Extending the rafters

Illustration of three bears walking through a forest, framed by trees and a large pale sun.

Illustration by Jessie Boulard

On a cold January day in 2017, about a dozen Queen鈥檚 faculty, staff, and students made their way to a meeting room inside the Kingston Community Health Centre in the city鈥檚 north end. The space was unremarkable 鈥 a few folding tables, plastic chairs, a coffee station with a weak brew 鈥 but the conversation that followed would prove anything but. Waiting for them were about a dozen others, mostly from the local Indigenous community, including the Katarokwi Grandmothers鈥 Council, a new circle of Indigenous women who had been building community through potlucks and other get-togethers around Kingston. That day, they all came ready to talk about what reconciliation with Queen鈥檚 could look like and how the university could make it real. 

Rahswah茅rha (Mark Green), a civil engineering professor, member of the Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte, and one of the co-chairs of Queen鈥檚 newly struck Truth and Reconciliation Commission Task Force, remembers that meeting like yesterday. 鈥淚t really was one of the most rewarding moments of our entire process,鈥 he says. By all accounts, it wasn鈥檛 an easy meeting. There were as many frustrations shared as hopes. But it was a start. And it was the first time the task force had sat down with local Indigenous folks. 鈥淭here really was an openness to build something new with Queen鈥檚 if we could show we were serious about doing this work,鈥 says Dr. Green. 鈥淚t was inspiring.鈥

That meeting helped set the tone for the task force鈥檚 work, which led to the release later that year of Yakwanastahent茅ha Aankenjigemi, Extending the Rafters, a report with 25 recommendations for Queen鈥檚 to respond meaningfully to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission鈥檚 (TRC) 94 calls to action, published two years earlier.

The report鈥檚 title was a metaphor from Haudenosaunee tradition. When a new family moved into the longhouse or the community grew, the rafters were extended to make room to welcome them. 

Queen鈥檚 has had its rafter extension plans in hand for eight years now. Ten years have passed since the release of the TRC鈥檚 final report and calls to action. All of it has spurred renewed reflection across campus and beyond about how Queen鈥檚 has responded to the horrific legacy of Canada鈥檚 Indian Residential School system. Speaking with Indigenous and non-Indigenous faculty, staff, and students for this story, it鈥檚 clear there isn鈥檛 always agreement on what Queen鈥檚 has and hasn鈥檛 done 鈥 and what it should do next. But they all say there鈥檚 no doubt serious progress has been made. It鈥檚 just that the more difficult work may lie ahead.

  • Curved wooden outdoor gathering structure with cedar shingles set among campus buildings and autumn trees.

    The Indigenous Outdoor Gathering Space

When the TRC鈥檚 final reportlanded in December 2015, it was obvious to Queen鈥檚 then-principal and vice--chancellor Daniel Woolf that the university had to act. 鈥淭his was a major event in the history of Indigenous and non-Indigenous relations in the country,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd it made very clear that educational institutions were going to have a major role in helping to fix things.鈥 

Three of the TRC鈥檚 94 calls to action speak directly to post-secondary institutions. Call 16 urges colleges and universities to create programs in Indigenous languages. Call 24 directs medical and nursing schools to require all their students to take a course in Indigenous health issues. And call 28 pushes for law schools to require all their students to take a course in Indigenous Peoples and the law. There are also more indirect calls targeted to colleges and universities 鈥 like 62 (ii), which asks government to pay schools to educate teachers about how to bring Indigenous knowledge and teaching methods into the classroom.    

At Queen鈥檚, Dr. Woolf moved quickly, asking then-provost Alan Harrison to work with the university鈥檚 Indigenous Council to create a task force that would respond to the TRC鈥檚 report. Nobody wanted the status quo, remembers Dr. Woolf, now back to being a history professor at Queen鈥檚. 鈥淭here can be a common problem with some institutions of striking a task force, writing a report, applauding it, putting in on a shelf, and then 10 years later coming back and realizing how little you鈥檝e actually done. We were determined that that was not going to be the case here 鈥 that there would be metrics, annual check-ins, accountability.鈥

Mark Green and Jill Scott, then vice-provost (teaching and learning), were asked to co-chair the task force. They gathered about 30 Indigenous and non-Indigenous faculty, staff, students, and community members, and got to work.

 Over the next five months, the task force held 18 consultation sessions with Indigenous and non--Indigenous students, staff, and faculty, as well as the Indigenous Council, Senate, Board of Trustees, student groups, and alumni. They also visited Indigenous communities to make sure those voices were reflected in the report.   

鈥淓veryone had a voice in it,鈥 rem-embers Kanonhsyonne (Janice Hill), then the director of Four Directions Indigenous Student Centre and a member of the task force. 鈥淚t was very Haudenosaunee-centric in that way, because our way of decision--making is that everyone has a voice and everyone is respected and heard.鈥

Just before the final report was released in March 2017, Dr. Woolf spoke at a special Queen鈥檚 Senate meeting. 鈥淔or too long, our country鈥檚 mistreatment and segregation of Indigenous Peoples has been hidden from view, only to perpetuate and contribute to their suffering,鈥 he said. 鈥淭o move forward in healing, we must acknowledge Queen鈥檚 own history as an institution that participated in a colonial tradition that caused great harm to Indigenous Peoples.鈥 

For Ms. Hill, a Clan mother of the Turtle Clan, Mohawk Nation at Tyendinaga, that moment was deeply meaningful. 鈥淚t was powerful for the principal to use those words and commit the university to doing better,鈥 she says. 鈥淎s the head of the university, it was clear this was being taken very seriously. And action did follow quickly.鈥 

鈥淎 lot of great work has been done. Now it鈥檚 about getting people thinking again 鈥 new ideas, new energy, new partnerships.鈥

Lisa Maracle, Associate Vice-Principal of Indigenous Initiatives

One of the first actions was the creation of the Office of Indigenous Initiatives (OII). With Ms. Hill as its inaugural director, the OII became a central voice for Indigenous perspectives within the university and a hub for building community, advancing reconciliation, and integrating Indigenous ways of knowing and being into the university. Not long after, Four Directions Indigenous Student Centre 鈥 a home away from home for Indigenous students at Queen鈥檚 鈥 doubled in size, providing more workspaces and expanded areas for cultural programming. 

New gathering spaces also brought Indigenous presence to the heart of campus. The Outdoor Indigenous Gathering Space, for instance, created room for ceremony, teaching, and community. Mackintosh-Corry Hall鈥檚 鈥Kanonhwerat贸nhtshera, G鈥檇i-mikwanim, The Welcoming Room鈥 and the revitalized John Deutsch University Centre (JDUC), with new areas such as the Agora鈥檚 Seven Grand-father Teaching Stairs, added new spaces for reflection and learning. And across campus, Indigenous art found permanent homes, from the Queen鈥檚 Remembers plinth to Stauffer Library鈥檚 study rooms lined with works by Indigenous artists.

Numbers tell part of the story, too. The number of Queen鈥檚 students who self-identify as Indigenous has nearly doubled since the release of the task force鈥檚 report, growing from 445 students (1.6 per cent of total enrolment) in 2018 to 816 (2.9 per cent) in 2025. For faculty, the percentage has increased from 1.2 per cent in 2018 to 1.9 per cent in 2024, partly boosted in 2023 with the hiring of six Indigenous Queen鈥檚 National Scholars. Among staff, the proportion who self-identify as Indigenous has remained steady at 2.4 per cent over that same period.

Patrick Deane, who became Queen鈥檚 principal and vice-chancellor in 2019, has been struck by how these changes have altered the feel of campus. 鈥淲e鈥檝e made very good progress under what Jan Hill calls 鈥榝aces, spaces, and places,鈥欌 he says. 鈥淣ow ingrained in the institution is a deep respect for the Indigenous Peoples whose territory this is, and you can see Indigenous culture reflected here now in a way you couldn鈥檛 10 years ago.鈥 

You can also see that culture reflected in the classroom. In the years since the task force released its report, Indigenous knowledge and ways of knowing have increasingly been woven into the academic life of the university. One example is the growth of what鈥檚 now the Indigenous Knowledges and Perspectives program. What began as a minor has expanded into full major and joint honours options, drawing on courses from more than a dozen departments. The program gives students the chance to engage with Indigenous histories, cultures, and worldviews, and to understand how those perspectives can shape fields like law, policy, health, and education. 

Queen鈥檚 has also tried to respond to the TRC鈥檚 calls to action aimed directly at universities. Through the Certificate in Indigenous Languages and Cultures, all undergrads can now explore Indigenous world-views and even learn languages like Mohawk. In Queen鈥檚 Health Sciences, initiatives like the Office of Indigenous Health and the Queen鈥檚-Weeneebayko Health Education Program have been part of growing efforts to weave Indigenous knowledge and cultural safety into health education. And in the Faculty of Law, a suite of new and evolving courses 鈥 led by Indigenous scholars and including the 2026 launch of the course Indigenous Peoples, Law, and Reconciliation for all first-year juris doctor students 鈥 is helping future lawyers ground their practice in reconciliation and Indigenous legal traditions. 

Philanthropic and alumni support has also been huge for some of these changes. The Outdoor Indigenous Gathering Space, for instance, beside Mackintosh-Corry Hall, was partly funded by an alumni gift. Donor funds have supported Indigenous-focused scholarships, bursaries, and research as well. And through programs like A Mile in Their Shoes: Truth, Empathy, and Reconciliation 鈥 an immersive, four-month learning program for Queen鈥檚 alumni 鈥 grads are deepening their own understanding of reconciliation.

  • Curved wooden bench inside a circular space with vertical wood slats and a medicine wheel design on the floor.

    The gathering circle inside the John Deutsch University Centre.

  • Upward view inside the circular wooden structure, showing radial beams and a round skylight overhead.

    Ceiling of the gathering circle.

Taken together, all these changes show that the university鈥檚 rafters have definitely expanded, says Principal Deane. But, he adds, as the late Murray Sinclair 鈥 Chancellor Emeritus and chair of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission 鈥 often reminded people, reconciliation isn鈥檛 a finished process. 鈥淢urray was always quick to recognize what had been achieved, but he was also quick to remind you that you had a long way to go. And we still do.鈥 

Everyone within the Queen鈥檚 community spoken with for this story shares that view. And some, in fact, worry that momentum on the reconciliation front at the university has slowed in recent years. 鈥淲e had pretty rapid progress in the first five years, but I don鈥檛 think there is the same focus there once was,鈥 says Dr. Green, who is also now the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) scholar in residence for Indigenous collaboration at Queen鈥檚. 

One of the earliest and most vital recommendations from the task force鈥檚 report was to strengthen Queen鈥檚 relationships with local Indigenous communities. Early efforts, such as the 2017 presentation of the friendship wampum belt to Queen鈥檚 by the Clan Mothers at Tyendinaga and the Katarokwi Grandmothers鈥 Council, helped build trust and new partnerships. Annual 鈥淧olishing the Chain鈥 ceremonies helped renew those relationships for several years, but they haven鈥檛 happened since 2023. 

Dr. Green, Jan Hill, and Lisa Maracle 鈥 a member of the Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte who succeeded Ms. Hill as associate vice-principal (Indigenous Initiatives) in 2025 鈥 say it鈥檚 time to rekindle ties like those as real, sustained collaborations, not symbolic gestures. 鈥淚f we鈥檙e not engaging with community in a good and helpful and productive way, then those partners will step away from the table,鈥 says Ms. Hill. 鈥淎nd they don鈥檛 want to be just rubber-stamping things. They want to be true partners, and they want to be heard.鈥

Curriculum change is another area that some say needs renewed energy. While Indigenous content is now woven into many programs, the task force鈥檚 vision was that every graduate leave Queen鈥檚 with a basic understanding of Indigenous knowledge systems relevant to their discipline. 鈥淲e chose not to go the route of a mandatory course, as some universities have,鈥 says
Dr. Green. 鈥淚nstead, we asked each faculty to embed Indigenous-specific content in ways that made sense for them and that was linked to learning outcomes and degree-level expectations. More programs need to meet that bar.鈥  

Principal Deane agrees that the harder work ahead is less visible than the faces, spaces, and places efforts that Queen鈥檚 has largely focused on over the past decade. Now, it鈥檚 more about deeper, structural, epistemological shifts, he says. 鈥淭he university is a European construct through and through. Many of the things that made education a tool in the colonization process are baked into the way it thinks, the way it reasons, and the way it rewards. And so that鈥檚 the difficult stuff 鈥 grappling with what it truly means to decolonize an institution like ours, rethinking what constitutes science, what constitutes knowledge.鈥 

That challenge, he adds, isn鈥檛 unique to Queen鈥檚, but it鈥檚 one that can only be met through larger-scale transformation. In other words, a willingness to allow Indigenous ways of knowing to influence how the university teaches, researches, and governs itself. This spirit of transformation is echoed in Queen鈥檚 draft Bicentennial Vision, which is being led by the principal. It highlights Indigenization as a core part of the university as it approaches its 200th anniversary in 2041.

  • Circular outdoor seating area bordered by large stones and landscaping near a campus building.

    The new seating circle outside the John Deutsch University Centre.

For Lisa Maracle, her priority as the new head of Indigenous Initiatives at Queen鈥檚 is to help 鈥渓ight the fire again.鈥 Over her first year at the university, she has seen both opportunity and appetite for renewed focus. 鈥淎 lot of great work has been done,鈥 she says. 鈥淣ow it鈥檚 about getting people thinking again 鈥 new ideas, new energy, new partnerships.鈥 

Part of that, she adds, means ensuring reconciliation continues to remain visible in the daily life of the university. And not only through faces, spaces, and places, but through how students learn and how the university engages with Indigenous communities. She also hopes to see more and larger Indigenous spaces on campus, as well as philanthropic support for initiatives that create meaningful connection. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got a strong foundation,鈥 she says. 鈥淣ow it鈥檚 time to build on it.鈥 

This sense of renewal feels familiar to Dr. Green, who still remembers the promise of that meeting in the north end of Kingston on that cold January day in 2017. 鈥淧eople from the local Indigenous community were keen to build a new and stronger relationship with Queen鈥檚, and so were we with them,鈥 he says. Nearly a decade later, that hope endures, he says, but it requires care and recommitment to grow. 

For Principal Deane, that鈥檚 what makes reconciliation both challenging and essential. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a long-term project,鈥 he says. 鈥淎s Murray Sinclair famously said, 鈥楨ducation got us into this mess, and education will get us out of it.鈥 Misapplied, education can do terrible damage. But it can be a massive force for good, and that鈥檚 what gives me hope.鈥  

It鈥檚 a hope shared by Ms. Hill, who retired from Queen鈥檚 in 2024 after three decades at the university. What happens at Queen鈥檚 matters far beyond its limestone walls, she says. The university鈥檚 graduates go on to shape the country鈥檚 policy, business, education, and beyond. The more they understand this history and its impact, the more they can help make a difference in the lives of all Canadians, but especially the lives of Indigenous Peoples. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like dropping a stone in the water,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he ripples can travel far.鈥

And so, the work continues at Queen鈥檚. Sometimes quietly, sometimes slowly, sometimes with great momentum. The rafters, once extend-ed, keep reaching outward.


Read the Queen鈥檚 Truth and Reconciliation Commission Task Force鈥檚 final report and annual progress update.

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