Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs
Formation | November 22, 1969 |
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Headquarters | Vancouver, BC, Canada & Kamloops, BC, Canada |
President | Grand Chief Stewart Phillip |
Website | http://www.ubcic.bc.ca/ |
Indigenous peoples in Canada |
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The Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs (UBCIC) is a First Nations political organization founded in 1969 in response to Jean Chrétien's White Paper proposal to assimilate Status Indians and disband the Department of Indian Affairs.
Since the disbanding of the Allied Tribes of British Columbia in 1927, there had been many attempts to create a unified provincial organization, but conflict between the primarily coastal/Protestant Native Brotherhood of British Columbia and the primarily interior/Catholic National American Indian Brotherhood had been too great.
At a three-day meeting in November 1969 in Kamloops, 175 provincial chiefs unanimously voted to create the UBCIC. In 1971, the UBCIC adopts its Constitution and By-laws and is incorporated under the BC Societies Act. [[1]
Past leadership
The first three-person executive consisted of Victor Adolf, Heber Maitland, and Philip Paul.
- George Manuel (President, 1979–81)
- Robert (Bob) Manuel (President, 1981–83)
- Grand Chief Saul Terry (President, 1983–98)[2]
- Grand Chief Stewart Phillip (President, 1998–Present)[3]
External links
References