Manic Monday | Learn, Build, Open Up, Set an Example – Together

LEARN about Indigenous culture
BUILD new & better relationships
OPEN UP to new opportunities

Last Thursday throughout Canada we celebrated National Indigenous Peoples Day. Several of our TOTA team attended celebrations that took place throughout this region.  The day weaved together ceremony with celebration, festivity with sombre reflection, timeless rituals with modern adaptations, and all were accompanied by various traditional foods, music, artistry and dance. These events, large and small, were joyful, poignant, at times solemn reminders of a history that has been anything but picture perfect. Our team took great honor and appreciation in having the opportunity to take part these gatherings.

Indigenous Peoples Day has many meanings for many people. For some, it is a celebration of culture.  For others, it is a time of reflection of tremendous loss as well as an opportunity to recognize some of the positive gains that have been achieved. Without question Indigenous Peoples Day carries an ever-growing importance that reflects the significance of the Indigenous role in this lands’ past as well as its future.

For the non-Indigenous, we have an opportunity now, more than ever before, to engage, to listen, to learn and to start a renewed relationship. These communities are rich with stories, anchored by spirituality, connected and respectful of mother earth, and driven by a resilience that has helped them endure a long history of struggle. Taking the time to discover and understand this culture and how it has survived will continue to bring us closer together as people and as a country.

The Thompson Okanagan region is home to three separate Indigenous nations: The Syilx, The Secwepemc, and The Nlaka’pamux. The relationship TOTA, in partnership with Indigenous Tourism BC (ITBC), share with these nations continues to grow and deepen.  In 2017, our first Indigenous Board Chair was elected, Frank Antoine, who is a member of the Secwepemc nation and has played an instrumental role in guiding and mentoring our organization through his mindfulness and thoughtful approach to life.

As I reflect on Indigenous Peoples Day and the reports I received from the TOTA team’s experiences in attendance at the Day’s festivities, I am reminded of the tireless work that has been done by so many to bring us to where we are at this moment in time. The foundation is being laid for a strong, vibrant and healthy Indigenous culture and each one of us can play a role in helping to move this vision forward through education, engagement, support, participation and understanding. By taking the time to get to know your Indigenous neighbours through all of those avenues, you will find that not only are you helping to make positive change occur, but your own life will be greatly enriched.

Our Syilx people have an incredible Nk’Mip Desert Cultural Centre in Osoyoos, and an amazing Sncewips Heritage Museum in West Kelowna. The Secwepemc people have the awe-inspiring Quaaout Lodge in Chase and the historic Secwepemc Museum in Kamloops. The Nlaka’pamux people have both the delicious Kekuli Café and the inspiring Nlaka’pamux Creations next door to one another in Merritt. No matter where you call home in our region, there is Indigenous culture for you to explore.

We are all better together, succeed together, and can set an example for the world together.

LEARN about Indigenous culture
BUILD new & better relationships
OPEN UP to new opportunities

Glenn Mandziuk, TOTA President & CEO

Previous
Previous

Manic Monday | Bon Voyage and Welcome Aboard...

Next
Next

Manic Monday | Beige on Beige or a Flash of Green