Web Notifications

SaltWire.com would like to send you notifications for breaking news alerts.

Activate notifications?

Being lead dancer at powwow a great honour for local Mi’kmaq man

None

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THESE SALTWIRE VIDEOS

Calling Chard: asparagus and leek risotto with chicken | SaltWire

Watch on YouTube: "Calling Chard: asparagus and leek risotto with chicken | SaltWire"
Lead dancers, Robin Benoit of Conne River, left, and Scott Butt of Flat Bay Brook, are seen dancing at the seventh annual Bay St. George Powwow in Flat Bay.
— Star photos by Frank Gale

FLAT BAY  Being the lead male dancer and dancing for family, community and the people in attendance at the seven annual Bay St. George Powwow was a great honour for Scott Butt.

The Flat Bay Brook resident, who grew up in St. George’s, said on Saturday while in full regalia at the Powwow in Flat Bay that he was also dancing for his ancestors and that it’s great the Bay St. George area is gaining the knowledge and skills of it Mi’kmaq culture.

“We’ve been building on it (culture) and made it grow and now we can be here as proud Mi’kmaq First Nation people and not have to hide. We can celebrate our culture and be proud of it,” he said.

Being from the area and being the lead male dancer was a really proud moment for him.

Bobby White, a resident of Flat Bay, takes great pride in the powwow being held in the community in which he lives.

“This brings everyone together and takes away any animosity there may be and brings the Mi’kmaq people together as family,” he said of the powwow.

White likes the fact that many family members from away come home for the event and that it opens up their culture and brings them closer with The Creator. He said there were people from across Canada attending the event and some from the United States.

“This is a culture that knows no boundaries,” he said. “It extends so far beyond out little community.”

He said people in Flat Bay have family serving in Afghanistan in the military who wished they could have been at the powwow on the weekend. He said Flat Bay is a community that hung on to its aboriginal roots and sometimes it was in secrecy but since the Federation of Newfoundland Indians has gained popularity, the culture is now more public.

“People are proud to be Mi’kmaq and now are not being discriminated for it,” he said.

Jasen Benwah, chief of the Benoit First Nation on the Port au Port Peninsula, said the powwow weekend was spiritual and uplifting and his band is hoping at some point to host a powwow in Cape St. George.

He said Benoit First Nation was pitching in and helping out at the Bay St. George Powwow and that it was just great to be there with his family and have another great experience in the Mi’kmaq culture.

Share story:
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT