Picture this: 2022 in southwestern Manitoba
, 2022-12-31 06:00:00,
Julia Brandon, member of the Waywayseecappo First Nation he says he is on a mission to help others in southwestern Manitoba “find their spiritual selves” by rediscovering their language. She teaches Anishinaabe as part of a program for Sixties Scoop survivors at the Friendship Center in Brandon with the goal of helping them reclaim and strengthen their indigenous identities and culture.
Unity Riders of Southwestern Manitoba undertook a six-day journey in honor of Every Child Matters for Truth and Reconciliation week. Travis Mazawasicuna says that when he looks at his relatives, he sees the lingering pain of residential schools, the Sixties Scoop and other colonial traumas that have led to mental health and addiction problems in indigenous communities. And he, he adds, challenges remain on the healing journey in Canada: Unity Riders were denied entry to the Birtle Residential School and not allowed to bring media when they visited the Elkhorn Residential School.

In southwestern Manitoba, about 60 people gathered in Brandon to commemorate the Oct. 4 Sisters in Spirit, walking to Dinsdale Park from Stanley Park and dropping flower petals into the Assiniboine River to remember their loved ones. “It lets us know that we are getting our message across, that we are being heard,…
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