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Saskatoon

'Smudge On': Saskatoon man working to fill Indigenous cultural, spiritual gap in city

Smudge On, a community program led by a Saskatoon man, works to bring the Indigenous practice of smudging to those who seek it in the city.

Smudging helped David Fineday deal with trauma from Sixties Scoop, he says

David Fineday, middle, in a small circle of people who stopped by Friday for Smudge On, a program that allows people to engage in the Indigenous cultural and spiritual practice of smudging. (Dayne Patterson/CBC)

A Saskatoon man is trying to bring the Indigenous spiritual and cultural practice of smudging to those in the city, where he says it is lacking.

David Fineday, 66, said he was taken from his home at about five years old, then didn't see his mother until he returned home more than a decade later at 16.

He said his mother and elders then taught him how to smudge.Smudging is a spiritual practice meantto purify oneself by washing the smoke from burning certain herbs, like sweetgrass and sage, over your face and body.

Fineday said he doesn't see smudging often in the city so he treks from his home in Saskatoon to a small, treed area near the corner of 20th Street West and Avenue K South, and does it there.

Fineday leads"Smudge On," a program backed by thePleasant Hill Community Associationthat invites people to smudge every Saturday. Last week he also held a smudge onFriday for those who wanted to participate on the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.

"Smudge On is a spiritual thing that I am trying to bring back to our people," he said.

"When you say your prayers that smoke takes your prayers up and that's how you're heard."

Two men stand in a park with a banner between them reading '60s Scoop' in large, colourful lettering, with many names written on it.
David Fineday, left, and Dennis Kissling, right, carried a banner on July 1 with names of people they said were taken from their homes during the Sixties Scoop. On the back it said 'Smudge-On,' a reference to the practice of smudging, which Fineday said has been a way to heal from the traumatic past. (Dayne Patterson/CBC)

Smudge On started in June 2020, but has become more consistent through 2021 and 2022, operating almost every Saturday through the late winter months into the late fall, Fineday said.

"People can come hereif they're having problems, they can have a smudge and have a prayer and if they want to talk, they can talk," he said, calling ita no-judgment zone.

"Everybody deserves a prayer, especially these people on the street with their mental illnesses and addictions. They're chased out of every other place."

Fineday said smudging helped himto know he wasn't alone and to heal from the trauma associated with being taken during theSixties Scoop, aperiod from the 1960s to 1980swhen Canadian child welfare authorities took thousands of Indigenous children from their homes and placed them with non-Indigenous foster parents.

David Fineday, right, hosts the Smudge On program almost every Saturday to provide those in search of the traditional Indigenous practice an opportunity to do it. (Dayne Patterson/CBC)

While Finedaydidn't attend residential schools, he saidhe moved from foster home to foster home from November 1961 until June 1973.

Saskatoon Ward 2 Coun. Hilary Gough stopped by Smudge On'sFriday ceremony with acase of coffee and Timbitsfor the attendees, who sat on blue tarps that circled a metal firepit in the grassed area.

She said she stops by occasionally.

"This is something that is happening today, for [National Day forTruth and Reconciliation], but it's also something that happens every week," Gough said.

"It is intended to meet people where they're at."

Gough said she thinks much of the work done on the national day needs to be done year-round, not just on a designated date.