Chinook’s Edge graduation ceremonies include celebration of Indigenous culture
If you’ve attended a graduation ceremony at a Chinook’s Edge school this year or in the last five plus years, you may have noticed some graduates wearing Métis sashes.
There have also been Indigenous graduates wearing medicine pouches. These protocols are now included in graduation events as a part of the division’s commitment to Truth and Reconciliation, and to ensuring Indigenous students feel welcome, safe and celebrated in their heritage and culture. Students and families are asked in advance if they would like to be honoured in this way. The Métis sash is a symbol of accomplishment and achievement and is presented to Métis students with pride, and positive energy for their journey ahead.
The medicine pouch represents wisdom, and a connection to the creator. It is filled with a white stone to give Indigenous students the feeling of connection and being grounded. It also contains sweet grass, a medicine in Indigenous cultures that represents kindness, strength and resilience. It is given to remind students to encourage them to love themselves and others, to move through life with kindness, and to remind them that they are strong and resilient. An Indigenous Elder smudges the sashes, the medicine pouches, and their contents prior to schools receiving them, with the intent of having students blessed with good thoughts, words and wishes as they begin their journey into adulthood and the next stage of their life. The Elder asks the creator to keep graduates grounded, safe and loved.
Leah Sorensen, a Métis graduate from Didsbury High School, said, “not being close to my culture, wearing the Métis sash felt good. It felt more embracing of my culture. It made me want to get to know more.” Sorensen said projects in school helped her learn more about her heritage. “I think it’s important to include this in graduations so you can learn to embrace where you come from,” she said. Sorensen said her Mom works as a Métis advisor at a post-secondary institution, and that she “was happy that our school lets us embrace who we are.”