"We took VANOC at its word when it promised unprecedented support for Aboriginal economic development as well as Aboriginal employment and training leading up to and during the 2010 Winter Olympics" says Shain Jackson, the owner of Spirit Works, a company making native jewelry and bentwood boxes and employing five First Nations workers.
Local Aboriginal businesses say they've found themselves on the short end of an unfair competition with non-Aboriginal companies who appropriate First Nations culture by selling products with Aboriginal designs on them, but originate overseas. VANOC actually licenses these cheap knock-off products and allows them to carry the label of "Authentic Aboriginal Products."
World-renowned Aboriginal clothing designer Dorothy Grant stated, "There is so much that can be said for the misuse of the word "authentic." And by combining this word with "aboriginal" misleads the public coming in from all parts of the world to believe that we are behind the products that VANOC has produced in China."
At a pow-wow once, I saw a Native in a booth selling Indian flutes. They were Indian alright: with little gold "Made in India" stickers.
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