Close X
Monday, October 7, 2024
ADVT 
National

Repatriation ceremony at B.C. museum for totem

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Feb, 2023 05:15 PM
  • Repatriation ceremony at B.C. museum for totem

VICTORIA - A totem pole taken from an Indigenous village on British Columbia's Central Coast more than 100 years ago is on its way home after a repatriation ceremony at the Royal B.C. Museum, where it had been on display.

Drummers and singers from the Nuxalk Nation participated in a ceremony today with the goal to reawaken the spirit of the totem by Louie Snow, an Indigenous carver who lost many works to the Royal B.C. Museum and other institutions.

Chief Deric Snow, a great grandson of the artist, says his ancestor's spirit remains inside the totem and it will not be at rest until it is returned to its home at Bella Coola, B.C.

Snow says the Nuxalk Nation has been trying to repatriate the totem and other artifacts since 2019.

He says the museum has taken a historical step in the right direction with the totem's repatriation, but other artifacts are overdue.

After two days of celebrations, a convoy of vehicles will follow the totem as it leaves Wednesday for Bella Coola, almost 1,000 kilometres northwest of Vancouver.

MORE National ARTICLES

Emissions cap on oil and gas likely by end of 2023

Emissions cap on oil and gas likely by end of 2023
A cap on greenhouse gas emissions from Canada's oil and gas sector will be ready by the end of next year, Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said Monday. In an interview from Egypt where he is attending the 27th instalment of the United Nations climate talks, Guilbeault said the government is developing the regulations in "record time."

Emissions cap on oil and gas likely by end of 2023

Two deny murdering man after B.C. prison escape

Two deny murdering man after B.C. prison escape
Zachary Armitage and James Lee Busch are charged with killing 60-year-old Martin Payne in July 2019, a day after the pair walked away from William Head Institution, located about eight kilometres from the victim's home in Metchosin.  

Two deny murdering man after B.C. prison escape

Permanent Indian residents can now be part of Canadian military

Permanent Indian residents can now be part of Canadian military
As of 2021, there were more than eight million immigrants with permanent residence living in Canada - roughly 21.5 per cent of the total Canadian population. In the same year, nearly 100,000 Indians became permanent residents of Canada as the country admitted a record 405,000 new immigrants in its history.

Permanent Indian residents can now be part of Canadian military

NDP calls for review of federal COVID-19 response

NDP calls for review of federal COVID-19 response
With the final federal public-health restrictions having been lifted in September, NDP health critic Don Davies said it's about time for the government to look back at whether appropriate actions were taken to manage the crisis. 

NDP calls for review of federal COVID-19 response

B.C. hails flood recovery but more disasters loom

B.C. hails flood recovery but more disasters loom
The record rains brought by an atmospheric river last November swamped southwest B.C., inundated farmland, washed out major highways and railways and forced thousands to flee. Five people died in what the Insurance Bureau of Canada ranks as B.C.'s most costly weather event, with insured losses of $675 million.  

B.C. hails flood recovery but more disasters loom

Surrey councillors mull future of municipal police

Surrey councillors mull future of municipal police
It presents two options, with the first stopping further spending on the SPS while a plan is submitted to the province for approval to end the integration and "ramp down" the municipal police agency.

Surrey councillors mull future of municipal police