September 2, 2005
Dances with Wolves producer helps aboriginal students
Baffin holiday inspires $600,000 donation for First Nations,
Inuit students
JANE
GEORGE
Jake
Eberts: "There's no reason why a native can't be as good as a white guy."
(PHOTO COURTESY OF JAKE EBERTS)

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An Oscar-winning producer's family has decided to give $600,000 over four years
to boost indigenous studies at McGill University in Montreal.
This first-of-its-kind program will provide recruitment outreach, bursaries,
scholarships and cultural activities to help First Nations and Inuit students
succeed in their studies.
"Why would I do this? No one else has done it, and it also has to do with
my upbringing, many different things, over many years," said McGill alumnus
Jake Eberts, whose film credits include Dances With Wolves, Black Robe, The
Education of Little Tree, Grey Owl and, most recently, the acclaimed March of
the Penguins.
Eberts, who was brought up near Arvida in northwestern Quebec, said that as
a youngster, he was often in contact with a nearby First Nations community.
A handmade wooden drinking cup given to his grandfather by a Cree fishing guide
in northern Quebec in 1915 and passed down to Eberts also connected him many
years later to a man who recognized the cup's maker as his uncle.
"I began to understand all the connections between families and place,
and the influence that the North has on Canada as a nation, in a natural way,"
Eberts said.
When Eberts worked on his films, which required research into First Nations
history, he said he acquired a deeper appreciation of the culture, language
and society.
"I also learned how the way of life has been compromised," he said.
Eberts asked himself how to preserve the culture and help the younger generation
understand what their ancestors practiced.
But the idea for an endowment to McGill firmed up when he visited Iqaluit,
Kimmirut and Cape Dorset last summer.
"The spark that really got me going was walking through the streets of
Iqaluit and Kimmirut, and seeing a lot of people not doing anything and looking
as if they were in despair, and at the mess of the place," Eberts said.
"This is really a shame. There are opportunities that they may not be aware
of."
Eberts hopes his endowment will encourage interest in education and an interest
in business.
A brief encounter in Kimmirut with an Inuk involved in the new sapphire exploration
and his U.S. helper convinced him something had to be done.
"'Why does a local guy have to bring in an American guy from California
to help him exploit sapphires?' I asked him, and he said, 'Well, we may know
something about the land and how to survive, and we may know something about
how to find sapphires but we don't know how to commercialize it,'" Eberts
said.
"One of the inspiring things for me was to create an awareness of business
education. There's no reason why a native can't be as good as a white guy."
Eberts also heard about how hard it is for post-secondary students to adapt
in a big city like Montreal. Yet, at the same time, when he was in Nunavut,
Eberts said he saw the worst of urban culture everywhere - "zillions of
plastic bags."
That's all the more reason, he thinks, for more education and a better, mutual
flow of information.
"It's a two-way street," said Eberts. "I was deeply impressed
in the worst way by the plastic bag problem."
Eberts' renewable endowment fund will try to attract, support, and integrate
indigenous students at McGill, by a mix of recruitment outreach, bursaries,
scholarships and cultural activities.
"The Eberts gift will make a tremendous difference. This endowment will
help attract, support and retain promising indigenous students of Métis,
Inuit, native (both 'status' and 'non-status'), Maori and Aboriginal heritage,"
said Waneek Horn Miller, newly-appointed coordinator of the First Peoples' House
of McGill.
One area likely to benefit most directly is recruitment from aboriginal communities.
"We want them to know about opportunities for studying here, and we would
like to make it easier for them to consider choosing McGill," said Sylvia
Franke, registrar and executive director of McGill's Admissions, Recruitment
and Registrar's Office.
Eberts will support:
- First Peoples' Entrance Bursaries valued at $6,000 per year to support
three indigenous or Inuit students on a renewable basis.
- First Peoples' Bursary Recruitment Fund to build recruitment activities
for the Eberts Bursaries.
- First Peoples' House Support, in annual grants of $6,000 to $18,000, to
fund the social integration of indigenous students and the Eberts bursary
recipients at McGill.
McGill will provide facilities, social activities and networking opportunities
for indigenous students, giving them a "home away from home" and helping
ease their integration into McGill and Montreal. Activities will include Pow
Wows, hot lunch programs, elder visits, guest lectures, housing support, academic
counselling and a mentoring program.
Founded in 1821, McGill University has 21 faculties and professional schools,
which offer more than 300 programs from the undergraduate to the doctoral level.
There are approximately 23,000 undergraduate students and 7,000 graduate students.
On Sept. 15, the First Peoples' House will host its annual pow wow in the lower
field of the downtown campus from 10 a.m to 4 p.m. to honor Eberts and his family.
All are welcome and admission is free.
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