Good morning

For your information, follow up and/or further distribution, please find the 
following news release regarding today's Healing Walk in the heart of the 
Alberta tar sands.


Tar Sands Healing Walk: More Than 250 First Nations & Allies Gather in Alberta 
to Raise Awareness
August 4, 2012. First Nations delegations from British Columbia and Ontario 
show growing concern and resolve against tar sands infrastructure projects 
across Canada
(FORT MCMURRAY, ALBERTA, Aug 04, 2012) Hundreds of First Nations leaders from 
BC, Alberta, the NWT and Ontario along with First Nation actress Tantoo 
Cardinal and allies from across North America, gathered in Fort McMurray today, 
to walk 13 kilometres through the visceral landscape of tar sands operations to 
bring attention to the destructive impacts of tar sands projects and pipelines 
on surrounding communities and the environment.

First Nation representatives from the Heiltsuk (BC), Yinka Dene (BC), Coastal 
First Nations (BC), the Union of BC Indian Chiefs, Six Nations (Ontario) and 
Aamijiwnaang (Ontario) joined with local First Nations leaders in a traditional 
mixing of the waters ceremony, bringing water from their respective territories 
as a symbol of importance of the protection of water and the sacred connection 
to mother earth.

Local elders led the group in prayers along the route that was once valuable 
northern Boreal forest and fertile traditional hunting, fishing and gathering 
grounds, stopping in the four directions to lay down tobacco as an offering for 
healing of the land.

"We have come from all over North America to walk together through the heart of 
the destruction caused by the ever-expanding tar sands and offer prayers for 
the healing of the land and its people," said Dene National Chief Bill Erasmus. 
"For more than 500 years governments have fought over our lands and resources. 
It's time the provincial and federal governments sit down with the First 
Nations, the rightful owners of these lands and resources, to decide if and 
when these lands should be developed."

The third annual healing walk was organized by Keepers of the Athabasca, a 
network of First Nation, Metis and allied communities along the Athabasca River 
that includes people whose lives have been directly impacted by tar sands 
operations.

"The places where we used to pick berries and find our medicines have been 
destroyed by rapid tar sands projects," said Anthony Ladouceur, Councillor of 
the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation. "Our people have lived here for thousands 
of years, but it is becoming increasingly difficult to continue to live off the 
land with industry expanding all around us."

The Alberta tar sands currently produce approximately 1.8 million barrels of 
oil per day; if industry and government's expansion plans are approved that 
number could reach six million barrels per day. Local opposition to Shell's two 
proposed open pit mine applications is growing, along with North American-wide 
resistance to pipeline proposals. Four pipelines are being proposed to 
transport tar sands oil: Enbridge Northern Gateway, Kinder Morgan Trans 
Mountain, Trans Canada Keystone XL, and Enbridge Line 9 reversal.

"I am deeply honoured to have the opportunity to participate in the 3rd Annual 
Tar Sands Healing Walk," said Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, President of the 
Union of BC Indian Chiefs. "This sacred walk serves to remind us that we, as 
parents and grandparents, have the unconditional responsibility to safeguard 
and pass on the legacy of respecting and caretaking Mother Earth, entrusted to 
us by our ancestors, to our children and grandchildren."

"This walk creates strength and unity among the people who have to live with 
the destructive impacts of tar sands. Together, we are more empowered to ensure 
a clean and healthy world for future generations," said Roland Woodward Chair 
of the Keepers of the Athabasca.

The walk was not a protest, but a spiritual gathering to offer prayers for the 
healing of Mother Earth and all those negatively impacted by tar sands projects 
and associated infrastructure. Participants walked along Highway 63 past Suncor 
and Syncrude's operations to help heal what has been destroyed and to give each 
other the spiritual strength to carry on.

For photos and b-roll posted later in the day, visit:
http://www.healingwalk.org/#!photos-2012/c15pl<http://marquimail.marqui.com/marqui/Redirect.aspx?u=593236&q=490107137&lm=26648874&r=383814&qz=b1f19017bf8613a5d0b8e970ab297777>

http://www.healingwalk.org/#!video/c1zdv<http://marquimail.marqui.com/marqui/Redirect.aspx?u=593237&q=490107137&lm=26648874&r=383814&qz=06d3c9cc690abcc515789f8e0bf5daf4>

Contacts:
To arrange media interviews :
Eriel Deranger
780-903-6598

Melina Laboucan-Massimo
780-504-5567

To call leaders directly:
Keepers of the Athabasca
Roland Woodward
780-972-1339

Union of BC Indian Chiefs
Grand Chief Stewart Phillip
250-490-5314

Dene Nation
Chief Bill Erasmus
613-859-5063

Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation
Anthony Ladouceur
780-881-5115

Yinka Dene Alliance
Chief Jackie Thomas
250-567-8084


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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