Amlamgog’s first ever youth powwow happens this Saturday on Truth and Reconciliation day
Last year on September 30, the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, Amlamgog (Fort Folly) First Nation hosted a sacred fire and a giant haybale teddy bear sporting on orange shirt, and sent out an open invitation for people to come visit. Cultural coordinator Nicole Porter says hundreds of people came from surrounding communities to pay their respects, to ask questions about residential schools and truth and reconciliation, and of course, to climb on the Orange Shirt Bear.
Porter says the opportunity for members of Fort Folly to share their stories and culture was significant, so much so that after it was over she immediately started to think about what the community could do in 2023. An opportunity for some funding came along and so Porter thought, “let’s honour our children and actually have a mini powwow for them.”
Amlamgog is hosting its first ever Youth Mini Powwow this Saturday, September 30 at the Fort Folly band office on Bernard Trail, just outside the village of Dorchester. CHMA dropped in to the band office to find out more about the event from Porter and one of the youth organizers, Porter’s son, Zachary Dubé:
This powwow, or Mawiomi as the gathering is known in Mi’kmaq, is a first for Amlamgog, and part of a growing number of powwows happening in the Maritimes. Porter says access to funding is part of the equation, as is changing attitudes.… Continue