Anishinabek Nation photo
Truth through storytelling. Your source for Indigenous news, profiles and community coverage that uplifts and informs.
Anishinabek Nation photo
Truth through storytelling. Your source for Indigenous news, profiles and community coverage that uplifts and informs.
The reimagined logo by artist Jennifer Taback, an Anishinaabe-kwe from Shawanaga First Nation, will be displayed prior to the Maple Leafs clash with the Vancouver Canucks on Hockey Night in Canada.
The logo was created by Kitchener-Waterloo artists Luke Swinson, a member of the Mississaugas of Scugog Island First Nation.
It will reach Canadians through their change as bank branches and businesses replenish their inventories of $2 coins, the Royal Canadian Mint said.
Together, we can build a future where Indigenous communities are not just surviving but flourishing, writes Grandmother's Voice co-founder Jody Harbour.
Reconciliation is not a destination — it’s a continuous process, writes Jody Harbour, co-founder of Grandmother's Voice.
The Native Women’s Association of Canada (NWAC) said Indigenous women are twice as likely to experience intimate partner violence and sexual assault and four times as likely to die by femicide.
Cara Loft, left, and Maja Wetz sing Monday during the closing of a Walk for Reconciliation at the University of Guelph. The songs were part of a walk through campus to mark the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.
The trauma from the residential schools didn’t just disappear, says Chief Donna Big Canoe.
Sept. 30 marks National Day for Truth and Reconciliation. Learn about Indigenous culture, take part in a sunrise ceremony or sacred fire, and tune into the national broadcast "Remembering the Children."
'As we mark another National Truth and Reconciliation Day, we must remember that reconciliation is not just about remembering the past but actively shaping the future', says Jody Harbour, co-founder of Grandmother's Voice.
Television network APTN, CBC/Radio-Canada and the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation will produce a national, multilingual commemorative gathering, “Remembering the Children,” broadcast live on Parliament Hill.
The National Day for Truth and Reconciliation is on Monday, Sept. 30. Learn about Indigenous culture and history with these recommended reads.
The National Day for Truth and Reconciliation is also known as Orange Shirt Day.
In honour of this important day, we've put together a list of films and television series we recommend you watch, celebrating Indigenous culture and helping pave the road to reconciliation.
Here is a look at what will be open and closed on the weekend and the holiday Monday, including the status of municipal services in Toronto, Durham Region, Hamilton, Halton Region, Peel Region and York Region.
A sacred fire and sunrise ceremony is a tradition in many Indigenous cultures that offers a chance to give thanks, reflect or pray on the day.
Day off with pay only applies to some workers in the province.
Observations and recommendations in this week's Living in Our Changing Watershed column.
The June 21 broadcast will feature celebrations from across Canada, an “Acting Good” marathon, the Indspire Awards and more.
National Indigenous Peoples Day on June 21 celebrates First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples' heritage and resilience, significant during the summer solstice.
Check out events happening in North Bay, Whitby, Toronto, Oakville, Stouffville, Peterborough, Ottawa, Foley, Midland, Kitchener, ߲ݴýand Muskoka.
This year’s exhibit includes a workshop featuring ribbon-skirt making and conversations about the history and impact of Indigenous women.
Robinson Huron Treaty Litigation Fund shared lawyers’ optimism about annuities case before the Supreme Court of Canada. A decision is expected to be issued in the spring of 2024.
I imagine the other murdered women buried somewhere in the landfill and what it must be like for them. They must sense...I am here. Sacred and strong. I am here. Medicine to my children. I am here. Lifeless and dead. The deposit of my broken body, amongst rotting, twisted refuse was not a choice.
Ontario Minister of Indigenous Affairs Greg Rickford issued a statement in recognition of Indigenous Veterans Day.
The Government of Ontario is appealing the decision made by the Ontario Court of Appeal in 2021 in the Robinson Huron Annuities Case to the Supreme Court of Canada on Nov. 7 and 8.
Wasauksing Kinomaugewgamik kindergarten to Grade 8 students and staff weren’t deterred from the annual Terry Fox walk by a downpour Friday, Oct. 6.
Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation (MNCFN) Chief Stacey Laforme is probably not who you’d expect to be a poet.
Today, we honour the memory of those who survived the Indian residential schools — and those who didn’t. We sometimes forget that the harm caused by those schools was often overlaid on other traumas. A case in point is Grassy Narrows First Nation in northern Ontario.
Sept. 30 is a day to recognize the legacy of the residential school system.
On this National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, we asked two Indigenous leaders about the nature of healing and what needs to be done to move forward.
National Day for Truth and Reconciliation will be observed on Monday, Oct. 2.
Indigenous online content creation has exploded in recent years, and many have taken to social platforms such as X (formerly Twitter), TikTok, Instagram and Facebook to grow their audiences and engage with new people.
There were 18 residential schools in Ontario recognized in the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement.
You never think it will happen to you until it does.
Over 24 acres of wetlands within the Georgian Bay Biosphere will see the removal of invasive species with the help of Shawanaga First Nation and the Wetlands Conservation Partner Program.
James Bartleman, who made history as the first Indigenous lieutenant-governor of Ontario, has died. Born in Orillia, he grew up in Port Carling and was a member of the Chippewas of Rama First Nation.
For the first time in more than 160 years, a Canadian Indigenous delegation had an audience with a sitting monarch.
Residential school survivors visit Huntsville for documentary at film festival.
Court Desautels, President and CEO for the Neighbourhood Group talks about his reconciliation journey as an employer.
What does Truth and Reconciliation mean to me?
Hamilton-based artist Kyle Joedicke, Cayuga (Turtle Clan), recently completed his mural on one of the Good Food Co-op's highly visible modular farms.
Anishinaabewin Maamninendimowin: Pane Gii-Bite (Indigenous Ingenuity: Timeless Inventions), presented by Indigenous Tourism Ontario and Science North, had its grand opening at the West Parry Sound District Museum on July 14.
The Anishinaabeg teachings of The Gifts of the Seven Grandfathers have been passed down from generation to generation among Indigenous people. It is Minobimaadizi, meaning "living well." The teachings are not just words, but also principles, ways of being, as to how to live well, the good way.
Anishinabek Nation Grand Council Chief Reg Niganobe is relieved with the recent federal court ruling on a motion filed by First Nation Police Chiefs of Ontario regarding their funding agreements.
The community celebrated the new space for Anishnabeg Outreach on July 6.
‘Microaggression never feels small’: Experiencing racism is a dark, painful, toxic place says Waterloo Region Indigenous professor, author.
About 35 people gathered on Aspdin Road near the Highway 11 overpass in Huntsville at noon on July 1 to remember Indigenous children who died in the residential school system.
As Gimaa (Chief) of Henvey Inlet First Nation, I see the Henvey Inlet Wind Project as a continuation of our community's spiritual relationship with the land and as a modern application of the teachings of our ancestors.
Indigenous history month: Jillian Morris
After a brief stint in local politics Terra Roy, 21, has gone back to her roots and immersed herself in Indigenous culture.
Colleen Gray is an Indigenous artist.
New Indigenous learning space coming to the Fennell campus.
Having been accepted to The Huntsville Festival of the Arts, Tom Thomson canoe mural painting, I began a weeklong journey of connecting canoe and culture.
Today, Anishinaabe artist Bonnie Devine’s work is well known throughout North America, with exhibits at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection, the University of Michigan, the National Museum of the American Indian (U.S.), the National Gallery of Canada and the Eiteljorg Museum (U.S).
He’s a type of gate keeper. When people, groups or municipalities approach the Mississaugas of the Credit Nation for any collaboration, they will likely first get a schooling from Darin Wybenga.
Woman adopted by ߲ݴýfamily shares her story.
Mississaugas of the Credit band councillor Erma Ferrell has a message about racism. Overcoming it is a matter of taking pride in First Nation’s identity.
Jenn Harper hopes other young Indigenous people see Cheekbone Beauty, and know anything is possible.
Melissa Ireland joined our Your Voice Against Racism campaign in 2022.
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