Medal for Barbara Nolan
Sault Ste. Marie’s Medal of Merit Selection Committee has confirmed its 2021 recipient as Barbara Nolan, an Indigenous role model and advocate who is recognized for her outstanding contributions to the community.
To be sure, Nolan’s work and commitment to the advancement of the Anishinaabemowin language revitalization efforts, Indigenous education and excellence in lifelong learning has had a significant impact in supporting Indigenous learners.
Born Barbara Pheasant in the territory of Wikwemikong within Manitoulin Island, she was raised by her grandparents from whom she learned the traditional language of her heritage prior to learning English.
From ages five to nine, Barbara attended a residential school in Spanish, Ont. She returned home to complete elementary school then moved to North Bay for high school. After Grade 12, she moved to Toronto where she found employment in the clerical field.
In 1970 she met her husband, Tom Nolan, and moved to Garden River First Nation. In 1972 she worked for the Separate School Board in Sault Ste. Marie as the Garden River representative. Once Garden River assumed administrative control of its own education program, Nolan began employment with Garden River First Nation.
As a residential school survivor, she has dedicated her time to working with numerous indigenous organizations and communities in the development and promotion of language revitalization and retention initiatives. She has made it her life mission to preserve the Anishinaabemowin language and has taught the language locally since the early 1970s.
Nolan has held the positions of Native School Counsellor and Elder-In-Residence/Cultural Advisor at Sault College for the past eight years. She works with students in meaningful ways to strengthen cultural knowledge and language acquisition through intergenerational sharing and participation.
She was also instrumental in establishing and delivering Anishinaabemowin immersion at the Garden River Child Care Centre. Within the past year, she gifted the centre with its Anishinaabe Spirit Name of ‘Abinoojinyag Onji’.
She feels everything the centre does should be for the children, and its work is to leave the children with a sense of who they are and where they come from. As the children spend time with Nolan she shares stories with them, helping to retain their language.
Recently, Nolan accepted an appointment as the Anishinabek Nation Anishinaabemowin Commissioner.
In this role, she advises the Anishinabek Nation leadership and the public on the importance of Anishinaabemowin protection, retention, revitalization initiatives, and its use.
She wrote the first Native as a Second Language curriculum in Canada, is a founding member of the Ontario Native Education Counselling Association and its first president, and is the first president and founding member of the Sault Ste. Marie Indian Friendship Centre.
“The Medal of Merit is a fitting recognition of Barbara’s great leadership and significant contributions to our community,” said Sault Mayor Christian Provenzano.
“Elders and Knowledge Keepers have invaluable knowledge, skills and wisdom based in indigenous history, tradition, culture, language and ceremony. Barbara has inspired hundreds of indigenous people to regain their language and celebrate their traditions, and she has shared her language with and taught many non-indigenous people.
“We need to collectively study indigenous history and culture so that we can learn from it, celebrate it and respect it. Barbara is helping us make significant progress in this regard and I am grateful for her continued efforts,” Provenzano added.
The City of Sault Ste. Marie awards the Medal of Merit annually to individuals or groups who have achieved exceptional meritorious honours in athletics, cultural or academic fields or who make extraordinary contributions to the community.