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Indigenous

Why this Montreal collective is moose hide tanning in urban spaces

The Buckskin Babes Collective has been organizing moose hide tanning in urban spaces throughout Montreal.

'Were learning that knowledge so that we can pass it on to the future generations,' says Brooke Rice

Autumn Godwin is nehithaw (Woodland Cree) from Montreal Lake Cree Nation in Saskatchewan and has been living in Montreal for over a decade. (Dave St-Amant/CBC)

For Autumn Godwin, a graduate student at Concordia University, there was a disconnect between living in Montreal and access to cultural teachings that comes along with being on her ancestral lands of northern Saskatchewan.

It's why she started the Buckskin Babes Collective to organize moose hide tanning in urban spaces throughout the city.

"I can't afford to go home every year or every summer to go and be on the land and I was craving these types of practices and I wanted to make it accessible," said Godwin, who is nehithaw(Woodland Cree) from Montreal Lake Cree Nation in Saskatchewan.

The collective, which also includes Concordia students Brooke Rice, Dayna Danger, MelLefebvre, and Victoria May, has been tanning hides outside of Btiment 7 in the city's Pointe-Saint-Charles neighbourhood.

Autumn Godwin started the collective last year to make cultural practices like moose hide tanning accessible to urban Indigenous people in Montreal. (Dave St-Amant/CBC )

Godwin said the project, which is a part ofher ethnographic work for her master's degree research intocultural resurgence,has "been medicine" and has brought a sense of healing and kinship.

"My mom went to the residential schools and my aunt went to residential schools, so it's a way for me to connect with my grandmother and my ancestors who did this on a daily basis," she said.

Indigenous people from across the city have stopped by the space to contribute to the project.

"I grew up in my community but due to the legacies of colonization, I missed out on a lot of knowledge transfer," said Craig Commanda, a Concordia student from Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg, north of Ottawa.

Craig Commanda is a Concordia student from Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg, north of Ottawa. (Dave St-Amant/CBC)

Commanda has been volunteering with the project every day. It's the first time he's helped tan a moose hide.

"Being able to take part in this opportunity for me has been very important," he said.

"It really feels like fulfilling work. It just helps put back what I don't have and I can take this with me wherever I go in the world."

Godwin's aunt is a knowledge keeper, and is helping the collective virtually throughout each step of the process.

They've been making their own tools for scraping. Rice, who is from Kahnawake, south of Montreal,harvested her first moose during the fall and is making tools out of its four legs.

Brooke Rice harvested a moose last fall in Tiower:ton, a Kanienkeh:ka (Mohawk) territory about 120 kilometres north of Montreal. (Dave St-Amant/CBC)

"It's been a really long dream of mine to make moccasins from start to finish the hunt, processing the hide, making tools out of the animals, utilizing the whole animal and honouring and respecting it in that way," she said.

For her, the project is about reclaiming and learning cultural teachings, some things that weren't passed down.

"It's a part of our responsibility, our generation, to learn things and dig. Just keep digging for the knowledge, asking elders, and organizing in this way even if it is bringing different communities and nations together," said Rice.

"We're learning that knowledge so that we can pass it on to the future generations."

Brooke Rice is Kanienkeh:ka (Mohawk) from Kahnawake, south of Montreal. (Dave St-Amant/CBC)

Some of the hides will be gifted back to the communities thatdonated the hides, after the second stage of the tanning process is complete during the fall.

"I would like to see this go one every year so that people will have the opportunity to learn how to do this and connect Indigenous communities," said Godwin.