1:37 Indigenous seamstresses reflect on National Ribbon Skirt Day Residential school survivor Rita Martin lived decades before she wore her first ribbon skirt. Handmade with the help of her ...
Tuckanow, a Métis-Cree woman from the Okanese First Nation, is the building safer communities coordinator with Growing Young Movers (GYM). GYM is a nonprofit organization at Regina’s mâmawêyatitân ...
AMAZON: Bioeconomy profits. The bioeconomy concept is gaining attention in global forums like COP and G20. Yet, for Amazonian ...
A Saturday event in Winnipeg for the third annual National Ribbon Skirt Day was a chance for dozens to celebrate Indigenous pride, along with "love, kindness [and] loud auntie laughter," according ...
National Ribbon Skirt Day pays tribute to Isabel Kulak, a member of the Cote First Nation in Saskatchewan. In 2020, while in Grade 5, Kulak faced criticism for wearing a ribbon skirt to school, as ...
Onkwehón:we across Turtle Island donned their ribbon skirts on January 4, in recognition of the third annual National Ribbon ...
As the country marks the first-ever National Ribbon Skirt Day, the Cree and Stoney Nakoda woman said things have changed since then. For her, ribbon skirts aren't just for ceremonies anymore.
Global News’ Sarah Jones was able to step into one Saskatchewan community who learned to make their own ribbon skirts and have been wearing them with pride.
A Saturday event in Winnipeg for the third annual National Ribbon Skirt Day will be a chance to celebrate Indigenous pride, along with " love, kindness [and] loud auntie laughter," says one organizer.
First Nations girls, women, gender-diverse and two-spirit people adorned themselves in vibrant fabrics and patterns on Saturday to commemorate the third annual National Ribbon Skirt Day ...