Chimczuk museum offers free admission to celebrate National Aboriginal Day - Action News
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Windsor

Chimczuk museum offers free admission to celebrate National Aboriginal Day

Along with their permanent gallery, Original Peoples Culture & Legacy, the museum has another new exhibit called Mtis Footprints. This exhibit, put together by the Windsor-Essex Mtis Council, is temporary and will be available for the public to see until the end of the year.

'Education and awareness is a key role in reconciliation'

Melissa Phillips will be leading the tour at 2 p.m., and holds this day close to her heart. She is Haudenosaunee from the Oneida Nations of the Thames, Turtle Clan, and strives to help people learn about her own culture. (Rima Hamadi)

To celebrate National Aboriginal Daythe ChimczukMuseum is offering free admission and a guided tour of one of their Indigenous exhibits.

Along with their permanent gallery, Original Peoples Culture & Legacy, the museum has a new exhibit called Mtis Footprints. This exhibit, put together by the Windsor-EssexMtis Council,is temporary and will be available for the public to see until the end of the year.

The exhibit features flags, clothing, furs and a special section honouringlocal Mtis veterans including Wilfred Rochon and Ralph Earl Scofield, a flight gunner during the Second World War who died in 2012.

The new Mtis exhibit will be at the Chimczuk Museum until the end of the year. (Rima Hamadi)

Melissa Phillips, the museum's collections assistant, will be leading the guided tour at 2 p.m. and holds this day close to her heart. She is Haudenosaunee from the Oneida Nations of the Thames, Turtle Clan, and strives in her role to help people learn about her own culture.

"I'm interested in history and interested in my Indigenous history, I just want to helpeducated people,"said Phillips.

These gloves are one of Phillips favourite artifacts in the exhibit. The museum received them in the 1960's, and thinks they are either Mtis or Plateau because of the bead work. (Rima Hamadi)

She hopes free admission and events for children like an Indigenous-themed scavenger hunt,will bring more people to the museum to learn about Indigenous culture and practices.

"It's not just educating non-Indigenous, it's also about educating our Indigenous youth as well," said Phillips."Education and awareness is a key roll in reconciliation."