Posted: Dec 27, 2020 10:00 AM PT | Last Updated: December 27, 2020
Anishinaabe author Waubgeshig Rice is one of the contributors to a virtual time capsule commemorating artists days in quarantine.(Shilo Adamson )
A time capsule may seem like a strange idea at the end of a year many of us can t wait to forget.
But a Vancouver-based arts organization is focusing on preserving this unique time in history for future generations to look back on through 12 new digital performances. The idea is to have something that a future society or future community can access and give them an idea of some of the things we re going through during this big shift, author and artist Waubgeshig Rice told Margaret Gallagher, guest host of CBC s
Free nature therapy offered to pandemic-stressed health-care workers
The B.C. Parks Foundation is offering free guided nature therapy sessions to health-care workers to help ease pandemic-related stress and has launched a fundraising campaign to help pay for the sessions.
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