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Sudbury

Students gather in Sudbury for learning ahead of the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation

There was a huge event today in Sudbury's Bell Park,where students of all ages gathered for a day of learning and performances around Indigenous culture.

Students from kindergarten to Grade 12 see and hear presentations on Indigenous history and culture

A group of people sit in blue chairs in an open air stadium watching a performance on a stage.
Students from various school in Sudbury gather to watch performances and hear history of Indigenous culture (Erika Chorostil/CBC)

There were hundreds of students of all ages today atSudbury's Bell Park,where they gathered for a day of learning and performances around Indigenous culture.

The students, ranging from kindergarten- to Grade 12, were shown a film, and watched actors perform scenes on stage.
It's all part of the lead-up to the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation on Monday.

Jamie McDonald-Guizzo is an Indigenous support worker at two Sudbury-area schools.She calledit an impactful day.

A woman in a black dress with a black sweater stands beside a fence with green grass and some people in orange shirts behind her.
Jamie McDonald-Guizzo is an indigenous support worker at two schools in the Sudbury area. (Erika Chorostil/CBC)

"This is impactful for my own story, but it's also impactful to be able to be here and be a part of our history going forward, and see the change that's to come. So I, myself, got quite emotional today in the presentations, and Ithink it's just a really really great honour for us to all come together," she said.

Emma Rochonis a student at Sudbury Secondary School, and says it was important for her to be at the event.

"I think it's important to learn about it because not a lot of kids get to. Like for me, for example, I didn't get to learn about this until last year when I came for the last one of these," she said.

"It's good to keep talking about it so we never forget about it because it's always going to be part of our history. Someone you know will probably have family that went through what the residential schools put the kids through."

Fellow student, Emma Card, is in Grade 10 at from Sudbury Secondary School, and was moved by the presentation.

"It kind of got me in certain parts, and I think it's really meaningful for everybody to listen to it," Card said.

"I feel like more needs to change too because I feel like this only gets mentioned during thismonth. I feel like it should be mentioned all the time."

Dozens of students sit on a rock shelf in a park with a banner behind them that says
Students attending a learning session in Sudbury's Bell Park ahead of the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation. (Erika Choristil/CBC)

McDonald-Guizzo says she's glad students are being engaged in this way.

"I think, at the end of the day, a lot of our students are willing to engage and learn, the more open that we are in discussion, the better that it's received," she said.

"I think the more than we provide these opportunities for learning and education in regards to our Indigenous culture, it just provides that open conversation that we should be having more often."

with files from Erika Chorostil