Mi'kmaw schools get smudge kits to help ease COVID-19 stress - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Mi'kmaw schools get smudge kits to help ease COVID-19 stress

The Mi'kmaw education authority in Nova Scotia is recognizingthe additional workload and stress its teachers are dealing with as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. It distributed small wellness packagesthat include smudge kits for use in the classrooms.

Mi'kmaw Kina'matnewey distributed hundreds of wellness packages to its teachers

Marsha Sabattis, a Grade 5 teacher at Membertou Elementary, was one of close to 500 Mi'kmaw Kina'matnewey teaching staff to receive a personal wellness package and smudge kit for their classroom. (Holly Conners/CBC)

The Mi'kmaw education authority in Nova Scotia is recognizingthe additional workload and stress its teachers are dealing with as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Mi'kmaw Kina'matnewey (MK)recently distributed small wellness packagesthat include smudge kits forteachers and teacherassistants to use in their classrooms.

"It is important that we just give them a little reminder that they're important to us and we appreciate them," said MK wellness consultant Rebecca Scirocco.

The packages included small personal items, such as a notebook, bath bombs and tea,and are a recognition of the importance of self-care in coping with stress.

"Since COVID, our teachers are very overworked," said Scirocco."They're having to teach in new ways. They can't interact with many of their peers. They're basically with their students throughout the entire day."

Rebecca Scirocco is the wellness consultant with Mi'kmaw Kina'matnewey. (Submitted by Rebecca Scirocco)

Thesmudge kits contained a bowl, a feather, sage and sweet grass.

"It's a good way to start your day to clean or refresh anything that you might be carrying with you, so it will give them a sense of belonging and relaxation," saidScirocco.

Grade 5 Membertou Elementary teacher Marsha Sabattis has already been burning sage in her classroom. She appreciates that MK's gesture recognizes smudging as a meaningful and calming ritual for many First Nations people.

"It takes all my negative energy and it's like you're kind of releasing a part of yourself to somebody higher than you,"said Sabattis.

Shehas obsessive compulsive disorder, which has been heightened by COVID, and she worries about passing on the coronavirus to family members who are immunocompromised.

Elder also being brought into classroom

Sabattissaidher students getmore stressed as COVID cases in the province rise. When that happens, she invites an elder into the class to lead a talking circle.

"We just sit around and let our feelings out. And I find that really helps the kids," she said.

"And then when you're doing the smoke with the sage ... it just feels like all of your emotions arejust taken out of you."

Buying 10 smudge kits for each of MK's schoolsand care packages for closeto 500 staff costthousands of dollars, said Scirocco.

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