this post was submitted on 24 Jun 2025
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IN JUNE 2021, an Atikamekw artist named Catherine Boivin posted a video on TikTok. It begins with a clip of a woman who goes by Isabelle Kun-Nipiu Falardeau describing “une femme Métis de l’Est,” or an Eastern Metis woman. In French, Falardeau explains that such women are “wild . . . you let them loose in a forest and they won’t have a problem,” that they have “hunter husbands” and don’t wear makeup. Falardeau was speaking generally, but she also calls herself la Métisse des Bois—the Metis woman of the woods. The video then cuts to Boivin, a mascara wand hovering near her eyelashes. “Do we tell her or not?” she says to the viewer in French.

Boivin’s question captures the growing frustration among many Indigenous people who have seen their identities not only co-opted for profit but reduced to cheesy stereotypes. Expert estimations place the number of people who have fabricated Indigenous identities at tens of thousands to possibly over a hundred thousand. Some of these so-called pretendians have made the headlines—singer Buffy Sainte-Marie, author Joseph Boyden, filmmaker Michelle Latimer—but the vast majority are not notable enough to warrant a media exposé detailing their deceptions.

In early May, Boivin found herself in a Quebec courtroom with Falardeau, who is suing her for defamation over a number of social media posts—what Falardeau has called a “smear campaign”—that, in turn, allegedly spurred an onslaught of cyberbullying. (Falardeau responded to fact-checking questions but declined to provide evidence or details regarding her ancestry.)

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 days ago (1 children)

So what options do we realistically have to address the issue?

We don't address the issue. In the case of Isabelle Kun-Nipiu Falardeau, who is claiming to be 'Easter Metis' - even tho there is no such designation - the Metis nation takes care of it.

Race-based benefits that are so lopsided you have people committing fraud to get those perks, a situation that seems antithetical to what the Charter and democratic nations are built on: that all races are equal.

First Nations, Inuit and Metis people don't get so-called benefits because of their race. They receive what is due to them because of the treaties the Government of Canada signed ... and reparations for not paying what was owed, or taking all the children away, or failing to subsidize band schools equally, etc etc etc.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 days ago

Should it be on the Indigenous nations to validate the claims of any random person who claims ancestry? That's an unfair onus on them IMO, especially since they're usually not the ones operating whatever program depends on it.

Also, we have plenty of cases of people being separated from their families so maybe they can't directly claim a relationship to a particular modern group bit still suffered from residential schools. Putting it on the nation's would exclude them.