
'Our Grandmothers' artifact collection acquired for future Métis centre at newly reopened Portage and Main
The Manitoba Métis Federation unveiled a newly acquired 142-piece collection, titled the "Our Grandmothers Collection," on Wednesday at the future Red River Métis National Heritage Centre, housed at the former Bank of Montreal building at the southeast corner of Portage and Main.
"This is truly a reflection of the MMF's commitment to bring our history home," said Anita Campbell, the MMF's minister of finance, human resources and information technology at a news conference.
"The reopening of Portage and Main ties in very well to the opening of our heritage centre, where we'll be inviting our citizens, the public, researchers, artists, schoolchildren and visitors from all around the world to come and learn about our people, our history and our culture."
The unveiling coincides with MMF's celebration of the reopening of Portage Avenue and Main Street to foot traffic, which happened Friday after nearly 46 years.
The federation completed a stewardship transfer of the Our Grandmothers Collection this year with Gregory Scofield, an author, University of Victoria professor and Red River Métis beadwork artist who is the curator of the collection. He spent more than two decades hunting down and preserving the artifacts.
For the collection, "coming home means the grandmothers, first and foremost, are not lost or circulating out in the world far away from us, their little ancestors," said Scofield, author of Our Grandmother's Hands: Repatriating Métis Material Art.
" It also means they're not sitting in boxes or storage bins. It means they are not being used as currency in galleries or auction houses with prices attached to their worth.... It means they are no longer forgotten."
The collection includes dozens of items, including ornate bead-, silk- and quillwork, along with embroidery and weaving, art, clothing, horse blankets and fire bags — some dating back to 1830, said Campbell.
The works, most made by Métis women, join a growing collection amassed by the federation to be unveiled in early 2027, when the Red River National Heritage Centre is slated to open.
"The collection represents our homeland geographically and demonstrates our migration, fashion, mobility and identity as a people," said Campbell, who is also spokesperson for the Infinity Women Secretariat, a non-profit affiliated with the MMF that advocates for Métis women.
"This is more than a collection. It is an artistic and culturally relevant legacy."
The broader collection includes poems by Louis Riel, the Métis leader recognized as Manitoba's honorary first premier in 2023 after legislation passed by the NDP government.
'Bold, transformational' investment in downtown: mayor
The federation bought the former Bank of Montreal building at Portage and Main in 2020, with plans to transform it into the centre. Last year, it acquired two nearby buildings — 333 Main St. and 191 Pioneer Ave. — along with a surface parking lot.
Provincial Housing, Homelessness and Addictions Minister Bernadette Smith, who is a member of the Métis Nation, acknowledged the significance of the location as a hub for trade, diplomacy and kinship.
"It's also a place where the Métis Nation was born and where its spirit continues to thrive," said the Point Douglas MLA.
"Today we mark more than just a reopening of a street corner — we celebrate the powerful act of reconnection between the Red River Métis and the land that had always been called home."
Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham acknowledged the MMF's efforts to help revitalize the iconic street corner, which reopened to street-level pedestrian crossing on Friday, after decades of allowing only underground crossing at Portage and Main.
While the idea of reopening was voted down in a 2018 plebiscite, Gillingham led a motion to do that, without public consultation, in 2024, on the heels of a report that pegged cost of repairs to the barricaded-intersection and underground concourse in the range of $73 million.
That same report suggested it would cost much less to reopen Portage and Main.
"The MMF's investment in this intersection and in the city's core … is bold, transformational and deeply appreciated," Gillingham said.
"There's so much work that we have yet to do, but it's part of the progress we're all making … to build a downtown for everyone."
MMF President David Chartrand said on top of acquiring roughly 600,000 square feet of space downtown in recent years, the federation has also moved about 600 of its employees into its offices in Winnipeg's core, in part to help downtown recover from a lingering economic downturn driven by the pandemic.
"I can't wait to see the finishing product of the beautification of downtown," said Chartrand.
"It's not yet finished…. The beautification that we [have] the privilege of seeing, where the mayor and city is going, is going to make you feel a great sigh of relief that Portage and Main is alive."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Globe and Mail
an hour ago
- Globe and Mail
Wanawī is Cree for ‘go outside' – it's a teaching we should learn alongside our kids
Stop me if you've heard this one: You walk into the living room and find your child with their eyes superglued to a screen. Maybe they're scrolling through an ubiquitous social-media app (presently, it seems to be Snapchat, who knows what will be next), or playing a game that never ends (they're on level 1,372), or doing any number of things that, as a parent, you don't quite understand. You tell your child they should go outside for some fresh air. Without looking up from their screen, they reply in a pained tone: 'But there's nothing to do outside.' I've experienced this aggravating situation with my kids. Whenever I take their devices away and they begrudgingly go outside, they make sure I know how displeased they are with the torturous thing I'm making them do. How times have changed. At the age of 48, I can tell you that time moves forward unrelentingly. When I was in university, cellphones were not a thing. I look further back, to when I was growing up in Winnipeg in the eighties. It was an underrated decade of music; people wore their hair big, and their personalities seemed even bigger. Somewhere in a photo album, there is a picture of me in pink neon shorts and a yellow neon hat, sporting a similarly neon tank top and thick-rimmed sunglasses. My skin tone was dark brown. I mean, my skin tone is always brown, but in the summer, my skin colour was swarthy. Why? I was outside all the time. Sure, we had a game system, and a Commodore 64, which I stuck a floppy disk into to play Lode Runner with a joystick. But I spent very little time in front of a screen, the exception being Saturday morning cartoons. If you had given me a choice between going outside or playing Nintendo, it would've taken me less than five seconds to throw my shoes on and run to Brock Fleet Park. In the summer, I played hide and seek around the bushes there. In the winter, my brother and I spent hours playing shinny on a rink that has since closed, from the early afternoon until the floodlights shut off late at night. The rink attendant, Bob, made us hot chocolate, and our toes were frostbitten, but we didn't care. I think further back, to Dad's childhood. He grew up on a trapline called Black Water, about 32 kilometres outside of Kinosao Sipi (Norway House Cree Nation). He played on the land, learned on the land, worked on the land and lived with family on the land. He told me that it was the most beautiful way to grow up. It taught him to respect Mother Earth and cherish the lessons he'd been gifted. Opinion: My teenaged son still doesn't have a smartphone. Here's why He was healthy, too. From the time he woke up to when he fell asleep on a bed of spruce boughs (which he often gathered for the family), all he did was physical activity. In the fresh air. Under the generous warmth of the sun. Through the forest, there was a lake he used to swim in, skip rocks across and run around. When he was older, he would stare out the window from his study and remember those days, recalling the times he'd spent as a child on the land and what he'd learned. His favourite place to be, in his old age, was by the water. What does all this give us? I'm not advocating for the elimination of all screens. Devices have their uses, but there is a dependence on them, even an addiction for some, and that's not healthy. My father often spoke of balance – that's what we should be striving for. A little bit of screen time and a lot of outdoors time would do any child good. I've witnessed this firsthand. One of my kids went through a period where they were doing their best to espouse the stereotypical teenager attitude – aloof, sarcastic, eyes rolling, selective hearing. One day, while I was away for work, I got a text from my partner saying our teen hadn't had a 'blow up' all week. Why? They'd hardly been on their screen because it had been taken away. In place of their tablet, they'd been taking the dogs for walks. It changed their entire demeanour. They were present and they were pleasant. Spending time outside supports a child's mental, physical and emotional development. Interacting with the physical world stimulates curiosity and creativity; that's why land-based education is such an effective tool. Active play builds muscle, improves co-ordination and helps to maintain a healthy body. And fresh air and sunlight boost mood, vitamin D levels and contribute to better sleep. In an increasingly screen-centred society, regular outdoors time can help kids connect more deeply to nature and themselves. My father's first language was Swampy Cree. I've been working to learn the language, word by word. In one of the picture books I've authored, On the Trapline, there is a Cree word on every page. One of them is wanawī, which in English means 'go outside.' It's not an order, it's a teaching. It's one that frankly all of us should learn and practise, not just our kids. Because what we do, more than what we say, influences our children. So for them, and for you, I say: wanawī! David A. Robertson is a two-time Governor-General's Literary Award winner and has won the TD Canadian Children's Literature Award and the Writers' Union of Canada Freedom to Read Award. He is a member of Norway House Cree Nation and lives in Winnipeg with his wife and five children.


CBC
2 hours ago
- CBC
Ancient Saskatchewan archaeological site falls victim to illegal scavenging
Social Sharing A crucial archaeological site in Saskatchewan has become a target for illegal scavenging. sowanânihk, which means "a place to cross" in Cree, is located near Prince Albert and is estimated to be around 11,000 years old. It holds a wealth of evidence of Indigenous settlements that likely existed there. A local ambassador for the site says national news coverage and general popularity has led to an increase in damage from human interference to the site, including the illegal practice of pot hunting. "There's been potters, or people actually digging into the site unauthorized," said Dave Rondeau, local historian and the Crutwell consultation co-ordinator for Métis Local 66. "Without any respect for what this site is in and of itself." The importance of the site The sowanânihk site was likely used as a long-term settlement by Indigenous people, according to archaeologists. "You know, this is a window for us, an opportunity and a window for us to peer back thousands of years and write the story right from the onset of habitation for our territory," Rondeau said. Glenn Stewart, an associate professor in the department of anthropology at the University of Saskatchewan, describes the site as "one of the oldest in Saskatchewan, especially further north." "Preserving it for future generations is not only something we want to do as archaeologists, but it's also a fundamental importance to Sturgeon Lake First Nation and other Indigenous groups in the area," Stewart said. As the site gets more attention, Rondeau said people should be helping to preserve it, not damaging it in search of relics. "As it becomes better known, there is always the risk that you might have more unscrupulous individuals going out and pot hunting." Pot hunting involves illegally digging up artifacts to keep or sell, often without any understanding of the archaeological value they hold. Rondeau said he's seen evidence of it at the site — shovel markings and damage along the riverbank. "You can corrupt the study," Rondeau said. "What good is removing these, you know, lithic material or points or rock or bones if it's just going to go into a box underneath your bed?" Archaeologists like Stewart are trained to carefully excavate and record findings so that the relationship between the artifacts can be understood in the larger context of the site. "Archaeology in itself is a destructive process," Stewart said. "We spend a lot of time training our students on how to properly excavate a site so that all of that information remains intact." A plan for preservation A University of Saskatchewan team is working on a preservation plan for the site. Using small cores extracted from the area, the team will try to get a definitive answer on how far the site extends. "We want to be able to bring in youth, especially Indigenous youth, so they can learn about their own history," Stewart said. "The Canadian government has done a very good job of erasing that history, so we want to give back now." These tests will also help determine how to preserve the site for future generations. Rondeau said that while archaeological research is essential, it is just as important that the local communities, especially Indigenous people, are involved in the conversation. "Whatever we do in terms of research will be governed by what Sturgeon Lake and other Indigenous groups want to see happen at the site," Stewart said. By working together, archaeologists and Indigenous communities hope to preserve a connection with the ancestors and the ancient history of the land. "Everybody owns this site. We are all treaty people, but we need some level of, for lack of a better term, stewardship or the ability to enforce, to stop the contamination of and the destruction of this site," Rondeau said.


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
Morning Update: Father drowns, child rescued from water
Ottawa Watch CTV Morning Live Hosts Rosey Edeh & Will Aiello have your Thursday morning headlines.