Land Acknowledgement
Toronto
Surrey Place is committed to Reconciliation with Indigenous People and in the spirit of greater inclusion and continued allyship and respect and care for the First People of this land, we begin by offering the territorial land acknowledgement.
Surrey Place acknowledges that Toronto is located on the traditional territory of many diverse nations. Toronto was originally home to the Haudenosaunee (pronounced hood-en-oh-show-knee), the Wendat and most recently the Mississaugas of the Credit. Toronto is covered by Treaty 13, signed with the Mississaugas of the Credit and Chippewa bands. We also acknowledge that Toronto is home to many diverse First Nations, Métis and Inuit today.
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Toronto derives from the word Tkaronto an Iroquoian or Mohawk word for “The Place Where Trees Stand in Water.” Today, Toronto is home to an estimated 70,000 Indigenous people.
Sioux Lookout
Surrey Place is committed to Reconciliation with Indigenous People and in the spirit of greater inclusion and continued allyship and respect and care for the First People of this land, we begin by offering the territorial land acknowledgement.
Surrey Place acknowledges that Sioux Lookout is on the traditional lands of the First Nations of the Anishinaabe (pronounced ann-ish-naw-bee), people of Lac Seule First Nation. We acknowledge that this territory is covered by Treaty #3, and we pay our care and respect to the survivors of residential schools, their children and any of those who have not survived the effects of the schools.
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It is said that Sioux Lookout’s name comes from a nearby mountain, which in the late 1700s was used by the Anishinaabe to watch for foes. Today, Sioux Lookout is home to an estimated 6,000+ Indigenous people.