As the  site of the longest-running blockade to stop clearcut logging,  Asubpeeschoseewagong. or Grassy  Narrows Trans-Canada  Highway 
This  entry looks at the First Peoples of Asubpeeschoseewagong, (Grassy  Narrows Kenora 
In 2007,  Grassy Narrows Chief Simon Fobister, and community leaders declared a moratorium  on all industrial activity within their traditional territory without community  consent, citing, “We’ve been seeking for many years a constructive solution to  this untenable situation, but the response has been to talk and log. We cannot  sit back and watch the demise of our way of life which disappears every time  more cutting areas are extended.”
“The  clear-cutting of the land, and the destruction of the forest is an attack on our  people,” says Roberta Keesic, a grandmother and trapper. “The land is the basis  of who we are. Our culture is a land-based culture and the destruction of the  land is the destruction of our culture.”
 
In the  mid-70’s, the way of life of Asubpeeshoseewagong was heavily impacted by mercury  being released into the English-Wabigoon river system by a pulp and paper mill  in Dryden from 1960- 1979. As a result, the Ontario Grassy  Narrows 
Living  close to all the development and being close to an urban center has not brought  all the benefits that one might expect.
 
A trapper  reported that his trapping cabin had burned down. The logs that he had cut down  for the replacement of the cabin which he hauled to the main road were cut up  for firewood by a person or persons unknown. In March 2007, Roberta Keesic was  charged with building 2 cabins for shelter in her traditional territory without  a permit , and refusing a stop-work order. Her case comes up on October 20,  2009.
 
Recently,  youth leader Chrissy Swain and community organizer Judy Dasilva visited the  former site of the Macintosh  Residential  School Grassy  Narrows  to Parliament Hill in Ottawa 
“We need  Canada to recognize the damage those schools have done to our communities and  cultures, and we need an end to the destruction of our lands, and an end to  native people being criminalized when they stand up for their rights to protect  their lands, their cultures, and their communities.”
 
Judy  Dasilva pointed out that there are now mining claims that run into a spring-fed  lake, a few kilometers from the community that will potentially impact their  water and food supply…..once again.
Their  voices continue to echo through Noopemig…..
 
 
 
 
 
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