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Online project aims to preserve voices, knowledge of First Nations elders
An elder based in Treaty 3 Territory in northwestern Ontario hopes a new website will help preserve traditional Anishinaabe language and culture for generations to come. We must know where we come from to know where we are going, says Alo White.
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New and growing website contains videos, podcasts, songs by elders in northwestern Ont. s Treaty 3 Territory
CBC News ·
Posted: Apr 20, 2021 12:15 PM ET | Last Updated: April 20
Alo White, seen holding a completed Tikinagan, is lead elder for the Ki eshgitabaaning Cultural & Healing Lodge in northwestern Ontario. The traditional healer and knowledge keeper, and original member of the Whitefish Bay singers, is spearheading a new website to preserve traditional Anishinaabe language and culture. (Ki eshgitabaaning Cultural & Healing Lodge)
Try refreshing your browser. COVID-19: One Year Later Saskatchewan restaurant industry still sweating a year into pandemic Back to video
In a cruel irony, business boomed at Gud Eats in downtown Regina after chef and founder Chris Cole announced its closure last month.
Even the original Gud Eats location in Saskatoon experienced a surge in business after the decision to close the Regina location after less than a year of operation became public.
It took the shuttering of the Regina restaurant for people to appreciate the vegan eatery. Cole said sales in Regina nearly quadrupled.
“That makes us feel a little uneasy,” Cole said in an interview as he prepared to close the Regina location. “It’s like, ‘Where was everyone?’ ”
Saskatchewan restaurant industry still sweating a year into pandemic
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Try refreshing your browser, or COVID-19: One Year Later â Saskatchewan restaurant industry still sweating a year into pandemic Back to video
In a cruel irony, business boomed at Gud Eats in downtown Regina after chef and founder Chris Cole announced its closure last month.
Even the original Gud Eats location in Saskatoon experienced a surge in business after the decision to close the Regina location after less than a year of operation became public.
It took the shuttering of the Regina restaurant for people to appreciate the vegan eatery. Cole said sales in Regina nearly quadrupled.
âThat makes us feel a little uneasy,â Cole said in an interview as he prepared to close the Regina location. âItâs like, âWhere was everyone?â â
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