Celebrating Indigenous History Month at Christ Church Bells Corners

Priest introduces two young Indigenous women wearing traditional dance regalia.
Archdeacon Monique Stone thanks Charmaine Leonard and Belle Bailey for sharing their knowledge and wonderful dancing.

Christ Church Bells Corners hosted a community event to mark Indigenous History Month on June 13.

The day began with Elder Larry Langlois offering a smudge and prayers outside the church.

Then everyone moved into the parish hall where Belle Bailey and Charmaine Leonard, who came to the event from Mādahòkì Farm, demonstrated two beautiful traditional dances. Bailey performed a Fancy Shawl Dance, and Leonard performed a Jingle Dress Dance. Afterward, they spoke and offered some insights from their Indigenous cultures and advice on how non-Indigenous people can learn more and work to contribute to reconciliation.

Everyone attending was invited to participate in a collaborative art project, adding their own designs to rocks that had been painted red, white, yellow and black. Then all the rocks were carried out into the parish garden to be arranged into the four quadrants of a medicine wheel, an important symbol in many First Nations cultures, which represents the interconnectedness of all life, the cycles of nature, and a path to personal balance.

The parish offered bannock with strawberry jam and strawberry water as refreshments for all.

 

 

  • Leigh Anne Williams

    Leigh Anne Williams is the editor of Perspective. Before coming to the Anglican Diocese of Ottawa, she was a staff writer at the Anglican Journal and the Canadian correspondent for Publishers Weekly. She has also written for TIME Magazine and the Toronto Star.

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