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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Mary_Two-Axe_Earley
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Mary Two-Axe Earley Mary Two-Axe Earley
rdfs:comment
Mary Two-Axe Earley, née le 4 octobre 1911 à Kahnawake sous le nom de Mary Two-Axe, décédée le 21 août 1996 au même endroit, est une activiste pour les droits des femmes et des enfants autochtones. Originaire de la communauté mohawk près de Montréal, son activisme politique entre les années 1960 et 1980 a permis de dénoncer et de contester la Loi sur les Indiens de 1876, extrêmement paternaliste et discriminatoire envers les femmes autochtones qui se marient avec un non autochtone. Mary Two-Axe Earley OQ (born Mary Two-Axe; October 4, 1911 – August 21, 1996) was a Mohawk and Oneida women's rights activist from the reserve of Kahnawake in Quebec, Canada. After losing her legal Indian status due to marrying a non-status man, Two-Axe Earley advocated for changes to the Indian Act, which had promoted gender discrimination and stripped First Nations women of the right to participate in the political and cultural life of their home reserves.
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Mary Two-Axe Earley
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Mary Two-Axe Earley
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dbr:Kahnawake dbr:Quebec
dbo:deathDate
1996-08-21
dbp:birthPlace
dbr:Kahnawake dbr:Quebec
dbo:birthDate
1911-10-04
dcterms:subject
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dbp:restingPlace
Kahnawake
dbp:alt
Photo of Mary Two-Axe Earley speaking and gesturing with her hands
dbp:birthDate
1911-10-04
dbp:birthName
Mary Two-Axe
dbp:caption
1970.0
dbp:children
2
dbp:deathDate
1996-08-21
dbp:knownFor
Successfully leading the fight against legal gender discrimination in the Indian Act
dbp:nationality
Mohawk, Oneida
dbp:occupation
Women's rights activist
dbp:spouse
1969 Edward Earley 1938
dbp:yearsActive
1967
dbo:abstract
Mary Two-Axe Earley OQ (born Mary Two-Axe; October 4, 1911 – August 21, 1996) was a Mohawk and Oneida women's rights activist from the reserve of Kahnawake in Quebec, Canada. After losing her legal Indian status due to marrying a non-status man, Two-Axe Earley advocated for changes to the Indian Act, which had promoted gender discrimination and stripped First Nations women of the right to participate in the political and cultural life of their home reserves. In 1967, Two-Axe Earley helped establish the Equal Rights for Indian Women organization and led the submission of a brief to the Royal Commission on the Status of Women. In 1974, she co-founded the Québec Native Women's Association, and the following year she received national and international attention at the International Women's Year conference in Mexico when she publicly fought back against her band council's attempts to formally evict her from Kahnawake. On June 28, 1985, the Canadian Parliament passed Bill C-31 to amend the Indian Act, eliminating the Act's original gender discrimination and creating a new process of reinstatement for affected First Nations women to have their Indian status restored. Two-Axe Earley became the first woman to have her status restored, and thousands of other First Nations women and their descendants were granted the same opportunity to regain their lost legal and cultural identity under Canadian law. The NFB released the film on her fight for equality, Mary Two-Axe Earley: I Am Indian Again, in 2021. Mary Two-Axe Earley, née le 4 octobre 1911 à Kahnawake sous le nom de Mary Two-Axe, décédée le 21 août 1996 au même endroit, est une activiste pour les droits des femmes et des enfants autochtones. Originaire de la communauté mohawk près de Montréal, son activisme politique entre les années 1960 et 1980 a permis de dénoncer et de contester la Loi sur les Indiens de 1876, extrêmement paternaliste et discriminatoire envers les femmes autochtones qui se marient avec un non autochtone.
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1996-01-01
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1967-01-01
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Mary Two-Axe
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1911-01-01
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1996-01-01
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