Dean’s Blog
This Is Anfield
By Dean John Osborne
Posted on Sunday, March 4, 2012
There are not many things that would induce me to leave the house on a Saturday morning when my two favourite football teams (Liverpool and Arsenal) are playing each other, but the annual New Sun Conference on Aboriginal Arts is certainly one. The first Saturday in March has long since become a fixed point of reference in my annual calendar.
鈥淐onference鈥 is perhaps the wrong word. Each year, the event organizer Allan Ryan invites wonderful individuals who have achieved something remarkable in some field of the arts, and invariably they have a compelling story to tell. He promises that we shall be entertained, enlightened, challenged, surprised, and above all inspired鈥攁nd he never fails to deliver! I have never made it through the day without being moved to tears at least once.
This year鈥檚 speakers were, to put it simply, awesome. I was certainly surprised, impressed, and challenged by the very simple message of John Kim Bell, pianist, composer, conductor, consultant, and founder of the National Aboriginal Achievement Awards. He argued that indigenous peoples must overcome what he called the 鈥渃ulture of victimization,鈥 and proposed that the arts could be a vehicle for transformation to a 鈥渃ulture of success.鈥 In his view, we need to be more concerned with where we are going, rather than where we have been. As an historian, I am not sure that I agree completely. We need to understand the past in order to understand the present, and then to avoid the same mistakes in creating our future. But I agree that we shouldn鈥檛 be imprisoned by our pasts, be they individual聽or collective. Healing must take place or else there is no future. And I can think of no better role model for someone who has dreamed big, and then transformed those dreams into a reality.
But the show was 鈥渟tolen鈥 completely by Stephen Leafloor (a 杏吧原创 graduate!) and his BluePrintForLife hip hop troupe. This amazing group of individuals offers intensive but transformative social programs for First Nations and Inuit youth, programs which combine traditional cultural elements, for example Inuit throat singing, with the global culture of hip hop. Sounds a bit crazy, doesn鈥檛 it鈥 but believe me, it works! The passion and energy which Stephen (a.k.a. Buddha), Creeasian, Evie Mark, and the others brought to their performance had us all aching to get up and dance; and Stephen brought those same elements to his talk later in the afternoon when he spoke eloquently about his work to overcome the social ills which afflict modern youth: bullying, physical and sexual abuse, discrimination, despair, suicide. In her morning presentation, documentary filmmaker Christine Welsh had posed the question 鈥淲hat does hope look like?鈥 Well, there are now about 200 of us who know the answer: it looks like a group who operate under the name BluePrintForLife. Check them out at
In his introduction to the event, Allan Ryan spoke of the sense of community, the 鈥淣ew Sun community,鈥 which has developed over the past decade. And it is the opportunity to be a part of that community that is perhaps the thing that I value the most about this very special day. On most days of the year, life seems like a roller coaster that is speeding out of control. But there is always one Saturday in early March when the 鈥淣ew Sun community鈥 comes together, to celebrate our humanity and be thankful together, to dissipate the rage and to heal, and to express our collective hope for a future that will help overcome the memory of the past.
鈥淲alk on, walk on, with hope in your heart
And you鈥檒l never walk alone
You鈥檒l never walk alone鈥

A presentation of the New Sun Chair in Aboriginal Art and Culture
with the support of the Dean of Arts and Social Sciences and the New Sun Fund
administered by the Community Foundation of Ottawa