logo
Cousins from Teslin, Yukon heading to Winnipeg after winning award promoting reconciliation

Cousins from Teslin, Yukon heading to Winnipeg after winning award promoting reconciliation

CBC27-04-2025
Social Sharing
Two cousins from Teslin, Yukon are heading to Winnipeg, Manitoba next month to accept the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation's (NCTR) 'Imagine a Canada' award at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights.
'Imagine a Canada' is an educational program offered at some schools throughout the Yukon. The program asks students across the country to envision a reconciled Canada and make something that reflects their vision through artwork, an essay, or a community project that promotes reconciliation.
Grace McLeod, 12, and Dylan Smarch, 11, are members of the Teslin Tlingit Council, and attend the Khàtìnas.àxh Community School. Their drawing titled 'Imagine a Canada where you can be yourself' was chosen for the award.
"Me, and Grace were looking at the human rights contracts," Smarch said. "So me and Grace decided 'let's do where you could be yourself because nobody should be able to tell you what you can or cannot do.'"
In theme of reconciliation, the two thought it was important to reflect and honour those who went to residential schools.
"It's about residential school and the kids who went there," McLeod said. "It's for the kids who couldn't speak their language and went to those schools. Imagine a Canada where every kid could have a family."
This is not the first time the two will be going to Winnipeg to accept this award. McLeod and Smarch also won the award in 2023.
"It feels good," McLeod said.
"It feels pretty awesome," Smarch said. "Don't ever give up on your goals and dreams. There might be rough spots but remember the big goal."
Making their families proud
Smarch's mother, Jari Smarch, said the first time they went to Winnipeg the experience was "pretty overwhelming" for the two but this time will be a little different.
"They know what to expect," Jari said. "They know they've got to go in front of a bunch of people and say their speech and tell them what their story is about. I think they're way more prepared this time."
"You're just overwhelmed with pride when they're up there speaking and telling their story."
Grace's father Phillip McLeod said he and his wife are extremely proud of Grace and Dylan and how they're already becoming role models within the community at such a young age.
"When they first told me Grace had won I thought 'oh yeah okay I'll go to the school and we'll get the award and they're like no you're getting ready to go to Winnipeg, and I'm like what?!'" McLeod explained while chuckling.
"I totally didn't believe it was a Canada wide thing until I started learning about it."
McLeod said he never had the chance to travel across Canada before so to be able to see the country with his family, especially for this reason, is a dream come true for him.
"You know they're creating a trail for the future generations even though they're young," Phillip said."You know they're showing the younger kids in their school that it is achievable if you put your mind to it and your heart to it you can achieve what you want."
The two will be accepting the award on May 23.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

It's not just food for the body — traditional meals feed First Nations elders' souls
It's not just food for the body — traditional meals feed First Nations elders' souls

CBC

time17-07-2025

  • CBC

It's not just food for the body — traditional meals feed First Nations elders' souls

Social Sharing First Nations elders forced from their homes by wildfires are getting a little taste of home — thanks to volunteers coming together to cook traditional food for them. "You are what you eat, right? The food is life," says Grace Masse, of the Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak harvester program, as she cuts up fresh moose meat provided by Indigenous hunters. "We have got some concerns about the other foods that they're getting served, and we just want to try to give them a little bit of what they want and be as healthy as possible when you're not in your own home," Masse says. "My grandparents passed away, so I would want them to eat really well if they were taken away from their homelands, like, to be taken away from your home, not knowing if you're going to go back. So I'm doing this to help our people, to help all the elders and to take care of them." Working beside her, Lester Balfour of Food Matters Manitoba says traditional food is an important way to keep the community together. "When you're in the city so long and you're craving the wild food and the home-cooked meals … maybe give them a little bit of that taste of home." WATCH | Cooks prepare a 'taste of home' for evacuated elders: Volunteers serve up 'taste of home' for Manitoba wildfire evacuees 13 hours ago With more than 100 wildfires still burning in Manitoba, the military continues to fly people to safety while volunteers prepare and distribute traditional foods to make elders feel more at home. During the first 2025 wildfire season mass evacuation last month, MKO and Food Matters Manitoba got together to source meat, fish, poultry and vegetables. While much of the food is donated, they continue to fundraise to cover costs. "The first 20 days was funded completely by donations from Canadians," says Cynthia Neudoerffer of Food Matters Canada. "The Tragically Hip got behind us and they ran [a] T-shirt sale campaign and ... donated a significant sum of money to us to support this initiative." At first, they were cooking outside on propane stoves at the Leila soccer complex. Then Manitoba Harvest invited them to use their commercial kitchen, which is making the process more efficient and comfortable. On the menu today: fried moose, potatoes, vegetables, bannock and a special surprise — Saskatoon apple crumble with whipped cream. By early afternoon, the food is ready for delivery to hotels around the city. At one, members of the Mathias Colomb Cree Nation wait patiently in a common room. One shows photos of some of the food they've had to eat — wrinkled wieners, stale french fries, dry potatoes and wrinkled lettuce, as well as sandwiches that are impossible to eat for someone with no teeth. As the food is distributed, Theresa Bighetty's face lights up. "The moose? We eat this. That's our food. I grew up with the moose meat. I grew up in a bush. Yeah, I eat wild meat," she says, not waiting for a fork, picking up a piece of meat between her fingers. "We like their food, MKO, when they come and feed us wild food."

It's personal for new United Way boss
It's personal for new United Way boss

Winnipeg Free Press

time02-07-2025

  • Winnipeg Free Press

It's personal for new United Way boss

The newly hired president and CEO of United Way Winnipeg knows the agency can help change lives — his was one of them. Matthew Cutler, currently the vice-president of exhibitions at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, and before that the province's assistant deputy minister of communications and engagement, has been chosen to take the reins of the organization as of Aug. 11. 'I would not be who I am today without United Way,' Cutler said on Wednesday. FREE PRESS FILES Matthew Cutler, current vice-president of exhibitions at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, has been chosen to be the next CEO of United Way Winnipeg, starting Aug. 11. 'Growing up, accessing United Way services as a young person, whether it was because of mental health issues, or experiencing poverty as a family, accessing food banks and other resources and then, when I came to Winnipeg, I knew the first place I needed to go was the United Way. If I wanted to understand the city and really get a sense of the fabric of the place, so it was my first stop.' Cutler became an agency liaison volunteer and, during his roles with both the museum and the province, he served as executive champion of the United Way. Asked about his immediate plans for United Way, he said it has 'a very exciting strategic plan' that was developed to help celebrate its 60th anniversary. 'I think the real question is: what do the next 60 years hold?' he said. 'We know, and we don't have to look hard, when we walk the streets of the city, poverty, mental health, there are affordability issues that are affecting the fabric of our community. The United Way model of bringing folks together and working united is one of the key solutions to these challenges.' The position became vacant when Michael Richardson stepped down earlier this year. In the interim, the agency has been helmed by Richardson's predecessor, Connie Walker. Cutler was born and raised in Ontario, where he admits 'I grew up with pretty modest means.' 'Then… mental health services were so key for me when I was coming out as a queer person as a young person.' Cutler began working in marketing and communications for the Niagara Centre for Independent Living, before going to Central Toronto Youth Services. From there, he spent six years as director of strategic partnership initiatives with The 519, serving as its project director and chief staff officer of the PrideHouse Toronto Initiative. Cutler then worked for the City of Toronto as part of the senior management team of its parks, forestry and recreation section. Cutler said when his partner was appointed to the University of Manitoba faculty, he followed him to Winnipeg. Sundays Kevin Rollason's Sunday newsletter honouring and remembering lives well-lived in Manitoba. Here, Cutler became assistant deputy minister in 2019, and also served as the lead for the provincial government's coordinating team on COVID-19. He was hired by the museum in August 2022. Cutler has volunteered extensively, including as chair of the board of the Rainbow Resource Centre since 2019, a board trustee with the United Way since 2019, and special adviser to the board of the Institute of Public Administration of Canada. He received a master's degree in leadership from Royal Roads University in November. Kevin RollasonReporter Kevin Rollason is a general assignment reporter at the Free Press. He graduated from Western University with a Masters of Journalism in 1985 and worked at the Winnipeg Sun until 1988, when he joined the Free Press. He has served as the Free Press's city hall and law courts reporter and has won several awards, including a National Newspaper Award. Read more about Kevin. Every piece of reporting Kevin 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.

A ‘meaningful step forward'
A ‘meaningful step forward'

Winnipeg Free Press

time14-06-2025

  • Winnipeg Free Press

A ‘meaningful step forward'

Reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people takes many forms. Some are very noticeable, like Pope Francis coming to Canada to apologize for the Roman Catholic Church's involvement in residential schools. But it also happens in quieter ways, like how the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, or Oblates, made the personnel files of 140 priests who worked at residential schools in Quebec, Ontario and western Canada available to survivors, their families and communities. They did it through the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation (NCTR), located here in Winnipeg. In a joint statement, the NCTR and the Oblates — their formal name now is OMI Lacombe Canada — announced late last month that those files are now more easily accessible to the public. Eric Gay / The Associated Press files Surrounded by Grand Chiefs, Pope Francis reads his statement of apology at Maskwacis, the former Ermineskin Residential School, July 25, 2022, in Maskwacis, Alta. 'It's a significant step forward,' said Raymond Frogner, head of archives and senior director of research at the NCTR. 'It gets us one step closer to a complete understanding of the residential school system.' In an interview, Frogner said when he arrived at the NCTR he discovered a lot of information about the children who attended the schools — but very little about the priests and sisters who operated them. Adding the personnel files of the Oblate priests to the NCTR's collection puts more of a human face on the story 'that is too often only institutional,' he said. 'We were missing that part. The story was incomplete without it.' The released files are predominantly reports from priests to their superiors about life at the schools, along with some personal correspondence and other information. In addition to helping survivors, Indigenous communities and researchers have a fuller picture of life at the schools, the files could also be a resource for those who are searching for children who never came home. 'We are creating a central source to examine, understand and heal from one of the longest serving and least understood colonial social programs in the history of the country,' Frogner said. Before the scanned files came to the NCTR, they were available on a limited basis as original documents in archives in B.C., Alberta, Manitoba and Quebec. Now that they are scanned and in one location — work paid for by the Oblates — they are easier to access. Father Ken Thorson is the provincial, or executive director, for OMI Lacombe. 'We weren't trying to hide them,' he said of the files that were in those provincial archives. 'But as archival documents, they could only be viewed by specialists due to their fragile nature. Some of them are over 100 years old.' For Thorson, the release of the files is a 'meaningful step forward,' even if it is just 'one part of a long and painful journey … we remain committed to continuing this important work. We were complicit in a colonial system that harmed Indigenous people. Now we want to do what we can to make it right.' It is customary for archives to limit access to personal files like these for 50 years after a person's death. But the Oblates decided to make that time period just two years — a decision expedited by the discovery of unmarked graves at the former Kamloops residential school, which had been operated by the Oblates. That discovery spurred the order to reduce the time frame for releasing files. 'The survivors are getting older and passing on,' Thorson said of the urgency felt by the order. As for the files themselves, 'I don't know what people will find in those records,' he said. 'But if something is important, we want them to be available. We want to do what we can to help towards healing.' Sundays Kevin Rollason's Sunday newsletter honouring and remembering lives well-lived in Manitoba. In addition to the personnel files, the Oblates have also released to the NCTR the scans of the daily logs, called codices, of the Oblate communities involved with the schools — something they also paid for. By paying for the scanning and making all these records more accessible, the Order hopes to 'contribute to the healing for Indigenous people,' Thorson said, adding that releasing the files is the right thing to do. 'We have an obligation to tell the truth,' he said, adding it is also in keeping with 'who we profess to be as Christians.' The Oblates began involvement in residential schools in 1884. Altogether, they operated 48 of the 139 schools recognized in the 2006 Indian Residential School Settlement Agreement. In 1991, they apologized for the order's involvement in the residential school system. faith@ The Free Press is committed to covering faith in Manitoba. If you appreciate that coverage, help us do more! Your contribution of $10, $25 or more will allow us to deepen our reporting about faith in the province. Thanks! BECOME A FAITH JOURNALISM SUPPORTER John LonghurstFaith reporter John Longhurst has been writing for Winnipeg's faith pages since 2003. He also writes for Religion News Service in the U.S., and blogs about the media, marketing and communications at Making the News. Read full biography 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.

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