Understanding the Historic Partnership
York University, one of Canada's leading comprehensive institutions, has taken a significant step toward reconciliation by signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation (MCFN) on March 4, 2026. This multi-year agreement, co-created between York President and Vice-Chancellor Lisa Philipps and MCFN Chief Margaret Sault, emphasizes reciprocity, respect, and collective action to advance the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's (TRC) Calls to Action. Situated on traditional MCFN territory in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), York recognizes the First Nation as the caretakers of the land across its Keele, Glendon, and Markham campuses.
The partnership builds on years of dialogue and prior gestures, such as the 2025 gifting of a Two Row Wampum Belt to York's Glendon College by the Nokiiwin Tribal Council, symbolizing parallel paths of mutual respect. Chief Sault highlighted the MOU's focus on relationship-building: "This MOU reflects a shared commitment to relationship-building grounded in respect, responsibility, and reciprocity." President Philipps echoed this, noting it marks "an important evolution in how York University understands its responsibilities as a post-secondary institution situated on Indigenous lands."
Who Are the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation?
The Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation (MCFN), known in Anishinaabemowin as Mazina'iga-ziibing Misi-zaagiwininiwag ("People of the Writing Stone Portage on the Credit River"), are an Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) First Nation and the sole Treaty holders for much of the GTA and Golden Horseshoe region. Their traditional territory once spanned approximately 3.9 million acres, from the Rouge River Valley westward to the Thames River headwaters, down to Long Point on Lake Erie. Today, MCFN governs a reserve of about 2,392 hectares with an enrolled population of around 2,330, of whom 850 live on-reserve.
Historically resilient amid colonization, MCFN has navigated treaties, land cessions, and cultural revitalization efforts. Their proximity to urban centers like Toronto positions them uniquely for partnerships that blend traditional knowledge with modern education, addressing contemporary challenges like language preservation for Michi Saagiig (Mississauga Anishinaabemowin).
York University's Commitment to Indigenous Initiatives
York has long prioritized Indigenous engagement through its Office of Indigenous Initiatives, Indigenous Framework, and events like National Day for Truth and Reconciliation. Key prior efforts include the Indigenous-led land acknowledgement adopted early among Ontario universities and the Moccasin Identifier project, which engraves moccasins on Keele Campus pathways to educate on treaties and traditions. York's strategy aligns with TRC Calls to Action, particularly those on education (e.g., Call 92: Funding for Indigenous teacher education; Call 93: Postsecondary access).
This MOU extends these by formalizing MCFN input, reflecting York's role in fostering inclusive campuses. For those exploring academic careers, York's higher education career advice resources highlight opportunities in Indigenous-focused research and teaching.
Core Commitments of the MOU
The agreement outlines concrete steps:
- Tuition Support: Waivers for eligible MCFN members in undergraduate programs, easing financial barriers amid rising costs.
- Health Collaboration: A MCFN councillor joins York's School of Medicine Indigenous Health Advisory Committee; joint Faculty of Health course development.
- Cultural Revitalization: Joint research and learning on Michi Saagiig language and culture.
- Economic Development: Exploring supports for MCFN community growth.
- Land Stewardship: Enhanced acknowledgements and Moccasin Identifier expansion.
These target TRC Calls like 24 (Indigenous control of education) and 92 (teacher training), promoting self-determination.
New Indigenous-Led Land Acknowledgements
As a direct MOU outcome, MCFN gifted three tailored land acknowledgements: one for Keele/Glendon, one for Markham, and a GTA-wide version (bilingual). Developed via community-led processes, they guide events, emails, and materials. York's protocols ensure respectful use, with pronunciation aids online. Assistant VP Audrey Rochette called it "an example of that [relationship-building] spirit." Interim VP Parissa Safai added: "Land acknowledgements are living documents... honour[ing] the work the Mississaugas invested."
Visit York's land acknowledgement page for full text.
Boosting Access for Indigenous Learners
Indigenous postsecondary enrolment lags: only 26.6% on-reserve First Nations hold university degrees vs. national averages. Graduation gaps persist, with 350,000 Indigenous youth entering adulthood by 2026 needing support. The MOU's waivers and pathways address this, mirroring trends like tuition-free access in other partnerships.
York's initiatives could model scalability, aiding students via scholarships and career prep. For faculty roles, check higher-ed faculty jobs.
Health, Culture, and Community Impacts
The health advisory role integrates MCFN perspectives into York's new School of Medicine, vital as Indigenous health outcomes improve via cultural safety. Language revitalization counters endangerment, with only ~500 Michi Saagiig speakers. Economic ties could spur joint ventures, benefiting GTA growth.
Stakeholders praise reciprocity; learn more via MCFN's official site.
Reconciliation Trends in Canadian Higher Education
York-MCFN joins recent MOUs: Sheridan College-MCFN (2025), SFU-First Nations Health Authority (2026), FNUniv-UNENE (2025). Universities respond to TRC (94 Calls), UNDRIP, with PSE funding rising. Yet challenges remain: low completion (e.g., 47% Indigenous college grads vs. higher non-Indigenous).
Partnerships like this foster Indigenization, per CAUT guidelines.
Photo by Isaac Graulich on Unsplash
Future Outlook and Actionable Insights
Expect co-developed courses by 2027, expanded identifiers, and metrics on MCFN student success. For educators, integrate Indigenous content; students, engage via York's Rate My Professor. Job seekers: Indigenous-focused roles booming—explore higher-ed jobs, university jobs, career advice. Post on recruitment for opportunities.
This MOU exemplifies constructive reconciliation, promising mutual benefits amid Canada's evolving postsecondary landscape.