The alliedFutures Project

 A journey from Truth to Reconciliation and beyond.

The alliedFutures Project

A guided knowledge sharing series led by a community of settlers, Elders and Knowledge Keepers. 

An educational toolkit to get informed, unlearn and unsettle.

As leaders in our community, it is time to unpack what it means to be a settler in Treaty 7 Territory. To move from intent to impact. Values to actions. Settler to Unsettler. Learn how to consciously disrupt your mindset and the spaces you’re in. This series is for leaders and teams across Treaty 7 committed to participating in the journey to Reconciliation. Sign up today!

A portion of the registration fee from the alliedFutures project are donated to the Urban Society for Aboriginal Youth, supporting them in their mission to empower Indigenous youth.

The Journey

The alliedFutures toolkit is an interactive digital toolkit provides you with resources and reflections throughout the 5-step journey: Sitting in Truth, Allyship, Accomplice, Decolonization and Indigenization, and Reconciliation. Read and revisit the toolkit and watch the webinars at your own pace.

Speaker Webinars

Knowledge Sharing Series

Become an Unsettler

In Partnership with Urban Society for Aboriginal Youth, Mount Royal University and WilderFutures.

The Artists behind the Logo

On behalf of alliedFutures, USAY, and Mount Royal University, we would like to extend a special thank you to artists Keegan Starlight and Amanda Fox.

Keegan and Amanda collaborated with our teams to create an illustrated identity for alliedFutures: A Journey from Truth to Reconciliation and Beyond.

We came together to reflect on and deconstruct our definitions of “Sitting in Truth”, “Allyship”, “Accomplice”, “Decolonization”, “Reconciliation”, and the alliedFutures journey. Keegan and Amanda met our reflections with deeply thoughtful interpretation. Here they have shared with us the meaning of each element in the illustration:

North: The sun shines on the people inside the tipi to show there is always a new day coming. We should have hope for the future and continue moving forward.

South: An older person embraces a younger person inside the tipi, symbolizing support and safety. Connecting with younger generations is incredibly important. This is a form of “Allyship" and requires that we all "Sit in Truth."

East: Two sets of tipis represent a reflection on heritage and how it might feel to walk the edge between present and past.

West: Two buffalos are set on a red background to represent the power and perseverance of culture. In pre-colonial days, the buffalos were our everything; they were food, shelter, tools, and life. To us Indigenous people, the colour red is sacred and holds power. We are still here, still thriving and evolving with our ancestors at our sides. Education and community are our new “buffalo," keeping our culture and language alive.

The illustration is brought full circle with the addition of the feather, a sacred item that has many meanings and blessings to it.