Conversations on Music, Allyship, and Reconciliation with Indigenous Music Therapists in Canada

Authors

  • Kaitlyn C. Kasha Faculty of Music, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada
  • Tiffany Sparrow Brulotte University of Alberta, Alberta, Canada
  • Tatyana Dobrowolski School District 59 Peace River South, British Columbia, Canada
  • Tinaya Iron-Entz St. Paul’s Hospital & Foundation, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
  • Elizabeth Mitchell Faculty of Music, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15845/voices.v26i2.4529

Keywords:

allyship, indigenous, reconciliation, music therapy

Abstract

This study aims to connect discourses about allyship and reconciliation to music therapy by centring the voices of Indigenous practitioners. Canada is working toward reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples and aspiring allyship is a way to guide this pursuit both in general and in therapy settings. Music therapy researchers have discussed components of allyship through explorations of anti-oppressive practice, social justice, and cultural competence, but this field of scholarship is continuing to emerge. In this study, the experiences and stories of three Indigenous music therapists in Canada are analyzed within narrative inquiry and phenomenological frameworks. Data represent the personal stories, perspectives, and lived experiences of these practitioners related to the dimensions of allyship. A co-developed framework for allyship emerged that includes becoming informed, advocacy, listening and openness, collaboration and relationship, accountability, reflexivity, words and actions, and individual and community contexts. Building on this framework, the co-authors discuss allyship’s congruences with therapeutic skills and music therapy contexts to build opportunities for reconciliation in Canada.

Author Biographies

Kaitlyn C. Kasha, Faculty of Music, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada

Kaitlyn Kasha (she/her), MMT, RP, MTA, completed her Master of Music Therapy Degree at Wilfrid Laurier University, located on the traditional territory of the Neutral, Anishinaabeg, and Haudenosaunee Peoples, in Ontario, Canada. She works as a music therapist and psychotherapist in an inpatient mental health setting and private practice.

Tiffany Sparrow Brulotte, University of Alberta, Alberta, Canada

Tiffany Sparrow Brulotte (she/her), MA, MTA, RCT, is a Métis music therapist, ethnomusicologist, yoga teacher, singer-songwriter, and facilitator based in Treaty 6 territory in Edmonton, Alberta. Rooted in the relational teachings of the medicine wheel, her work weaves together music, breath, mindfulness, and cultural connection to support holistic wellbeing for Indigenous youth, families, and communities. Drawing from both clinical practice and lived experience, Tiffany is passionate about the power of voice as medicine and creating spaces that help people reconnect to the truth, value, and beauty of who they are.

Tatyana Dobrowolski, School District 59 Peace River South, British Columbia, Canada

Tatyana Dobrowolski (they/she), MEd, BEd, BMT, MTA, completed their studies in Music Therapy at Capilano University and their education studies at SFU specializing in music. They changed their focus to Indigenous Education for their masters at UBC. They now work as an educator and music instructor with a side passion for research as a way to improve equity in education.

Tinaya Iron-Entz, St. Paul’s Hospital & Foundation, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada

Tinaya Iron-Entz (she/her), MA, MTA, is a Nehiyaw (Plains Cree) music therapist with the Healing Arts Program at St. Paul’s Hospital in Saskatoon, SK. Tinaya specializes in hemodialysis and critical care utilizing music therapy practices rooted in both Indigenous and Western ways of knowing.

Elizabeth Mitchell, Faculty of Music, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada

Elizabeth Mitchell (she/her), PhD, RP, MTA, is Assistant Professor and Coordinator of the Bachelor of Music Therapy Program at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, ON, Canada. She has extensive clinical experience working in mental health treatment settings. Liz is passionate about fostering music therapy practices that are relational, community-oriented, music-centred, and anti-oppressive.

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4529-Kasha et al. Photos: N.Bergbusch/K.Rosborough/P.Dobrowolski/B.Sitter/H.Gauled

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Published

2026-07-01

How to Cite

Kasha, K. C., Brulotte, T. S., Dobrowolski, T., Iron-Entz, T., & Mitchell, E. (2026). Conversations on Music, Allyship, and Reconciliation with Indigenous Music Therapists in Canada. Voices: A World Forum for Music Therapy, 26(2). https://doi.org/10.15845/voices.v26i2.4529

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Research