to Bay Street with Clint Davis
Clint Davis (Inuk) is the CEO of the first-ever Indigenous majority-owned investment dealer in Canada, dedicating his career to increasing Indigenous participation in capital markets. Clint has ...Show More
2) But first, The Public Broadcaster and Reconciliation with Robert Doane
Robert Doane (Gitxsan) is the senior director of the National Indigenous Strategy through the Indigenous Office at CBC. In the past five years, Robert has met with First Nations, Inuit, and M&ea...Show More
3) Building Upon a Father’s Legacy with Niigaan Sinclair
Niigaan Sinclair (Anishinaabe) is a cultural influencer, author, and professor. He is also the only son of the late Murray Sinclair, the former chair of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Niigaa...Show More
4) The Thrill of Victory, The Agony of Defeat with Waneek Horn-Miller
When Waneek Horn-Miller (Kanien’kehà:ka) was only 14 years old, she was stabbed in the chest by a Canadian soldier during the Oka Crisis. Nine years later, she was the co-captain of Canad...Show More
5) Creating Systems of Change for Families with Kayla Frank
When you work in the field of child welfare, it helps to have a real understanding of what families and children are going through. Kayla Frank (Cree) can relate. In a vulnerable and honest conversati...Show More
6) The Rise of Indigenous Economic Power with Carole Ann Hilton
Carol Anne Hilton (Nuu-chah-nulth) created a hashtag and is now managing a movement. Indigenomics is the visibility and inclusion of Indigenous business and economic growth globally. Carol Anne talks ...Show More
7) A Seat at the Table with Mike Degange
When the CEO and President of Indspire was growing up, he didn’t dream of being a CEO or a president of an organization. But his path of education and life-long learning led him to that exact po...Show More
8) Breathing Life into Our Languages with Ronald Ignace
When Ronald Ignace (Secwépemc) was a young teen boy, he ran away from residential school. Later, he realized the importance of education and worked to get his high school diploma, then went on ...Show More
9) Who is Reconciliation Up To? with Christa Big Canoe
Christa Big Canoe (Anishinabek) shares why reconciliation is more than a land acknowledgement, how Indigenous lawyers are in demand at an all-time high, and why, as a lawyer, she sees herself as a sto...Show More
10) Your Truth Becomes My Truth with Shelagh Rogers
Legendary broadcaster Shelagh Rogers (Métis) looks back at her experience as an Honourary Witness for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and how the simple act of listening to Survivors&rs...Show More