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Buffy Sainte-Marie honoured with new Canada Post stamp

Indigenoussinger-songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie is the latestartist to be honoured with a commemorativeCanadian stamp.

Honour bestowed to singer-songwriter for her 'extraordinary career' and commitment to raising social awareness

Through Canada Post's 2021 Stamp Program, activist and musician Buffy Sainte-Marie is being honoured for her 'extraordinary career' and her commitment to raising social awareness. (Canada Post)

Joining the ranks of Joni Mitchell, Leonard Cohen and Rush, Indigenoussinger-songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie is the latestartist to be honoured with a commemorativeCanadian stamp.

Canada Post revealed the stamp celebrating Sainte-Marieat a small, in-person event at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa on Thursday.

"It feels like an embrace. It feels like it comes from more than only my own family or my own show-business people that I knowit feels like a national kind of thing," Sainte-Marie told CBC News.

The image of the 80-year-old used on the stamp was taken by photographer Simon Fowler and was the cover of the singer's singleThe Big Ones Get Away,from her 1992 album Coincidence and Likely Stories.

Stamp was in works for some time

The idea forthe stamp had been in the works for some time, said Canada Post spokesperson Valrie Chartrand. It generally takes up to 1or two years to take a stamp fromidea toissue date, she said.

For Chartrand, getting a chance to honour the five-time Juno Award winner and Order of Canada recipient in person made the wait worthwhile.

"She really is one of those Canadians that has contributed to the evolution of our country," said Chartrand.

Acknowledgingthat "you get a platform for a few minutes," Sainte-Marie said shehopes this honourprovides an opportunity "to share some positivity and some ideas."

"There are so many people, Indigenous and otherwise, who are really doing a lot of great work in Canada, and really throughout the world," she said.

Connecting Canadians through her music

The lifelong activist and advocate for Indigenous, social andenvironmental issues is well-known for connecting with Canadians through her music, as well as through her long-standing educational and philanthropic efforts.

Sainte-Marie first made a name for herself during the folk boom in the early 1960s.

"I felt, even early in the '60s, that if only people knew about just the poverty and the wretched dishonesty that goes on in exploiting Indigenous people, if only people knew, they would care and they'd do something about it."

She became the first Indigenous person to win an Academy Award in 1983 in theoriginal song category forUp Where We Belong,whichshe co-wrote for the filmAn Officer and a Gentleman.

Buffy Sainte-Marie is a five-time Juno Award winner. She is shown here with her award for best Indigenous music album at the 2018 Junos in Vancouver. (Tina Lovgreen/CBC)

Journalist, historian and authorNicholas JenningsdescribesSainte-Marie as "a true original" and someone who has a style "unlike any other."

"[Sainte-Marie] came on the scene and really started making waves as a performer, as a songwriter, in the early '60s," he said."She's now 80and she's had this extraordinary career where she's never stopped."

Sainte-Marie is still performing and creating; she went back on the road for a couple of shows this summer.

"She's one of those artists who never, never rests on her laurels. She's always creating, always innovating. That's,I think, a true measure of greatness," said Jennings.

"I'm a writer. I love to write," said Sainte-Marie.Though she admits, these days,using her computer "is just plain easier."

"I don't use stamps very often anymore. I do like to send cards," she said. "Now, when I have my own stamp, I guess I'm going to start sending postcards."