Hudson Bay, Sask., school brings kokum's teachings into reconciliation efforts
When Corinne Severight is asked to come to speak at the school in Hudson Bay, Sask., she always has a batch of fresh bannock with her.
Severight, who is from Cote First Nation, helps teach about residential schools, First Nations history and her Saulteaux language because she wants a better future for her grandchildren.
"I've been invited to the school quite often — I'm quite a fixture there, all of the kids call me grandma or kokum," she said.
Severight raises her two of her grandsons in the community about 300 kilometres east of Saskatoon and they attend the school.
She attended a federal Indian day school then public schools but her older siblings and parents went to residential school.
"I was raised in that mentality that came with it," she said.
Severight said the first time she told her story was when she was invited to speak at the school to a group of small children.
"I tried to talk and I couldn't, the emotions just came," she said.
Corinne Severight teaches younger children about Orange Shirt Day through colouring art at the Hudson Bay Community School. (Submitted by Corinne Severight.)
Now Severight helps with a program for the schools called A Loss of Language.
"It covers the whole story of the residential schools, what happened to the children and then we tried to get the people to imagine this happening in this town," she said.
Severight said the history she was taught in school was nothing like what she heard or saw growing up, but she couldn't say that to her teachers.
"I always tell them this — you can't have a reconciliation unless you know the whole story," said Severight.
Severight also goes out on the land with students to show them foraging, the impact of climate change and the importance of clean water.
"I want a better understanding between the people in our community," said Severight, adding that starts with helping children get along "because older people are already pretty much set in their ways."
Louise Gel, the principal of Hudson Bay Community School, said it was after they invited a residential school survivor to speak to the high school students in 2019 for Orange Shirt Day that they realized this needed to be more than just one day.
The pre-K to 12 school has about 350 students and Gel said there are 30 who identify as Métis and 31 who Identify as First Nations.
"I saw the work [Severight] was doing in our community to lead the Truth and Reconciliation movement and I could just see her value and that's what we needed, was somebody who could guide us in our work," said Gel.
Students from Hudson Bay Community School out doing land-based learning, where they take in teachings on foraging and plants. (Submitted by Marcie McArthur-Stevenson.)
Gel said students had a lot of questions for Severight about Indigenous knowledge and history and showed "a real level of politeness."
"I believe that when we're doing any of the First Nations teachings, it doesn't matter what your background is, if you're learning about respect, that's good for all kids," said Gel.
Cattail lessons
Saskatchewan's Ministry of Education said in a statement that there are both mandatory and elective curricula that includes opportunities for students to learn about residential schools, treaties and historical and contemporary contributions and issues impacting Canada's Indigenous people.
Madison McLeod, 14, is from Nelson House First Nation in Manitoba and is in Grade 9 at the Hudson Bay school.
She said she enjoys having Severight teach about residential schools and her First Nations culture. McLeod said she learned about residential schools before, as her dad went to one.
"It's cool we had to learn more about it and like understand it more," said McLeod.
McLeod's favourite things are the teepee teachings and going foraging, where she learned a lesson about cattails.
"We saw these cattails and we decided to eat them — I was coughing a lot because it kind of like just exploded," laughed McLeod.
McLeod learned she ate the wrong end and Severight taught her they were also used for medicine.
"I'm happy that people are learning about things that they wouldn't probably try and learn on their own," said McLeod.