Montreal

National Indigenous Peoples Day brings dance and caribou awareness to Montreal

People of all walks of life gathered at the McCord Stewart Museum to celebrate National Indigenous Peoples Day. Celebrations continue in the afternoon at Cabot Square in a concert organized by the Native Women's Shelter of Montreal.

This year's celebrations dedicated to the boreal caribou

A man wearing regalia dancing.
Dancers performed at the National Indigenous Peoples Day celebrations in Montreal on Friday. (Kwabena Oduro/CBC)

The alley beside the McCord Stewart Museum in Montreal erupted in song and dance and lively conversation as people gathered to mark National Indigenous Peoples Day Friday morning.

The event, a collaboration between Land InSights cultural organization and the museum, kicked off celebrations on the second-longest day of the year, this time dedicated to the boreal caribou, or atiku in Innu. 

"Atiku is the soul of the forest," said André Dudemaine, the Innu director and co-founder of Land In Sights. "If the atiku cannot survive in the forest it means the forest itself, the nature itself, Mother Earth herself is now in danger."

For over 25 years, Indigenous groups in Quebec have been asking for the protection of the animal which has been listed as threatened since 2003, says Dudemaine.

Men in regalia dancing during National Indigenous Peoples Day at the McCord Stewart Museum in Montreal.
Kanien'kehá:ka artist MC Snow, in orange, is one of two artists behind the bronze sculptures on Peel Street forming an urban trail connecting the St. Lawrence River to Mount Royal. (Kwabena Oduro/CBC)

Federal Environment Minister Guilbeault recommended the adoption of an emergency decree to protect the species earlier this week. He said Friday the decree was supported by the federal cabinet and that he's had a first meeting with Indigenous leaders to get started on a conservation plan. 

National Indigenous Peoples Day is always a special opportunity for Dudemaine to express his culture, but today was made especially important by this display of political will, he said.

Ray Deer comes back to the McCord Museum every year to celebrate, dance and make his and his people's presence known, says the elder dance troupe leader.

"We come back to re-establish our foothold on the island of Montreal just to have them recognize that this is ours and they need to acknowledge that," said Deer, who is from the Kanien'kehá:ka community of Kahnawà:ke south of Montreal.

Four people sitting around a drum playing it with hand drum sticks.
A drum circle kept the dancers dancing on beat. (Kwabena Oduro/CBC)

Deer and his fellow dancers stepped to the steady beat of a drum circle before members of the public were invited to join in. 

Two people with giant puppets strapped to their backs. They control the puppets' arms with long poles.
Two giant puppets swayed to the beat of the music while watching over the ceremony. (Kwabena Oduro/CBC)

They performed three dances, the duck and dive, an inter-tribal dance and the alligator dance, a traditional Haudenosaunee dance. 

"We were told as long as we did this dance, we would never see alligators on our territory. And you see it worked," said Sedalia Fazio, an elder from Kahnawà:ke, before bursting into song. 

Close up of a man's hands carving soapstone.
Concert attendees were able to shop from the merchants' tents and participate in a soapstone carving workshop. (Kwabena Oduro/CBC)

Celebrations continued through the afternoon at Cabot Square where the Native Women's Shelter of Montreal hosted a concert in collaboration with POP Montreal.

A woman in white polka-dot skirt singing under a tent at an outdoor concert
Siibii was among the singers performing at the National Indigenous People's Day Concert. (Elisabeth Ndeffo/CBC)

The free event featured performances from the Beatrice Deer Band, Aysanabee, Anachnid, Matiu, Siibii and the Black Bear Singers.

A man in regalia performs hoop dance
Sampson Sixkiller Sinquah, originally from Phoenix, Ariz., performing a hoop dance. He's part of a family of performers who are members of the Hopi, Tewa and Choctaw nations in Northern Arizona. (Elisabeth Ndeffo/CBC)

The Sinquah Family Hoop Dancers also performed for the crowd. The trio made up of two brothers and their father represent the Hopi, Tewa and Choctaw nations in Northern Arizona. 

WATCH | Scenes from Montreal's National Indigenous Peoples Day celebrations: 

Montreal celebrates National Indigenous Peoples Day

11 months ago
Duration 1:21
CBC's Kwabena Oduro went to take in the festivities in downtown Montreal.

Written by Cassandra Yanez-Leyton with files from Kwabena Oduro