Pubdate: Tue, 01 Mar 2016 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2016 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinion/send_a_letter Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Alexandra Paul Page: A5 CHIEF CONFRONTED OVER MEDICINE POUCH Plans to file complaint regarding incident at Winnipeg airport A NORTHERN Manitoba chief says he was accused of carrying marijuana Saturday at the Richardson International Airport when a security guard aggressively confronted him about a sacred medicine pouch he wears around his neck. In a peculiar twist to the incident, the guard walked off in an apparent huff when two other security guards tried to intervene and calm the situation down, leaving Pukatawagan's Mathias Colomb Chief Arlen Dumas and his companions speechless at the security screening area where passengers must pass through metal detectors or scanners and have their belongings X-rayed for safety before boarding a flight. "I was caught by surprise. I do a lot of flying, and usually I don't have an issue. Usually the people I see are courteous," Dumas said Monday in a phone interview. "I try to be accommodating; I can appreciate how difficult these jobs are." Dumas and his partner, Pam Palmater, a national indigenous rights advocate, were lined up with other passengers Saturday morning before entering the departure area for a flight to The Pas. Also with them was Dumas's son, Achahk Dumas, 16. Dumas said he's filing a complaint over the incident. The Canadian Air Transport Security Authority is already investigating a similar complaint involving another Manitoba indigenous leader. Manitoba Grand Chief Derek Nepinak filed a complaint with the agency that provides security at airports in Canada after sacred items in his pipe bundle were unwrapped and handled by screening officers at Ottawa's Macdonald-Cartier Airport three weeks ago. At the time, the security agency said its staff receive cultural training to treat indigenous sacred objects seriously and with respect, advising passengers to speak directly with supervisors if they have concerns at screening areas. Monday, agency spokesman Robert Labbe upped the urgency of that earlier advice. "If a passenger believes they have not been treated with respect, we encourage them, strongly, to get in touch with us directly, through our website or our 1-800 number. We thoroughly review and investigate all complaints, and we try to resolve it in a satisfactory manner, and when an issue is substantiated, we take measures to address the manner," Labbe said. "In this specific case, we'll need to do an investigation, which isn't ongoing at the moment." Dumas said he and his son were both selected for a body scan, and the guard who conducted it asked what the pouch - a ceremonial item made out of tanned moose hide and with beaded embroidery - was for. Dumas told him it was a medicine pouch. Such pouches are a common indigenous item, often worn around the neck, much like a man in a business suit wears a tie. Tobacco mixtures are typically carried for cultural reasons; in a pinch, the tobacco can be used as an offering with a prayer. "It's one of those tiny ones. You've probably seen them," Dumas said. But the guard appeared unfamiliar with the practice and was suspicious about the pouch, Dumas said. Dozens of indigenous people fly in and out of the Winnipeg airport, filing through security without being questioned over everyday ceremonial objects. The objects, called bundles, usually go through X-ray and aren't tampered with. As with Nepinak's pipe, such objects are considered sacred and are usually only handled by their custodian. Most often, such indigenous symbols also indicate abstinence from alcohol and drugs, which made the accusation about marijuana sound disrespectful and insulting to Dumas, his son and Palmater. Nepinak called for basic indigenous culture training for airport security guards, a call echoed by Palmater and Dumas Monday. "He was very disrespectful and rude," said Dumas. "And when Pam tried to tell him the cultural significance of the medicine pouch and that I was a chief, the guard said 'What's achief?'" In the end, Dumas unpacked the pouch and the guard took the broadcloth wrapping from inside the pouch and ripped it open to show the tobacco mix. "He then accused the chief of possessing marijuana, and we both vocally protested at his racism," Palmater said. "He continued to take apart the medicine, which was clearly cedar tobacco and sage and smelled as such, and he kept saying 'This is obviously marijuana and smells like it, too,'" she added. "He started by being very aggressive and he said 'It looks like marijuana,'" Dumas said. "I don't know what this man's beliefs are but whatever they are, his job is to be professional. Security is supposed to be there for our protection, not to insult people," Dumas said. Adding to it all was the purpose of the trip, Palmater said. It was a medical trip for Dumas's son. Born with cystic fibrosis, he recently underwent a double lung transplant and he's still being closely monitored. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt