
Second annual gathering celebrates Métis heritage
A celebration of Métis history, artistry and contributions saw its second year in Stony Plain on Saturday.
Heritage Park hosted mâmawihitowin to highlight the Lac Ste. Anne Métis community. Mâmawihitowin is the Cree word for 'a gathering of peoples.'
'I think Métis history generally is not well known, and particularly when you get to specific communities like ours,' said Tracy Friedel, president of the Lac Ste. Anne Metis Community Association.
'We're really trying to help people better understand Alberta's very distinct, unique history and also our contribution to the building of this province,' Friedel said.
Friedel said the celebration was a way to make people aware that her community was more than a recreational site or site of pilgrimage.
'The community has been there for many decades prior to any of that,' she said.
Indigenous artisan market
The Indigenous artisan market in Heritage Park on July 26, 2025. (Galen McDougall/CTV News Edmonton)
The day was filled with kids' events like horse and wagon rides, face painting and games. Entertainment for the parents includes an Indigenous artisan market including traditional foods.
Friedel noted that the Lac Ste. Anne Métis community was awarded a Federal Lands Initiative property in Stony Plain.
That means a 52-unit, multi-family development is coming to the area around 2027.
'We're very honoured to be able to lead those projects for the community,' Friedel said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
19 minutes ago
- CTV News
Chroma NB celebrates new home with launch party
Chroma NB has moved to a new spot in Saint John. (Source: Chroma NB) A non-profit support organization for 2SLGBTQIA+ people is celebrating its move to a new location with a launch party in Saint John, N.B., next week. Chroma NB was previously located at the InterAction School of Performing Arts building on Germain Street in Saint John, but 10 months ago the group sold the property, leaving Chroma without a home. 'We lost any kind of community space in the south end,' said Hadeel Ibrahim, executive director of Chroma. 'We wanted to be part of the solution with this space.' Chroma eventually found a new spot on Carmarthen Street, which lets them stay in the south end of Saint John. 'It's kind of perfect for us,' Ibrahim said. 'It's on the south end because it's where our people are. It just makes sense.' Chroma offers workshops, projects and programs to support the 2SLGBTQIA+ community in the Saint John area. One of their big programs is the Rainbow Lunch Club, which provides a safe and welcoming space for high school-age youth. 'It's a place where they can get a free meal and talk about life,' Ibrahim said. Chroma's grand opening of its new space coincides with Saint John Pride, which launched on Friday and includes a variety of events like a comedy show, a BBQ, a drag show and the annual parade on Aug. 16. Chroma's grand opening will be held at 200 Carmarthen St. from noon to 2 p.m. on Aug. 14. For more New Brunswick news, visit our dedicated provincial page.


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Buskerfest takes over downtown Ottawa for 31st year
Some of the world's best street performers are in Ottawa for the annual Ottawa International Busker Fest. CTV's Camille Wilson reports. Loading the player instance is taking more time than usual Loading the player instance is taking more time than usual World-class performers are taking over the streets of Ottawa this weekend for the Ottawa International Buskerfest. The annual festival takes place on Sparks Street until Sunday evening with more than 20 performers from all around the world participating. Buskers are highly skilled street performers that put on public shows and include fire-breathers, contortionists, acrobats and comedians. Hiroshi Usda, an acrobatic comedic busker from Japan, has been performing for 14 years. 'We travel all around the world trying to entertain people and then spread our love,' said Usda. Performers are scheduled to appear on five stages and will show off their various street talents surrounded by big crowds. 'I really like it because this is a form of art that we get to see the people, to really connect with them. Usually in the theatre, you're blinded by the lights but here, you hear the laughs, you see them, you really have an interactive show and I really like that,' said performer Julie Perron-Laflame. Perron-Laflame has been performing for 10 years but says it still comes with some difficulties, with the heat expected to soar into the mid-30s this weekend. 'You have to deal with the heat, with the temperature, with the wind. For a juggler, it's really hard. The sun is in the eye when it's really, really hot. It's hard also for the people to stand there and watch your show, so it's like we're living this hard thing together,' said Perron-Laflame. After many years of training, perfecting and practicing, they are ready to take over a section of downtown Ottawa once again. For the fans, it's all about the thrill and seeing it up close and personal. Carolyn Pichard and her family are here for the second day in a row to take in all the action and performances. 'When I was younger, I used to go around and do all the different festivities in Ottawa, now I'm bringing my family for a chance to enjoy some of the same things that I did when I was young,' said Picard. This family-friendly event also hasface painting, balloon artists, henna, stilt-walkers, music and more. Buskerfest is free to attend, but attendees are encouraged to make donations to the performers.


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Pride parades expected to draw thousands in Montreal
Social Sharing Montreal Pride and Wild Pride, each with their own unique vision, will be celebrating the 2SLGBTQ+ community in the streets of Montreal Sunday afternoon with two separate parades. Nearly 50 years after the first Pride celebrations in the city, thousands of people are expected to march through the streets to showcase the community's diversity and celebrate the advances in the fight for equal rights. Starting at 1 p.m., participants in the Fierté Montréal parade will stroll along Réné-Lévesque Boulevard for more than two kilometres, from Metcalfe Street to the heart of the Village at Atataken Street. Fierté Montréal's new head of the board of directors, Marlot Marleau is hoping people will show up wearing their brightest colours for this year's theme of Blossom here, now! "Blossom means asserting our rights to grow, to fully shine, and to love freely," Marleau said. "We're very excited to have everyone come and celebrate at the parade with us." WATCH | Building connections and community at Fierté Montréal's 1st artisans' market: Some Montrealers are hoping the good vibes from Fierté Montréal's first-ever artisans' market will help create connections between communities. The organization has been slammed by multiple 2SLGBTQ+ groups over its refusal to take a stance on the war in Gaza. It has since issued a statement condemning genocide in the enclave. The road leading up to this year's event has been mired in controversy, with Fierté Montréal initially facing criticism for refusing to take a stance on the Israel-Gaza war. At the end of July, however, Fierté Montréal issued a statement condemning the 'genocide in Gaza,' and saying it stood in solidarity with the Palestinian people. It also barred two Jewish 2SLGBTQ+ groups from participating in the event for spreading hateful discourse. After an apology and the resignation of the chair of Fierté's board of directors, Bernard Truong, the groups were reinstated. Fierté Montréal's new board chair said the organization had acted to bar Ga'ava and CIJA after receiving complaints about hateful discourse, but reversed the decision because they said they didn't want to condemn an entire community for one individual's comments. Marleau said Sunday's parade is a chance for the community to focus on shared values. "I'm sure that the walkers will take away from the parade the fact that we can, even in disagreement, be united behind the rights of the 2SLGBTQ people in Quebec, in Canada," they said. An alternate march is being organized by Wild Pride starting at 2 p.m. at Place des Arts, with participants making their way to Dorchester Square, via de Maisonneuve Boulevard. Wild Pride was started after several Lesbian and queer organizations cut ties with Fierté Montréal in May, saying the organization no longer represented them. In addition to Fierté's neutrality on the Israel-Gaza war, the groups denounced internal practices within the organization they allege were tinged with misogyny, racism, sexism and ableism. Montreal police disperse crowd at Rad Pride event A third parade, Rad Pride, which organizers describe as an anti-capitalist and anti-Zionist march was scheduled for Saturday evening, but came to a quick close following police intervention. Rad Pride issued a news release denouncing what it says was "police violence" and to celebrate the courage of the demonstrators. In the release, Rad Pride said the march had only just begun on Ste-Catherine Street, when demonstrators were met by line of "anti-riot" officers. The group says people leading the march were doused in pepper spray and hit by officers after asking to circulate in the Village neighbourhood. Montreal police spokesperson Manuel Couture confirmed police intervened to disperse the crowd, but that demonstrators were pushing officers and throwing fireworks in the streets. Couture said there were no reports of injury and no arrests, but there were instances of mischief including the window of a bank that was smashed and a fire that was started in a garbage can.