間眅埶AV

media release

Sterling Prize recipient challenges racism and role of museums in era of reconciliation

August 26, 2021
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In an era of reconciliation, museums are being called on by Indigenous professionals like Sdahl Kawaas (also known as Lucy Bell) to be more accountable, anti-racist places.  

Sdahl Kawaas is the recipient of 間眅埶AVs 2021  for her bravery in calling out racism in the heritage field and advocating for change. 

Receiving the Sterling Prize is so amazing and to see that people hear my truth and my voice, says Sdahl Kawaas. The whole point of the prize is to provide a platform to have difficult conversations, so its a huge win for whistleblowers and Indigenous people. It shows we can do something about racism and that theres an opportunity to make change.

She made headlines in 2020 when she resigned from her high-profile position as the first head of the Indigenous Collections and Repatriation Department at the Royal British Columbia Museum in Victoria. 

In her resignation speech, which launched a Public Service Agency investigation, SdahlKawaas alleged a culture of personal and systemic institutional racism that she and other Indigenous and people of colour faced in the workplace. Her speech and allegations rocked the museum world. The investigation substantiated numerous claims of racism and workplace bullying. 

She sees the Sterling Prize as on opportunity to further the discussion on racism against Indigenous people and as another step toward reconciliation so the next generation, like her daughter Amelia, doesnt have to face the same discrimination she has.  There are so many opportunities within the heritage field in Canada, we have to address discrimination in order to move forward, she says.

Sdahl Kawaas will receive the Sterling Prize and give a lecture on these issues at an award ceremony on Thursday, Oct. 14 at the Bill Reid Gallery in Vancouver, which will be live-streamed for the public.

To register, visit the Sterling Prize .


More broadly, Sdahl Kawaas experience is forcing museums to reflect on themselves and grapple with their colonial legacy at the same time Canada comes to terms with its treatment of Indigenous people.

It makes me so sad that I had to leave the Royal BC Museum to speak my truth but this is a bigger issue in the heritage field, she says.

Sdahl Kawaas continues to support the Haida Nations repatriation efforts, while working towards her PhD in individualized interdisciplinary studies at 間眅埶AV (focusing on Indigenous museology and Haida museum practice as an act of restitution and reconciliation). 

There are more than 12,000 belongings from the Haida Nation scattered in museums and galleries around the world, some of which the Haida are trying to reclaim and bring back home. 

The Sterling Prize was first awarded in 1993 and remains committed to recognizing work that provokes and contributes to the understanding of controversy, while presenting new ways of looking at the world and challenging complacency. The prize recognizes work across disciplines and departments and is awarded annually by the Sterling Prize committee.

CONTACT

MATT KIELTYKA, 間眅埶AV Communications & Marketing 
236.880.2187 | matt_kieltyka@sfu.ca

間眅埶AV 
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778.782.3210

ABOUT SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY

As Canadas engaged university, 間眅埶AV works with communities, organizations and partners to create, share and embrace knowledge that improves life and generates real change. We deliver a world-class education with lifelong value that shapes change-makers, visionaries and problem-solvers. We connect research and innovation to entrepreneurship and industry to deliver sustainable, relevant solutions to todays problems. With campuses in British Columbias three largest citiesVancouver, Burnaby and Surrey間眅埶AV has eight faculties that deliver 193 undergraduate degree programs and 144 graduate degree programs to more than 37,000 students. The university now boasts more than 170,000 alumni residing in 145+ countries.