Home B

CULTURE

HOME

left_nav_red.gif (1121 bytes)

Current Issue

1998 Articles

BIOGRAPHY
Mishi's Spirit Soars

Singer, songwriter, and actress, Mishi Donovan is a Chippewa Cree whose CD, The Spirit Within, is a reflection of the heart and soul of her people. -Staff

Buffy Sainte-Marie
A look at the art, music, writing, and most of all the life, of the famous singer.

BUSINESS
Gambling in Court

The Beecher Bay Band will gamble in court that it has the right to build a casino on reserve land between Metchosin and East Sooke. -R. Stewart

CULTURE
End of an Era

The last man alive capable of reciting from memory the Great Law of the Iroquois Confederacy dies at 76. -Maurice Switzer

EDUCATION
A Victim Speaks

Harriet Nahanee relives the haunting childhood memories of her youth at a residential school. -Lloyd Dolha

MODERN TREATIES

POLITICS
In Court over Kemano
The Cheslatta Carrier Nation expects support in its court action over huge releases of water into the Nechako River below Cheslatta Falls. -Staff

HISTORY
A Dene Tragedy

Uranium mining at Great Bear Lake has not only left in its wake a "village of widows," but the water and the land surrounding the closed mine has essentially become a radioactive wasteland. -Ronald B. Barbour

Reconstructing Aboriginal History
We often overlook the fact that pre-colonial Canada was not all sweet grass, sweat lodges and sunsets. - Richard Wagamese


Aboriginal Cultural Festival Celebrates Unity

Ronald R. Barbour

When nations that are historically and traditionally at odds, or even at war, put aside their differences to come together and celebrate their similarities, culture and uniqueness - it must be another Aboriginal Cultural Festival.

The 5th Annual Aboriginal Cultural Festival brought together many nations representative of the vast diversity of the West Coast First Nations. People were drawn from their own lands to come to Coast Salish territory to join in this celebration of culture including the Dene, the Haida, the Kwakiutl, Nisga'a, Gitksan, Cree, and Ojibwe. It does the heart good to see this festive gathering of nations and peoples. The theme of, "Bringing the people together" made its indelible mark on the minds of the thousands that came to Squamish territory to witness this event.

This year's festival marked a significant change from the venues where the festival had been held previous years - the Pacific Coliseum and the Plaza of Nations. The organizers, led by Festival Coordinator Rose Holzer-Tambour, took the festival to a place where many think it should have been from the beginning - out in the open, communing with the forces of nature.

"The concept was to come over to Squamish Territory and form a working relationship with Squamish Nation," says Holzer-Tambour. "[This] is a first step for the urban Aboriginal community such as the Vancouver Aboriginal Friendship Centre and organize an event in conjunction with their territory."

For those with a penchant for soaking in West Coast style song and dance, the new festival site at the Squamish Nation's Capilano Longhouse provided an ideal location.

"It's very traditional, it's much more comfortable than the Coliseum." states Holzer-Tambour of the Longhouse. "It was one of the big highlights for this year's events."

In a great ceremony of respect and protocol, many honours were bestowed upon some of the dignitaries and elders that graced the festival. Venerable elders Khot La Cha (Chief Simon Baker), who welcomed everyone to his traditional territory and then delivered the invocation after the opening night's grand entry; elder and spokesperson for the Burrard Band, Bob George, and Musqueam elder, Vince Stogan (who was not present due to illness in the family) were honoured and recognized for serving their communities and their distinguished work for all First Nations.

"How many drums have we heard today? Twenty? Thirty?" George asked the crowd rhetorically after accepting his gifts. "What about 30,000 - that could make a sound that could be heard around the world.

Bristling with emotion and punctuating his words with clenched fists, George brought the Longhouse down when he asserted emphatically that we had to stop fighting each other and unite.

"It is through this unity that will make us strong," urged George.

Truly the Great Spirit must have moved through his body and touched everyone that was present, and the words he spoke of unity with purity of mind and spirit truly proved he is his father's son.

The Pow-Wow itinerary held in the sports fields that was not even a stone's throw from the Longhouse, kept those in the mood for fancy dancing, traditional and glass dances, enthralled throughout the weekend.

When asked about the success of the Festival, Holzer-Tambour smiled and let out a huge sigh of relief.

"It was very exciting," beamed Holzer-Tambor. "It was very authentic and it was a very special."

It seemed that the most difficulty anyone had was deciding between the watching the dancing, hearing the singing or witnessing the fascinating events inside the Longhouse.