Bringing Birth Home
Naître Chez Soi
Karen Lawford, Chair
Karen is an Associate Professor, Midwifery Education Program, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at McMaster University in the settlement of Hamilton, Ontario. As an Anishinaabeg midwife and Registered midwife, Karen is a global leader in comprehensive, gender-inclusive sexual and reproductive health care research for Indigenous Peoples. Karen currently holds funding for several key research projects to understand the impacts of COVID-19 on evacuation for birth, and mapping sexual and reproductive healthcare services for Indigenous Peoples.
OUR BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Helen Agger, Vice-Chair
Helen is an Anishinaabekwe from Namegosibiing (Trout Lake, Lac Seul First Nation, Treaty 3, northwest ON). She has worked in the not-for-profit sector, reporting directly to the Boards of Directors for three national organizations and has also sat as a board member herself. She is a doctorally trained historian and author of two books, Dadibaajim: Returning Home Through Narrative (2021) and Following Nimishoomis: The Trout Lake History of Dedibaayaanimanook
Sarah Keesick Olsen (2008). Ironically, it was not until after Helen started her academic journey that she began to appreciate her Anishinaabe heritage and the preciousness of her mother’s teachings. She is deeply concerned for the preservation of Indigenous
knowledges, world views, languages, and the dadibaajim narrative practice, even though she of dual heritage by virtue of her Norwegian father’s immigration to the Anishinaabe homelands of her mother. Currently she is working on a third book in which she presents examples of how the Anishinaabe ancestors were able to achieve a life of affluence by means of their thought, logic, and value system. Helen lives in Winnipeg with her spouse Garth, who is of English heritage. They have a daughter, Leslie, and granddaughter, Emilia, who also reside in Winnipeg.