This Indigenous educator launched her own publishing company to release her first book - Action News
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British Columbia

This Indigenous educator launched her own publishing company to release her first book

Leona Princewrote her own children's book and created her own publishing company to release it to inspire young women and Indigenous entrepreneurs.

Leona Prince, an educator in B.C.'s northern Interior, wants to inspire young women

Leona Prince, a mom of three kids, wanted to write a book about the challenges kids face in their pre-teen years. (University of Northern British Columbia)

A northern B.C. educator wants to dismantlethe barriers blocking Indigenous women like her fromentering the world of business.

Leona Princewrote her own children's bookto inspire young women and Indigenous entrepreneurs and created her own publishing company to release it.

The result is A Dance Through the Seasonswhich tells the story of girl named Young Woman and what happens when those around her don't recognize her strength.

Prince, the district principal for aboriginal education in NechakoLakes School Districtwest of Prince George,already co-owned a book-selling company, Fireweed Canada,that specialized in Indigenous books.

Her new bookreleased Fridayis the company's first publication.

Prince said she wrote the story for A Dance Through the Seasons in one night and fiddled with it over the years. (University of Northern British Columbia)

"We wanted to venture out and take a risk because this trail has not been blazed very much, especially within our culture," Prince, who isDakelhfrom the Lake Babine Nation,toldDaybreak Northhost Carolina de Ryk.

Indigenous women going into entrepreneurship in Canada face barriers like lack of education, the inability to qualify for a loan and lack of access to male-dominated fields, such as construction, according to a 2017 study.

Story came from a dream

Prince believes her newest venture will be successful because of the desire for "truth telling" in Indigenous stories.

"That really is the essence of what we are trying to achieve: to get an accurate representation of our cultures."

Prince said the story's premise came from a dream that a colleague shared with her.

"She goes, 'I think it's about you.' ... And she told me how I would leave and go out on this leadership journey and come back and lead them."

That night, Prince went home and wrote the story in one sitting. The book was illustrated by Carla Joseph, a Cree artist from Prince George.

"She is Prince George's best kept secret," Prince said about illustrator Carla Joseph. (University of Northern British Columbia)

Readers will notice thecharacters have blank faces.

"I want children and other people to see themselves in Young Woman," Prince said, "and to think about their own journeys and their ability to persevere through anything."

With files from CBC's Daybreak North