Brandi Morin
Alberta
About Brandi Morin
Brandi Morin, Métis, born and raised in Alberta, possesses a passion for telling Indigenous stories. Based outside Edmonton, Morin has lent her talents to several news organizations, including the CBC, Indian Country Today Media Network and the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, National News. She is now hard at work striving to tell the stories of Canada's Indigenous peoples to a broader audience.
Meet Marilyn James, a warrior and matriarch for the Sinixt Salish Peoples
Extinct to the Government of Canada, this matriarch's culture and peoples have been attacked for over a century. This is her fight to resurrect the Sinixt way of life through tradition, occupation and family.
Indigenous journalist 'disillusioned' by arrest covering Land Back Lane conflict
The area near Caledonia, Ont., has been a site of escalating tension between police and protesters, who call themselves land defenders. Journalist Karl Dockstader is charged with mischief and failure to comply with a court order.
Wet'suwet'en Matriarchs, sacred berries and MMIWG
Within the first day of arriving for a near two-week stay in Smithers, B.C., to delve into discovering the stories of the traditional Wet'suwet'en People, I learned about Niwus. And I continued to learn about this sacred medicine until the day I left.
A real and present fear. What it's like to be a woman, Indigenous and a reporter in Canada
Our lives as Indigenous and especially Indigenous women are in endless danger.
As tension over Trans Mountain pipeline simmers, I learned what each side believes
TMX pipeline, racial divides and the looming war in Blue River, B.C.A minefield of racial divides, violence and human rights violations is about to explode in Blue River, B.C., over the expansion of Canada’s Trans Mountain pipeline (TMX).
Are the Wet'suwet'en on the brink of destruction? I went to find out.
The ancestral wisdom passed through the ages to the Wet'suwet'en is crucial to the maintenance and survival of these lands, waters and everything they’re connected to outside here. Including the people.
Stop killing my people
This country was designed to oppress our people. It was designed to target us, to keep us in line.
I wonder who will march with Indigenous Peoples?
Systemic racism against Indigenous Peoples runs deep. It's in every facet of society.
The story of a pipeline and the communities in its path
This pipeline project and showdown with the Wet’suwet’en is complicated — more than can be understood just by reading an article slamming one side or hailing another. Its dotted with rumours and misconceptions of the people affected. And it involves digging deeper. A lot deeper.