Ribbon garment-making workshop invites Winnipeggers to practice cultural understanding at CMHR - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 04:57 AM | Calgary | -13.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Ribbon garment-making workshop invites Winnipeggers to practice cultural understanding at CMHR

The Canadian Museum for Human Rights is inviting guests to make small ribbon garmentsthis weekend as part of an event showingsolidarity with Indigenous people on Canada Day.

Indigenous excellence also showcased this weekend at events through skihiw festival

A table with multiple craft materials on boxes.
Two workshops to be held at the Canada Human Rights Museum will teach visitors the significance of Indigenous cultural clothing. (Radio-Canada)

The Canadian Museum for Human Rights is inviting guests to make small ribbon garmentsthis weekend as part of an event showingsolidarity with Indigenous people on Canada Day.

Two workshops to be held Monday afternoon will teach visitors the significance of Indigenous cultural clothing.

Guests willbe able to makemini versions of a ribbon skirt, shirtor pants, which they can then take with them home.

Marilyn Dykstra, Indigenous cultural liaison with the museum, says the goal is to promote cultural understanding, a way to move forward toward reconciliation between Canada and Indigenous people.

"We can't fix everything that's happened, but what we can do is we can move forward, right?" she said. "We can take those mistakes and we can build on them."

A woman smiling
Marilyn Dykstra, Indigenous cultural liaison with the museum, said the goal is to promote cultural understanding, a way to move forward toward reconciliation between Canada and Indigenous people. (Radio-Canada)

Indigenous creators were alsoin the spotlight this weekend during this years'skihiw festivaland its block parties, which celebrate up-and-coming artists from Indigenous communities.

The festival is usually held closer to National Indigenous Peoples' Day on June 21. Director Alan Greyeyes said organizers didn't forget July 1is just a day after.

"We made the decision not to celebrate colonial milestones. And sowe don't do events on Canada Day. We don't participate in Canada 150 or Manitoba150, Winnipeg 150," he said, adding that the festival'sgoal is to showcase Indigenous excellence.

'Keep us in mind'

"I think that Canada Day is a touchy subject for everybody," said Ashley Martel Lepine,master of ceremonies. She added that everyone should celebrate Canada Day how they feel fit, though also encouraged others to "keep us in mind."

"It was the day of colonization or the Indigenous people. So it's not something that us Indigenous people really celebrate," said Barrin May, a musician fromSaint Theresa Point First Nation.

Three people on a stage.
Indigenous creators were in the spotlight this weekend during this years'skihiw festivaland its block parties, which celebrate up-and-coming artists from Indigenous communities. (Radio-Canada)

Mayadded changing the way Canadians celebrate July 1to showcase Indigenous culture would go a long way to address that.

Yndira Campos, a singer, said she's "not the biggest fan" of Canada Day, but she still celebrates in her own way.

"I go out and still go out to powwows and stuff like that," she said."But for me personally, I'm not going to be all, you know, 'Happy Canada Day.'"

Dykstrasaid events like Monday's at the CMHR can help bridge the gap.

"I am Canadian, yes. I am also part of Cumberland House Cree Nation, right?" she said.

"But I'm Canadian and I know that every time I travel outside this country and I know that my feet are not in my home, right? I am part of Turtle Island, and this is where I belong."

The two-hour workshops are scheduled to start at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. at the museum'sStuart Clark Garden of Contemplation.

With files from Radio-Canada's Corentin Mittet-Magnan