Treaty-focused board game set to grow after UN recognition
After receiving accolades and financial support from the United Nations, a team that includes the Yellowhead Indigenous Education Foundation, the Indigenous Knowledge & Wisdom Centre, and the Edmonton Shift Lab is gearing up for a wider retail launch of its board game focused on Treaties.
"Because of all the pieces involved, we want to make sure everything's 100% done perfectly well," Sam Singh, a co-founder of the now-shuttered Shift Lab project from Skills Society, told Taproot about Exploring wâhkôhtowin. "Our plan is it'll be out in 2025."
With gameplay designed by Roberta Taylor, Exploring wâhkôhtowin is already playable for free online through Tabletopia. Two to four players traverse the board collecting cards that tell stories about Indigenous-settler relations in history that honour "the spirit of friendship in which the original treaties were signed," reads the Tabletopia page.
"Our intention was to focus on: What does it mean to be a Treaty partner? What does it mean to embody Treaty, currently?" Jodi Calahoo Stonehouse, the former executive director of Yellowhead Indigenous Education Foundation and current Alberta New Democratic Party MLA for Edmonton-Rutherford, told Taproot.
Calahoo Stonehouse is a Cree and Mohawk woman from Michel First Nation who was a key collaborator on the project. "We found that there was a missing gap around how we got where we are as Indigenous peoples," she said. "This board game really is meant to be an interactive, accessible way to look at the history of legislation, colonialism policy, and agreements."
Exploring wâhkôhtowin dates back to work that Shift Lab started in 2016, and eventually became one of its three anti-racism prototypes. Shift Lab used systems- and design-thinking to develop the game with the partners, and much of the work took place at Skill Society's Action Lab. The game was funded by the Edmonton Community Foundation, the province, the Edmonton Heritage Council, and the Canadian Race Relations Foundation. Its name, "wâhkôhtowin," refers to "the kinship interwoven in relationships, communities, and natural systems."
Years after work on it started, the game is now receiving global attention. In November, Singh travelled to Portugal for the United Nations Alliance of Civilizations Global Forum, where Exploring wâhkôhtowin was one of 10 projects selected from about 1,800 applicants for recognition by the Intercultural Innovation Hub.
That hub will now provide the Yellowhead Indigenous Education Foundation with a US$20,000 grant, as well as one year of capacity-building and mentorship support to help the game grow.
Singh said the physical version of the board game will be distributed through Pe Metawe Games, an Indigenous-owned game store.