Space for Healing

For many Indigenous Peoples living in urban centres, it is difficult to find spaces and groups to feel safe and comfortable sharing lived experiences and trauma. This is especially true for residential school survivors who carry scars from the abuse they endured in these institutions. Those living in cities often face feelings of increased disconnect and additional barriers to health care, education, and employment, along with limited financial resources and support systems.

Space for Healing2026-02-11T04:05:00+00:00

Wiigwaas Jiimaan

The building of a birch bark canoe, known as wiigwaas jiimaan in Anishinaabemowin, is a sacred act in Anishinaabek culture. The canoe represents the physical connection to the water, the land, and to one another.

Wiigwaas Jiimaan2026-02-11T04:00:49+00:00

Shelter

Reliable transportation in remote and rural Indigenous communities is critical to increasing safety, reducing isolation, supporting independence, and providing critical access to healthcare, education, employment opportunities, and support organizations.

Shelter2026-02-11T03:57:46+00:00

The Truth

For many temporary residents, tourists, and summer vacationers, Ontario’s Muskoka is known only as cottage country. What is often overlooked is the history of the land and its peoples. Because of recent Reconciliation efforts, the community is now advocating for visitors to understand its history and to hear Indigenous voices in ways that honour oral tradition and lived experience.

The Truth2026-02-11T03:51:23+00:00

Seated at the Table

The Ojibwa name for Peterborough, Ontario is “Nogojiwanong”, meaning the place at the end of rapids. It has become a place where many Indigenous Peoples are experiencing increasing levels of food insecurity, rising costs of living, limited access to nutritious food, and ongoing impacts of colonization and systemic inequities.

Seated at the Table2026-02-11T03:47:24+00:00

Treading in our Ancestors’ Footsteps

Seated on the shores of Georgian Bay, Moose Deer Point First Nation in Ontario is strongly tied to the land and water. This plays a critical role in the community’s economy and has shaped its values, traditions and beliefs. This terrain can be unforgiving and difficult to navigate, so in the 1960s, road access was built between village sites to connect families, make schooling more accessible, and enable mail delivery. However, while colonial road structures have made travel more convenient, the traditional pathways have been lost and forgotten.

Treading in our Ancestors’ Footsteps2026-02-11T03:43:41+00:00

Upholding Values

Hiawatha First Nation has always held pride in values that are guided by traditional beliefs, teachings, and principles that shape attitudes toward healing, spirituality, and community life. Central to these values are the Seven Grandfather Teachings, which have been passed down through generations and continue to guide Indigenous Peoples to live together in peace, balance, and mutual respect.

Upholding Values2026-02-11T03:40:06+00:00

With Honour

The trauma of the residential school system has haunted communities and families for generations. Many still grieve without closure for the children who entered through a school door but never left. For them, Ground Penetration Mapping is one of the only ways to locate their loved ones, honour their resting place, and begin to heal. Yet these technological services remain costly, time-consuming, and require support from organizations who are deeply respectful and detail-oriented in their approach.

With Honour2026-02-11T03:36:36+00:00

Learning on the Land

Since 2023, the Enwayaang Learning on the Land Camp in the Wikwemikong Unceded Territory on Manitoulin Island has made a big impact. Initially created by Trent University, in partnership with local Indigenous communities, to respond to a need for traditional Indigenous land-based learning for Indigenous and non-Indigenous students.

Learning on the Land2026-02-11T03:29:26+00:00

From Grandmothers to Daughters, Aunties to Nieces, Mentors to Youth

There is an urgent need to create safe and sacred spaces where young Indigenous women and girls can reconnect with their cultural identity, spiritual practices, and traditional roles. As the most vulnerable individuals in an already high-risk ethno-group, many of these youth have become disconnected from their communities.

From Grandmothers to Daughters, Aunties to Nieces, Mentors to Youth2026-02-11T03:31:25+00:00
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