管家婆免费开奖大全

First-year student takes big step as head female dancer at 管家婆免费开奖大全 powwow

Photo of Miyopin Cheechoo
Miyopin Cheechoo, a first-year student studying humanities, was the head female dancer at the 管家婆免费开奖大全 powwow organized by the Indigenous Studies Students' Union (photo by Nick Iwanyshyn)

Miyopin Cheechoo hasn't even been a 管家婆免费开奖大全 student for a year, and she was already asked to fill important shoes as head female dancer of the spring powwow.

The Cree student from Moosonee has been dancing at powwows in northern Ontario basically as long as she could walk, but this was her first in Canada's largest city.

鈥淚t's a big responsibility because you're representing not only your tribe but also your community, your family and Indigenous Peoples here,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t's a lot actually.鈥


Miyopin Cheechoo, the head female dancer and a New College student, poses for a portrait at the Goldring Centre for High Performance Sport (photo by Nick Iwanyshyn)

If she had any pre-dance jitters, they seemed to melt away as she took the floor at the Goldring Centre on Saturday for the grand entry. In red polka dot print and wearing and beadwork given to her by her aunt, she danced to the drumbeat alongside the head male dancer, Amos Key Jr., an assistant professor at the Centre for Indigenous Studies and the department of linguistics.

An age gap of almost five decades separated the head dancers, but they danced in harmony. Cheechoo says she looked to Key for guidance when she lost her place. Key, a member of Mohawk Nation from Six Nations of Grand River Territory, has no shortage of experience, spending much of his summers at powwows across southern Ontario.

On the sidelines, more than 100 people watched the event or left their seats to join in. The Indigenous Studies Students' Union put on the event for the third year in a row after resurrecting a campus tradition that was lost for 20 years. Earlier the same week, 

Ziigwen Mixemong, the membership co-ordinator at ISSU and the head female dancer last year, says she had planned to invite Cheechoo to be the next head dancer even before she was a 管家婆免费开奖大全 student. They met through the  a week-long campus visit for Indigenous students in Grades 9 through 12 hosted by the Faculty of Kinesiology & Physical Education. Mixemong, now a third-year student at University College and former on-site co-ordinator at Soar, says Cheechoo struck her as an 鈥渆mpowering young woman鈥 who could rise to the challenge of being head dancer.


Miyopin Cheechoo, centre, holds hands on the gym floor. Ziigwen Mixemong of the Indigenous Studies Students' Union is on the far left and Amos Key Jr, the head male dancer and an assistant professor of Indigenous studies, is on the far right (photo by Nick Iwanyshyn)

It's a role that comes with challenges, not least of which is to stay on your feet all day. The dancing took a toll on Mixemong, but the soreness only caught up afterwards, she recalls. 鈥淲hen you're dancing you don't really feel pain because it's just about the beauty of dancing,鈥 she says.

Maybe the biggest responsibility of the head dancer is to get people on their feet and keep the party going. 鈥淧owwows aren't a spectator sport,鈥 Mixemong says. 鈥滻 always say, if you haven't danced at a powwow, you haven't been to a powwow.鈥

In her earliest memories of powwow dancing, Cheechoo is wearing her purple butterfly print regalia and dancing her heart out. Others kids might run around and play, but her mom Christina used to say, 鈥淵ou're not here to run around, you're here to dance.鈥


Young and old danced across the gym floor at the 管家婆免费开奖大全 powwow over the weekend (photo by Nick Iwanyshyn)

Her father Don didn't want to miss seeing his daughter make her debut at a Toronto powwow. Earlier in the week, he and his truck made the six-hour train trip from Moose Factory to Cochrane, Ont., and then he drove another 10 hours to 管家婆免费开奖大全. He sat in the bleachers with his daughter's friends. 

It's not easy being so far away from his daughter, he says. 鈥淚 miss her all the time, every day,鈥 he tells 管家婆免费开奖大全 News, 鈥渁nd I worry about her all the time now that she's in the big city, but she's doing really well.鈥 

He was happy to see that 管家婆免费开奖大全 students organize a celebration of Indigenous languages, cultures and communities that attracts a large crowd each year. 鈥淔irst Nations have been underrepresented and marginalized,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t's good to have this at a major university and have that recognition that we are here, we exist.鈥

Miyopin agrees. 鈥淗aving an event like this at 管家婆免费开奖大全 is important for Indigenous representation, and also it provides a space for both Indigenous Peoples and settlers to interact in a way that's fun.鈥


The Indigenous Studies Students' Union organized the powwow, the third event of its kind at 管家婆免费开奖大全 after the tradition went dormant for 20 years (photo by Nick Iwanyshyn)

 

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