See photos from a Wabanaki name-giving ceremony - Action News
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New BrunswickAnn's Eye

See photos from a Wabanaki name-giving ceremony

The ceremony includes singing, drumming and smudging.

Elders receive traditional names from the ancestors

A smiling woman with white, curly hair and wearing sunglasses and a purple shirt and skirt stands in front of a river.
Wolastoqey Grand Chief Ron Tremblay performed a name-giving ceremony for Cyril Francis, a Peskotomuhkati woman from Sipayik (Pleasant Point Passamaquoddy Reservation) in Maine. Her name is Yalahseniket, meaning one who brings the light. (Ann Paul/CBC)

This is part of a series called Ann's Eye, featuring the work of Ann Paul, a Wolastoqey content creator. You cansee more Ann's Eye pieces by clicking here.

On a sunny day in Sipayik (Pleasant Point Passamaquoddy Reservation) in Maine, family and friends embraced Cyril Francis, saying her name three times.

The ritual is part of the name-giving ceremony, during which an elder reveals the name for someone provided by the ancestors. Wolastoqey Grand Chief Ron Tremblay performed the ceremony for Francis, revealing her name to be Yalahseniket, meaning one who brings the light.

Wolastoqey photographer Ann Paul covered the ceremony, which included drumming, singing, smudging and a pipe ceremony, for CBC New Brunswick. Scroll through the photos and watch the video to see what she saw.

WATCH | Meet Yalahseniket: One who brings the light:

Anns Eye: See a naming ceremony in Sipayik

5 months ago
Duration 2:26
The ceremony reveals a name that has been provided by the ancestors. Wolastoqey Grand Chief Ron Tremblay performs the service for Cyril Francis in Maine.
A man with grey hair braided down his back stands in front of a flowing river, banging a hand drum and looking up to the sky.
Wolastoqey Grand Chief Ron Tremblay performed the name-giving ceremony for Cyril Francis. The name doesn't come out of thin air, Ann Paul said. The elder has to know the person and what they bring to the community. The name could come to the elder in a dream or as a spiritual epiphany. (Ann Paul/CBC)
A woman wearing sunglasses and a yellow shirt stands outside on green grass in front of a river hugging another woman wearing a purple shirt and skirt.
Ann Paul said Cyril Francis had a sense of peace about her after she received her name. 'She seemed so happy, she was glowing. She had all her loved ones there that she invited,' Ann said. (Ann Paul/CBC)
A row of women wearing colourful clothing stand outside on green grass holding up hand drums. A river flows behind them.
During the pipe ceremony, Ann Paul said she took her drum down to the water and dipped it into the saltwater to loosen it. 'My drum was calling out for the water,' she said. Of course, she had to chase after her mother Elder Maggie Paul, who decided to do the same thing and took off for the water. (Ann Paul/CBC)
A man with grey hair and wearing a colourful shirt bends down over a woven basket and colourful objects strewn over green grass. A river flows behind him.
The name-giving ceremony was held at Split Rock, a ceremonial place in Sipayik. The reservation is Wabanaki territory, Ann Paul said, because Indigenous groups have lived in the area for centuries, well before colonizers arrived and created borders. (Ann Paul/CBC)
A man wearing a blue shirt and holding a feather stops in front of a woman wearing yellow holding a hand drum for a smudge.
The name-giving ceremony included smudging. (Ann Paul/CBC)

Ann's Eye

Photographer Ann Paul brings an Indigenous lens to stories from First Nations communities across New Brunswick.Click hereor on the image below to see more of her work.