MCK Signs The Declaration on Restoring Traditional Government
Written by Jeremy Zafran on 20 June 2024
The MCK has signed the Declaration on Restoring Traditional Government, approving the next phase of the KGOV Project Charter. The Mohawk Council of Kahnawà:ke (MCK) Council of Chiefs (Kahnawa’kehró:non Ratitsénhaienhs) signed the Declaration and the Authority of the Rotinonhsón:ni Confederacy at the June 17th Council Meeting by consensus. The Project Charter for the Kahnawà:ke Governance Project (KGOV): Transition to Traditional Government Phase was approved as well. On June 17th, 1979, the MCK received a mandate from the community, unanimously supported by Council, to return to traditional government under the Great Law of Peace. In 1982, the MCK committed itself to transitioning to traditional government, and re-stated that goal in 2000. KGOV recently completed community engagement process found that the majority of Kanien’keháka Kahnawa’kehró:non support restoring Traditional Government with broad support for reconciliation of the community’s traditional and elected political bodies to create a unified government. This report was presented to the council on June 5th of this year, who agreed to support its “Pathway to Traditional Government.”
The approval comes exactly 45 years after the original mandate was received by Chief and Council, and with the support of the present council for Traditional Government, recognizing the authority of the Rotinonhsón:ni Confederacy. Immediately following the signing of the Declaration, the chiefs approved the next phase of the KGOV Charter: Transition to Traditional Government Phase.
Ietsénhaienhs Jessica Lazare, Governance Portfolio Chief:
“I am proud to have been a part of this process since even before I was elected to Council, learning about our community’s history and listening to Kahnawa’kehró:non and their experiences from the past and present,” said,. “After understanding the history of Kahnawà:ke’s relationship with the Indian Act system and learning from conversations that have occurred because of the Kahnawà:ke Governance Project, it was clear to the table that this is the direction we continue with. This declaration is a reiteration that we are still working towards that 1979 commitment, 45 years later.”
Gerald Taiaiake Alfred, KGOV Project Lead:
“The unanimous approval of this Declaration by the Ratitsénhaienhs is historic. It is a significant step forward toward the achievement of our ancestral vision of restoring traditional government in Kahnawà:ke. I see it as a bold act of decolonization. It represents true leadership by this Council, who acted in accordance with the wishes of the majority of Kahnawa’kehró:non, past and present.”
The Declaration and Mohawk Council Executive Directive can be viewed at www.kgov.ca.