Cynthia Wesley-Esquimaux

Chair on Truth and Reconciliation Lakehead University

  • Orillia ON

Dr. Wesley-Esquimaux's research addresses unresolved intergenerational trauma and grief primarily within the Canadian Indigenous community.

Contact

Social

Biography

Dr. Cynthia Wesley-Esquimaux is the former Vice-Provost (Aboriginal Initiatives) at Lakehead University, Thunder Bay. She held the Nexen Chair in Indigenous Leadership at the Banff Centre in Alberta for four years, is a Status Only Asst. Professor at the Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto, and an Adjunct Asst. Professor at Lakehead in the Department of Anthropology. She is a former Advisory Member of the Mental Health Commission of Canada, and a member of the Board of Healthy Minds Canada and Teach for Canada. She is a Honourary Witness for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, and a member of the Governing Circle for the Centre For Truth and Reconciliation at the University of Winnipeg. She is a retired member of the Lake Simcoe Science Advisory Committee because of her move to Thunder Bay, a Lady of the Lake, and an active and engaging media representative. Cynthia is interested in environmental and humanitarian causes and is actively engaged in a variety of initiatives across Canada. Her teaching and academic writing is directed towards understanding Historic and Intergenerational Trauma and Grief within the Indigenous community. She is a member of the Chippewa of Georgina Island First Nation in Lake Simcoe. Cynthia has dedicated her life to building bridges of understanding, and sees endless merit in bringing people from diverse cultures, ages, and backgrounds together to engage in practical dialogue. She is deeply committed to public education and active youth engagement, and co-founded and Chairs the Canadian Roots Exchange out of the University of Toronto, Lakehead and the University of Saskatchewan.

Industry Expertise

Education/Learning
Research

Areas of Expertise

Indigenous Community
Intergenerational Trauma
Community Outreach
Community Development
Teaching
Government
Humanitarian
Leadership
Policy

Education

University of Toronto

PhD

Anthropology

2004

Affiliations

  • Former Vice-Provost (Aboriginal Initiatives) at Lakehead University
  • Nexen Chair in Aboriginal Leadership at the Banff Centre in Alberta
  • Status Only Asst. Professor at the Faculty of Social Work University of Toronto
  • Adjunct Asst. Professor at Lakehead in the Department of Anthropology
  • Former Advisory Member of the Mental Health Commission of Canada
Show All +

Languages

  • English

Media Appearances

Finding solutions to youth suicide crisis in Saskatchewan

The Current, CBC Radio  radio

2016-11-03

The tragedy of losing too many young lives in many First Nations communities is a crisis that needs a solution. The Current asks what separates Indigenous communities that have high suicide rates from those that do not, and what can be done to fix this.

Cynthia Wesley-Esquimaux, the minister of Indigenous affairs' special representative on child welfare, tells Anna Maria Tremonti that legacy is also an important factor in the discussion to find solutions to this crisis.

View More

Lakehead names Wesley-Esquimaux Truth and Reconciliation chair

tbnewswatch  online

2016-09-18

Cynthia Wesley-Esquimaux has been named Lakehead University's Truth and Reconciliation chair, the first such position in a Canadian university.

THUNDER BAY – When the Truth and Reconciliation Commission named Cynthia Wesley Esquimaux an honourary witness, she took on reconciliation as a life-long responsibility.

The nature of that responsibility has become clear over the last three years and on Friday, her work was granted a new and official title.

Wesley-Esquimaux was named Lakehead University’s chair on truth and reconciliation at a dignitary-studded ceremony at the Bora Laskin Faculty of Law. It’s the first such position created in any Canadian university.

Wesley-Esquimaux will be an official point person for reconciliation both on Lakehead University’s campuses and across Northwestern Ontario.

“It’s the perfect step into an official role that says, ‘yes, I know I’m a target in some ways too, for people who don’t necessarily agree with this conversation but also a beacon of hope for people who do,’” she said.

View More

Cynthia Wesley-Esquimaux named Lakehead University chair for truth and reconciliation

CBCNews Thunder Bay  online

2016-09-16

Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ont. has taken a step towards reconciliation with Indigenous peoples that the school's president Brian Stevenson believes is a first in Canada.

On Friday, Cynthia Wesley-Esquimaux was named the university's first chair for truth and reconciliation. The former vice-provost of Aboriginal initiatives will advocate for healing within the Lakehead University community and beyond.

"It's time to lay down our anger and distrust and create the kind of relationship we can all be proud of," Wesley-Esquimaux said.

View More

Show All +

Event Appearances

Keynote Speaker

Icemen 2016: International conference on Community Engaged Medical Education in the North  Sault Ste. Marie

2016-06-20

Keynote Speaker

Wabano Aboriginal Health Symposiums, Spring 2014  Ottawa

Articles

"Reconciliation Social Work"

Chapter in the International Journal of Mental Health & Addiction

Spring 2016
Wesley-Esquimaux, C. and Koptiz, S.

"Why Wise Practices?”

Chapter in the International Journal of Culture and Nationalism on Fourth World Literatures

December 2015

“Reconciliation in Thunder Bay”

The Chronicle-Journal

October 2015
Wesley-Esquimaux, C. and and Benoit, S.

Show All +