Honorary degree for reconciliation activist

Mavis Gillie, an advocate for Indigenous rights and reconciliation, particularly in Canada’s North and British Columbia, will be granted an honorary degree tomorrow from the University of Victoria.

The university’s highest honour will be presented to Gillie, 88, at a special convocation ceremony March 9 at 10:30 a.m. in the University Club of Victoria.

In her younger years, Gillie spent a decade in the Northwest Territories and it was there that the plight of First Nations peoples ignited her lifelong activism for justice and healing between Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities based on moral and spiritual grounds.

After moving to Victoria and during the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline Inquiry in the 1970s, Gillie became a founding member of Project North (Victoria Chapter), offering assistance and support for the Dene and Inuit in their opposition to the pipeline proposal.

Her later work included aiding First Nations in opposing logging in Haida Gwaii and the Stein River Valley, and organizing support for the Nisga’a Treaty.

Gillie’s activism has been carried out through the Anglican Church, Project North and Aboriginal Neighbours (for which she is also a founding member).

Her honorary degree nominators point to Gillie’s commitment to correct injustice wherever it is found—in government and church policies, community attitudes or individual bias. Through all of her work her unassuming, cooperative and respectful approach to finding concrete solutions to the issues have made her loved and revered within First Nations and settler communities.

A photo of Mavis Gillie is available upon request.

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Media contacts

Ian Case (Director, Ceremonies and Events) at 250-721-7632 or iancase@uvic.ca 

Mike McNeney (Alumni Communications) at 250-721-7642 or mmcneney@uvic.ca

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Keywords: convocation, reconciliation


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