logo
Métis woman teaches kids to love the culture — but her own daughter surprised her

Métis woman teaches kids to love the culture — but her own daughter surprised her

CBC13-03-2025
Felice Gladue has a deep passion for sharing her Métis culture with children, but she says for a brief time, her own kids were her toughest audience.
Felice, whose Métis ancestry comes from St. Laurent, Man., began sharing her culture with children while working for Aboriginal Head Start, a preschool program for Indigenous kids, more than two decades ago.
"I just feel such a great connection and a great sense of joy to be able to share with others about the Métis people," she said.
About a decade ago she founded Metis ALIVE, a company based in Beaumont, Alta., (just south of Edmonton) to help share Métis history and traditions in schools and the community.
But while she's been helping other children learn about Métis culture, Felice said she "dragged" her own kids around to events and programs to immerse them in it.
"There's a point where they're kind of like those teenagers where they don't want to do anything," Felice said.
Willow Gladue, now 16, agrees with that assessment.
'Mom, I can jig'
"I remember hating having to go to all the events and stuff and having to say hi to people all the time," Willow said.
During the pandemic that changed, the teen said. She heard about a jigging contest with prize money.
"I was like, 'Oh, I can make that much money for jigging?" she said, and asked her mom if she could take part in the virtual competition.
Felice said she was skeptical.
"I'm like, 'Well, you need to learn,'" she remembers saying.
She said she thought she would need to teach Willow the steps.
However, after growing up around it, Willow says she knew what to do.
"I do remember that day being like, 'Mom, I can jig. Like, I literally have watched you all these years. Of course I can jig.'"
She said she remembers her mom hesitating before putting music on, but once it was on Felice was convinced.
"She flat out did the Red River jig. And I was just like,'What the heck?"
From there, Willow says her love of dancing grew.
"I just kinda was like, 'I wanna do this.' I'm proud of my culture and I'm proud of who I am and I just, I love to dance," she said.
In addition to dancing and singing, Willow also plays the fiddle, guitar, piano, drums, harmonica, ukulele and the kalimba. While she enjoys each of those, Willow said she hopes to pursue acting and attend the Vancouver Film School after high school.
Working for Metis ALIVE has helped her make some money to pay for it. Willow joins Felice at presentations, even travelling out of Alberta, and demonstrates jigging.
In addition to dancing, Willow has also worked to put together DIY capote (or capot) kits for dolls.
The capote coats are a traditional Métis garment and "really represents our ancestors" who worked as voyageurs, trappers and traders, according to Felice.
The kits — which Metis ALIVE has also sold in child and adult sizes, as well as for dogs — include all the pieces of fabric needed to make the coats, a darning needle, pattern, instructions and even a tiny Métis sash.
Pride in culture
Felice also tries to bring the culture and history alive through dancing, singing and acting.
When visiting schools, Felice says she begins by asking if there are any Métis, Inuit or First Nations kids in the class.
"Sometimes nobody will lift up their hand," she said.
"But by the end of my presentation, by the end of the experience, that kid is coming up to me in a real quiet voice [saying], 'You know what, actually? I am Cree.'"
She said she's asked kids why they wouldn't identify themselves at the beginning of the class, and they've said they were embarrassed. But after seeing the friends and classmates enjoy learning about Métis culture — songs and dances and stories — they have the confidence to own their identities, she said.
Felice said she was pleasantly surprised to see Willow enthusiastic about getting involved with presentations and the capote kits after years of not showing interest.
"But you know what? Her foundation is there. And when she was ready to come back, she came back."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ally's Ribbons assembles group of Indigenous designers, models for iconic Milan Fashion Week
Ally's Ribbons assembles group of Indigenous designers, models for iconic Milan Fashion Week

Winnipeg Free Press

time10 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Ally's Ribbons assembles group of Indigenous designers, models for iconic Milan Fashion Week

Alyssia Sutherland was her own first client. Now, she's taking a delegation of Indigenous designers and models — including some from northern Manitoba First Nations — to Milan Fashion Week (Sept. 23-29) in Italy. 'One individual going to Milan, we can't make a wave or a splash,' Sutherland said. 'My goal is to get as much people as we can to these opportunities.' MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS Ally's Ribbons, her business, is no stranger to the spotlight. Since launching in 2020, Sutherland's ribbon skirts have been shown at fashion weeks in New York and Paris, and at the Cannes Indigenous Arts and Fashion Festival. Milan is the widest net Sutherland has cast yet: nine designers and 26 models are in tow, part of a group of roughly 100 heading to Italy with Ally's Ribbons. Some come from Sutherland's home community of Peguis First Nation. Others come from Sagkeeng, Opaskwayak and Berens River in Manitoba, and 'all over Turtle Island,' including the United States. 'It's really important for us to let people know that we're here, we've always been here and we'll continue to be here,' said Sutherland, 29. 'We're going to show the world through our art.' She grew up watching her grandmother sew dresses. In 2018, her mother-in-law taught her to work a sewing machine. MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS Sutherland made her own ribbon skirt, a traditional Indigenous garment with rows of colourful ribbons. 'I started going to ceremony and there was a lot of people recognizing my ribbon work,' Sutherland recalled. They asked her to make them skirts. Soon, through word of mouth, Sutherland's wares were coveted throughout the province. She created an Instagram page for her work in January 2020. It became a tool for receiving orders around Canada and beyond. Sutherland credits two Indigenous celebrities for growing her customer base. Fawn Wood, an Alberta musician, bought a skirt from Sutherland in 2021 and showed it off to fans via social media. A year later, actress Crystle Lightning tapped Sutherland to create an Indigenous poodle ribbon skirt. The handmade skirt was used in performances of Bear Grease, an Indigenous reimagining of the long-running musical Grease. MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS Each Ally's Ribbons creation is unique. It's helped increase appeal, Sutherland relayed. 'I make ribbon to make a statement,' she said. 'I don't like replicating stuff.' She contacted a Canadian Indigenous production house about joining it for the Cannes Indigenous Arts and Fashion Festival in 2023. The answer came back yes — bring yourself, your designer brother and 11 looks. 'We didn't know what we were doing,' Sutherland said. Her brother, Terrance Thomas, creates the men's pieces under Ally's Ribbons' umbrella. The duo met their models and learned the ropes when they arrived at the event in France. 'To be in that environment with other designers and models, just proud to be there, was such an eye-opening thing,' Sutherland shared. 'The Milan show is kind of my test of, 'Can I put on a good show? I am not making any money from this production.'– Alyssia Sutherland Trips to New York and Paris fashion weeks followed in 2023 and 2024. Sutherland started bringing her own models. She pitched a bigger Indigenous fashion showcase — one with several designers overseen by Ally's Ribbons — to the production company she works with, HiTechModa. The result will unfurl Sept. 28 in Italy. 'The Milan show is kind of my test of, 'Can I put on a good show?'' Sutherland said. 'I am not making any money from this production.' Designers joining the roughly one-hour event include Thomas, April Slater from Misipawistik Cree Nation (Grand Rapids) and Dreyden Flett Roulette from Opaskwayak Cree Nation. Ally's Ribbons models have been preparing since May. Ocean Bruyere, the company's head model, is coaching the group. MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS 'We really focus on mental health and supporting our models because there's a lot of barriers we have to get through, especially as being Indigenous people,' said Bruyere, 28. 'We're stepping into a colonial environment that is used to seeing one look and one look only.' The models represent different sects within Indigenous culture, including Afro-Indigenous. 'There's no set standard for age, size or appearance,' said Bruyere, who's from Sagkeeng First Nation. 'Me and Ally really want to focus on showing a variety of people.' Meditation, cultural practices and team bonding activities are interwoven into the runway preparation, Bruyere said: 'We have to learn how to be OK with our skin colour, the way our bodies are shaped, the way our eyes are shaped.' 'We really focus on mental health and supporting our models because there's a lot of barriers we have to get through, especially as being Indigenous people. We're stepping into a colonial environment that is used to seeing one look and one look only.'– Ally's Ribbons' head model Ocean Bruyere Lucy Kemp, who's walking the Milan runway with Ally's Ribbons, called the troupe a 'really healthy, holistic group of people.' She's co-organizing a fundraiser to cover Milan trip expenses. Ally's Ribbons models will walk in a fashion show Sept. 5 to raise money. Fashion week trips are pricey, Sutherland explained. 'Top clothing houses are there represented,' Indigenous Chamber of Commerce president Renee Greyeyes said of Milan Fashion Week. 'For us to have that recognition means that our clothing, our cultural attire, is being accepted on a world stage.' Gucci, Versace and Fendi regularly take spots at the prestigious event. Greyeyes has noticed ribbon skirts increasingly being worn in Manitoba spaces. Provincial government event invites now offer a dress code of business and cultural attire, a change made since Wab Kinew became premier, Greyeyes said. MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS 'We're not embarrassed to wear (ribbon skirts) anymore,' she added. 'It's quite different from 30 years ago.' She called Sutherland a 'really strong example within the Indigenous business community.' Sutherland aims to start a modelling agency within the next year, building on work Ally's Ribbons is currently doing. First, though, Sutherland is focused on getting her crew to Milan. Ally's Ribbons is selling $28 tickets to its September show, happening at Swish Studios at 290 McDermot Ave., on Eventbrite online. Organizers have dubbed the evening event 'Manitoba to Milan' and will host a pop-up market. There will be tickets at the door. Gabrielle PichéReporter Gabrielle Piché reports on business for the Free Press. She interned at the Free Press and worked for its sister outlet, Canstar Community News, before entering the business beat in 2021. Read more about Gabrielle. Every piece of reporting Gabrielle produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Fringe Review: Elon Muskrat funny, thought-provoking
Fringe Review: Elon Muskrat funny, thought-provoking

Vancouver Sun

time17 hours ago

  • Vancouver Sun

Fringe Review: Elon Muskrat funny, thought-provoking

Elon Muskrat 4 stars out of 5 Stage 5, Acacia Hall, 10433 83 Ave. Elon Muskrat has a proposition for YOU. No, not just your usual money-making endeavour. What Elon has in mind is a casino, an all Indigenous owned, designed, and operated casino that will salve any vestiges of white guilt you might be feeling. Best of all? He'll be dressing everyone in his favourite b-word combination: bow ties, blazers and buckskin. If that's not enough to convince, Elon will even spit science to some dope beats to seal the deal. To namecheck Joe Jackson, he's The Man. Get top headlines and gossip from the world of celebrity and entertainment. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sun Spots will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Like his South African namesake, Elon is an entrepreneur and a con artist, but playwright and performer Josh Languedoc digs a little deeper with a parallel story involving Migwe, the beaver. It all eventually connects, but in the interim, we've got the casino, which is shaped in a circle, because 'we're native.' You'll laugh a little, you'll ponder Languedoc's deeper meanings, and maybe you'll consider the VIP casino experience, which features Musk's other favourite b-word combination: beaded hats, beautiful ribbon shirts, and of course buckskin, because, well, 'some things you just got to keep tradition.' Check out all of our reviews from the 2025 Edmotnon International Fringe Theatre Festival here .

Fringe Review: Elon Muskrat funny, thought-provoking
Fringe Review: Elon Muskrat funny, thought-provoking

Edmonton Journal

time17 hours ago

  • Edmonton Journal

Fringe Review: Elon Muskrat funny, thought-provoking

Article content Stage 5, Acacia Hall, 10433 83 Ave. Article content What Elon has in mind is a casino, an all Indigenous owned, designed, and operated casino that will salve any vestiges of white guilt you might be feeling. Article content Article content Like his South African namesake, Elon is an entrepreneur and a con artist, but playwright and performer Josh Languedoc digs a little deeper with a parallel story involving Migwe, the beaver. Article content It all eventually connects, but in the interim, we've got the casino, which is shaped in a circle, because 'we're native.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store