With every beaded moccasin, a reminder to the spirit of a lost child: 'You are safe now'
Six Nations beaders are taking part in Project 215+, which goes on tour starting Thursday

WARNING: This story contains distressing details.
Project 215+ began as a small dedication to all the babies and children who never made it home from Kamloops Indian Residential School.
Early in the discoveries of these unmarked burial sites at former residential schools, the purpose of the project was to make 215 pairs of moccasins for these children, each with their own brightly coloured beaded piece on top, called vamps.
Jessica Hernandez of Kahnawà:ke Mohawk Territory near Montreal called on beaders across Haudenosaunee territories to come together through beading, to heal and to remember those children.
"It started with Kamloops but it's grown beyond that … We'll never know the accurate numbers," she said this week. Hernandez would have never fathomed then that those numbers could exceed 6,000 unidentified bodies of Indigenous children and babies — a number estimated by many communities.
She hopes Thursday's new National Day for Truth and Reconciliation will bring to light what many have long-known, that what happened to Indigenous people was genocide. Her intention with Project 215+ now is also to bring awareness.
The project has gained momentum amongst many Haudenosaunee beaders, including at Six Nations in Ontario.
'I just knew I wanted to be part of it'
Charlene Hemlock, Cayuga Nation, Wolf Clan of Six Nations of the Grand River, was assigned child #136. "I was feeling conflicted. I wish I had a name but I understand we don't have names. They're unidentified children," she said.
Using her own children's feet to measure the pattern, the mother of five couldn't help but think of the children who would've worn those moccasins. "When I started putting the moccasins together and I saw how small the feet were, I thought about how scared those babies must've been."