With students 'thriving', here's how Lennox Island First Nation is reclaiming education - Action News
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PEIATLANTIC VOICE

With students 'thriving', here's how Lennox Island First Nation is reclaiming education

Speaking Mi'kmaw was once banned in Lennox Island First Nation's school. Now, it's celebrated.

Listen to the Mi'kmaw cultural revival at John J Sark Memorial in an Atlantic Voice documentary

John J Sark Memorial School Grade 6 students Riley Bernard, left, and and Xavier Bernard practice drumming on a lunch break. (Jessica Doria-Brown/CBC)

On a recent lunch breakat John J Sark Memorial School, two Grade 6 students used their free time to brush up on their drumming.

"It's just really fun," said Riley Bernard, laughing and drumming with his friend, Xavier Bernard.

Along with the fun, both students also know that this break time is special.

"I feel it's super cool because my ancestors, it was illegal for them to do it, a long time ago ...It feels like you'rehealing yourself, andit'll heal like a bunch of other people," said Xavier.

Practicing Mi'kmaw culture, including everything from drumming to speaking the language, was illegal at the Lennox Island First Nation's school asrecently as the mid-1980s.

Prior to John J Sark, the school on Lennox Island wasan Indian day school, one of669 across Canada. Day schools were akin to a residential schools, with the only difference being students at day schools went home for the night.Lennox Island's day school has left a legacy of abuse among its survivors that persists despite the school being handed over to the First Nation in 1987.

Since then, educators, students and the community haveworked to transform the First Nation's on-reserve education system, and what stands today, in 2022, is a testament to cultural resurgence and passing onrenewed pride to the current and future generations of Mik'maw students.

Each morning at John J SarkMemorial School begins with students announcing the weather, in Mi'kmaw and English, which isalso broadcast through the community for everyone to hear. Cultural and language posters adorn classrooms, and tiny class sizes mean each student gets a lot of time and attention from teachers.

"We take into account not only their academic needs, but their emotional needs.As well, we work to help promote inclusivity, kindness, using all of the teachings that they learn with their Mi'kmawculture teacher," said Kim Colwell, Lennox Island's education director.

Students are 'thriving'

That dedicated Mi'kmaw teacher, Nancy Peters-Doyle, has a classroom shared with the school's music program.

"The students at John J they're thriving," Peters-Doyle said.

Peters-Doyle runs through vocabulary and grammar lessons, but also saidrecently students have become focused on drumming. Her own father Frank Joe Peters, a beloved elder and Mi'kmaw teacher attended the former Indian day school, andshe said as students drum it has served as a history lesson for the recent past.

"I said that to them, basically for a really long time, our people weren't allowed to drum. It was against the law ... you're drumming for the ancestors who couldn't do it.You'redrumming for your family members who couldn't do it for so long," she said.

"You're reconnecting with that."

Nancy Peters-Doyle teaches Mi'kmaw at John J Sark Memorial School. (Jessica Doria-Brown/CBC)

John J Sark has recently expanded, in a massive project that added two new classrooms, a kitchen, cafeteria and other amenities. On weekends, the building is used for community activities and events, but weekdays the focus is kept on the kids.

"Having the school here on Lennox Island provides the community with a place for all of their precious children to attend and embrace and celebrate who they are. And that is vital for the language to grow, for the culture to thrive," said Colwill.

John J Sark Memorial includes instruction through to Grade 6, and Peters-Doyle teaches a Mi'kmaw class at the off-reserve middle school children attend after elementary.

But she said when children attendhigher grades away from Lennox Island, they encounter barriers like racism that continue to dog Indigenous people.

She said emphasizing culture at an early age is key.

"The more we can strengthen their resolve as Indigenous people when they're young, the more that the racism that still exists out there and is in all of the places that they'll probably interact in society as they get older.Hopefully they'll recall that strength from when they were a kid and be like, oh, well, I'm proud to beMi'kmaq," she said.

With files from Jessica Doria-Brown