logo
These Indigenous kids played a song to attract grizzly bears — and it worked

These Indigenous kids played a song to attract grizzly bears — and it worked

CBC4 hours ago

A group of Indigenous children played a traditional song with drums on Sunday at Metro Vancouver's Grouse Mountain, and ended up catching the attention of curious grizzly bears in the process.
Six children from the Squamish First Nation were on a trip to the popular Grouse Mountain resort, which includes a grizzly bear wilderness sanctuary where tourists can get a glimpse of the reclusive creatures.
While there, the children played a tune called the Grizzly Bear Song, which comes from one of the nation's hereditary chiefs, Ian Campbell.
And in a moment that was caught on video, bears came out of the bush and up to the sanctuary fence to curiously examine the six drummers, whose traditional song describes their connection to nature and to the bears themselves.
WATCH | Indigenous kids' drumming attracts grizzlies:
Young musicians go viral after coaxing grizzlies with their Grizzly Bear Song
8 hours ago
Duration 1:43
The video has since gone viral, and both the children and the group's co-ordinator say they're proud that the nation's heritage is now being shown off to a global audience.
"It felt, like, really amazing ... I felt so blessed when they came really close to us," said Jonah Nahanee, one of the kids.
"It's fun to sing with my culture," he added.
The kids in the group range from 10 to 11 years old, and all of them expressed joy at the fact the bears seemed to want to listen to their songs.
In the video, a bear comes close to the fence where the boys are singing and looks at them all in turn as they continue to drum.
One of the boys, Thomas Jacobs, says it's the closest he's ever been to a grizzly.
"I think we've been doing this for three or two years, and I just love singing for my culture," he told CBC News.
'I shed a tear'
Jennifer Nahanee, Jonah's mother and the group's co-ordinator, says the drummers are called the Proud Little Warriors, and they have regular practices at least once a month.
She said the kids — who've been learning the Squamish language and music for years — know more about the songs' meaning than she does.
"I don't always know what the words mean, but I can definitely feel it in my Sḵwálwen — in my heart," she said.
"And, you know, I shed a tear when they were singing up at Grouse Mountain, just because you know how proud I am to see how far they've come."
Nahanee said that her video has racked up more than a million views, and she's gotten messages of support from people who speak Spanish and other languages.
"I'm happy, you know, to get our language and our culture out there, let people know that we're still here, you know?" Nahanee said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Joshua Jackson had to make a tricky transition before Dawson's Creek
Joshua Jackson had to make a tricky transition before Dawson's Creek

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Joshua Jackson had to make a tricky transition before Dawson's Creek

Before Joshua Jackson landed his breakout role as Pacey Witter on Dawson's Creek, he had already been working for years as a child actor. Jackson's mom was a casting director who helped him get his first big gig on the 1991 film Crooked Hearts when he was just 11. In a Q interview with guest host Gill Deacon, the Vancouver-born actor says his mom was "completely uninterested in being a stage mom," but she supported his enthusiasm for the performing arts and taught him the importance of being a professional on set. "I certainly wasn't shoved into it, it was something that I was totally gung-ho for," he says. "[I remember] how important it was for me to be in a space with adults where they heard me, right? You show up, you do your job and these grown-ups will respect you…. That was the addictive part. Like, 'Oh, look, I can walk through the world as a quasi-grown-up in this space in a way that I cannot anywhere else.'" Roughly a year or so after that, Jackson played Charlie Conway in one of Disney's most iconic films, The Mighty Ducks, which went on to become a successful franchise. He says he thinks those movies were hits because they didn't talk down to kids. "I remember being so annoyed at that age … and I found so much of what was made 'for me' to be really insulting and annoying," Jackson says. "You're young, you're not dumb." Similar to The Mighty Ducks, the hit teen drama Dawson's Creek also became known for reflecting the maturity and intelligence of young people. But leading up to that role, Jackson experienced a long dry spell in his career as he made the tricky transition from child star to teen heartthrob. "I wasn't just going through a dry spell — I was dead in the water," he says. "I was preparing to no longer be an actor at 17 or 18 years old…. I was not a kid, so those roles were suddenly gone, but I wasn't anything close to a man yet, and I was kind of a gawky young adult. So, yeah, that transition was hard." Like most actors, Jackson says he's experienced several ups and downs in his career. "The ups are fabulous, but what you're really trying to do is survive the downs," he says. "And I don't know anybody, like literally anybody, who's had a linear up career. This is not part of the way the thing works." You can catch Jackson narrating the Canadian Audible Original series Oracle 3: Murder at the Grandview, which is a psychological thriller that combines crime investigations with supernatural elements.

Loss of son spurs Yorkton couple to raise $1.5 million for cancer-fighting efforts
Loss of son spurs Yorkton couple to raise $1.5 million for cancer-fighting efforts

CBC

time2 hours ago

  • CBC

Loss of son spurs Yorkton couple to raise $1.5 million for cancer-fighting efforts

CBC's virtual road trip series Land of Living Stories explores the hidden gems across Saskatchewan. Reporter Janani Whitfield hit the road to Yorkton in search of inspiring stories of community spirit. This is the third story in a three-part series from that community. In their darkest times as a family, the Ottenbreits have held on to a saying. It helped them through the loss of their child to cancer, and in their work to rally people in Yorkton, Sask., and beyond to join them in a fight against the insidious disease. Greg Ottenbreit remembers its origin well. He was looking at his son Brayden, sedated on a gurney in a hospital and waiting for a scan. Brayden was three years old when he was diagnosed with ganglioneuroblastoma, the cancer that would later claim his young life. "You always go to a dark place. In my mind, I had his funeral 10 times," Greg said, turning to look at his wife, Leone. "And that's when Leone says, 'You know what, no matter what happens, we've got to choose to be better, not bitter…. No matter what happens, we've gotta make a conscious effort. This isn't gonna tear us apart and our family apart.'" At the time, they didn't know what lay ahead — the grief that comes from losing a child and the strain it can put on a family. They also didn't know his death would drive them to start an event that's still going strong and has raised more than $1.5 million for cancer research and support initiatives. In 1998, family and friends shaved their heads in solidarity with Brayden, with the local Kinsman Club encouraging them, and raised $14,000. The event stuck, gaining even more support from the community after Brayden's death in February 2000. "When you lose a child, it's like, what are you going to do with that? Myself, what I wanted to do was curl up in the corner," Leone said. When she sees people benefiting from their fundraising efforts, she feels driven to continue. "It actually puts a purpose to our pain." Beyond the now-annual Brayden Ottenbreit Close Cuts for Cancer event, the couple has helped spur other fundraising events like pancake breakfasts and hot dog sales. Greg, a former Sask. Party MLA, even sported a mullet in the legislature to raise funds. All the money has gone to cancer-related causes, such as funding family stays at the Ronald McDonald house in Saskatoon, a medically-assisted camp for children who've been affected by cancer or renovations at the Saskatoon Cancer Patient Lodge. It's all done in memory of a boy whose parents recall him as "a character," who brought smiles to the hospital staff by using a squeaky tricycle instead of a wheelchair to get around the hospital, or challenge volunteers at the cancer clinic to races. Leone brings up her Facebook profile to show her son's picture, frozen in the year 1999, forever a child, kissing his mother's cheek. It remains her favourite photo of all time. "[This] is him hugging me after we both shaved our heads. You can just sense the love." Leone said she knows Brayden would be thrilled with the efforts he's inspired in his family and across the province, nearly three decades after his death. "We're quite certain that he's still cheering us on from heaven going, 'Yeah, you guys just keep going. This is awesome.'" It's the good memories that stay with them and gives them the strength to support other cancer patients and their families, Leone said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store