Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ballet meant to educate Canadians about Indian residential schools: commissioner

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Oct, 2014 11:17 AM

    WINNIPEG - One of the most European forms of dance will tackle Canada's fraught colonial history when performers with the Royal Winnipeg Ballet take to the stage Wednesday for the world premiere of a ballet about Indian residential schools.

    The ballet, entitled "Going Home Star — Truth and Reconciliation," follows the journey of a young, urban First Nations woman who discovers her ancestors and finds meaning in her own life with the help of a homeless residential school survivor.

    Based on a story by novelist Joseph Boyden, it includes appearances by Polaris prize winner and Inuk throat singer Tanya Tagaq along with other aboriginal vocalists.

    The ballet, sponsored by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, of Canada, is an attempt to capture the emotions and experiences of residential school survivors by a company that doesn't have an aboriginal dancer.

    But commission head Murray Sinclair said it's a way to bring a dark chapter of Canadian history to a different audience.

    "We know that people will say this is not their story to tell us," Sinclair said in an interview. "That's true, but what we say to survivors who wonder why this is being done is: 'This is a story that they're telling themselves. This is a story that Canadian society needs to be able to communicate to itself in a way that they can appreciate.'

    "This is one way of doing that."

    About 150,000 First Nations, Inuit and Metis children were taken from their families and forced to attend government schools over much of the last century to "take the Indian out of the child." The last school closed outside Regina in 1996.

    The $60-million truth and reconciliation commission is part of a landmark compensation deal between the federal government, the Crown and residential school survivors. It has visited hundreds of communities and has heard graphic details of rampant sexual and physical abuse.

    Learning about the issue through dance can reach those who would not necessarily attend a lecture or a speech on the topic, Sinclair said. Dance and music have also been shown scientifically to stimulate a separate part of the brain, so the ballet has the potential to reach people on a different level, he said.

    "This is not an aboriginal story. This is not only about the experience of those who were students in the school. This is also the story about Canada's experience," Sinclair said.

    "While they were indoctrinating aboriginal people into believing that their people were inferior, their languages were irrelevant, their cultures were not worth protecting, the very same message was being given to students in public schools in this country."

    The performance was spearheaded by aboriginal actress and former MP Tina Keeper, who sits on the ballet's board of directors. The history of residential schools in Canada lends itself well to the ballet stage, she said.

    "At the heart of every ballet is a great story and that's what we have here," she said. "It is a great tragic tale and a love story, so in that sense, it fits perfectly."

    Choreographer Mark Godden said the aim was to reflect the heart-wrenching stories coming out of the truth and reconciliation commission. But the experience also needed to be positive.

    "It's to not deny the past but to say that, in many ways, First Nations and aboriginal people are stronger than they are before. Many of them aren't victims," he said. "That was the desire — to build a story that was more uplifting."

    Godden said he started by watching streaming testimony given at the commission. With two kids of his own, he was an "emotional wreck" absorbing the raw, emotional testimony, he said. But he also saw the courage and strength of survivors who relived their abuse by talking about it publicly.

    "That's something I wanted to put into the ballet," he said. "If everybody picks up the burden of this story, then we lighten the load for everybody. It's a sense of social responsibility there."

    The ballet is careful to avoid cultural appropriation, Godden said. There is no attempt to integrate traditional aboriginal dance or costume. The music, performed by aboriginal artists, provides a bridge between the European tradition of ballet and the aboriginal experience, he suggested.

    Commissioners and survivors met with those involved with the ballet throughout the creative process.

    "The process itself has been reconciling," said commissioner Marie Wilson. "The process of having dancers and creative people learn about this history while they are practising their own art form has allowed for growth. Those who come as audience members will be witness to that."

    The ballet is giving away free tickets to residential school survivors and is setting aside a batch of "pay-what-you-can" tickets for one performance.

    It's hoped the ballet will tour across the country following its premiere in Winnipeg.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP say they have footage of B.C. tour bus crash; speed likely not factor

    RCMP say they have footage of B.C. tour bus crash; speed likely not factor
    Video footage from a dashboard camera has allowed investigators in British Columbia to rule out speed as a potential factor in a bus crash on a mountain highway where dozens of tourists were injured as they were returning from a trip to the Rocky Mountains.

    RCMP say they have footage of B.C. tour bus crash; speed likely not factor

    Montreal police to charge 44 people for raucous pension protest inside city hall

    Montreal police to charge 44 people for raucous pension protest inside city hall
    Montreal's police chief says 44 people will face criminal charges in connection with a rowdy pension protest inside city hall earlier this month.

    Montreal police to charge 44 people for raucous pension protest inside city hall

    Mistrial could be declared in Saskatoon murder case after Mr. Big ruling

    Mistrial could be declared in Saskatoon murder case after Mr. Big ruling
    The spectre of a mistrial hangs over a high-profile murder case in Saskatchewan after a Supreme Court ruling on undercover police stings.

    Mistrial could be declared in Saskatoon murder case after Mr. Big ruling

    Ex-Quebec teacher gets jail time for sex crimes against 15-year-old student

    Ex-Quebec teacher gets jail time for sex crimes against 15-year-old student
    A former Quebec high school teacher found guilty of sex crimes stemming from a relationship with a 15-year-old student will serve jail time.

    Ex-Quebec teacher gets jail time for sex crimes against 15-year-old student

    Man who dismembered ex should wait 20 years before eligible for parole: Crown

    Man who dismembered ex should wait 20 years before eligible for parole: Crown
    A Toronto man convicted in the "savage" killing and dismemberment of his ex-girlfriend should have to spend 20 years behind bars before he can apply for parole, prosecutors said Friday.

    Man who dismembered ex should wait 20 years before eligible for parole: Crown

    Canadians spend economy to 3.1 per cent annualized pace in second quarter

    Canadians spend economy to 3.1 per cent annualized pace in second quarter
    With last winter's harsh weather behind them, Canadians opened their warmed up wallets in the second quarter, spending the economy to an annual growth rate of 3.1 per cent that easily exceeded analyst expectations.

    Canadians spend economy to 3.1 per cent annualized pace in second quarter