BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//132.216.98.100//NONSGML kigkonsult.se iCalcreator 2.20.4// BEGIN:VEVENT UID:20260429T183012EDT-6770jZDhLj@132.216.98.100 DTSTAMP:20260429T223012Z DESCRIPTION:Ofrenda de Día de Muertos\n\nTo honour the lives of the childre n who did not return from Canada’s Indian residential schools\n\nNovember 2nd\, 2017\, 2-4 pm\n\nEntrance lobby of the Faculty of Education\, 3700 M cTavish Street - 1st Floor\, ɬÀï·¬\n\n* Join the new ɬÀï·¬ Ar t Hive Initiative on Monday\, Oct. 30\, from 12 to 2 pm\, to make art and traditional elements for the altar *\n\n** There will also be a special sc reening session of the Weekly Indigenous Film Series related to our Altar for the Day of the Dead event\, on Thursday\, November 2nd from 4 - 6 pm\, in room EDUC 216 **\n\n\n\nThis altar (ofrenda) commemorates the lives of thousands of children who were taken from their homes and sent to Indian Residential schools and did not return home. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission has identified 3\,200 deaths in the TRC’s Register of Confirmed Deaths\, while other sources estimate that 6\,000 children died in the In dian Residential schools. In over one-third of these deaths the schools di d not record the children’s names\, in one quarter of the deaths the child ’s gender was not recorded\, and in over half the cases the cause of death was not recorded. Children at Residential schools died at a far higher ra te than school-aged children in the general population.\n\nThese findings are in keeping with statements that former students and their parents gave to the Commission. They spoke of children who went to school and never re turned. The tragedy of the loss of children was compounded by the fact tha t burial places were distant or even unknown. Many Indigenous people have unanswered questions about what happened to their children or relatives wh ile they were attending residential school.\n\nThe Day of the Dead (Día de Muertos) is a festive and sacred time in Mexico and some other Latin Amer ican countries. This day\, the souls of the dead are welcomed back\, joine d with the living\, becoming a celebration of life. Significant objects ar e placed as gifts to the visiting souls in ofrendas: the altars for the ch ildren are set on the eve of October 31st with sweets\, fruits and white f lowers\, while the eve of November 1st is the time to honour the adults. A lthough many elements of Catholicism were incorporated into the ofrenda af ter the Spanish conquest\, it is considered mostly an Indigenous tradition .\n\nAs women artists we want to offer this ofrenda to the Indigenous chil dren who never returned home – for whatever reason. Our hope is to promote awareness on this issue\, creating a space for dialogue and bringing the community of ɬÀï·¬ together.\n\nWith this ofrenda installed at the Facult y of Education\, we want to acknowledge the traditional territory of the K anien’kehá:ka people where we stand today\, celebrating our ancestors and sharing diverse Indigenous culture with the community of ɬÀï·¬.\n\nProjec t by Maria Ezcurra\, Haidee Lefebvre and Lori Beavis\, supported by the P. Lantz Initiative for Excellence in Education and the Arts\, Institute for Human Development and Well-being (IHDW) and the ɬÀï·¬ Art Hive Initiativ e (MAHI).\n\nView photos from the Faculty of Education Art Initiatives and the Altar for the Day of the Dead\n DTSTART:20171102T180000Z DTEND:20171102T200000Z SUMMARY:Altar for the Day of the Dead URL:/ihdw/channels/event/altar-day-dead-282306 END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR