Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Shuswap Band memorializing land through plant identification book

Flowers are pressed and preserved inside the book. Kelly Sikkema / Unsplash

The Shuswap Band is adding a creative spin to remembering the land’s history by putting a Plant ID Book together.

Story continues below advertisement

The book asked for community involvement, allowing people to draw, paint, or even go so far as to dry out plants, leaves, and flowers and submit PDF copies of their creations.

The guidelines given to contributors were to, “create an image representing what plants mean the most to them/their relationship with the land,” says Olivia De Brabandere, the project coordinator and Shuswap’s Culture and Heritage Coordinator.

Though the book required about a year of planning, it was only recently that construction began, accepting community submissions from Aug. 16 to Sept. 16, in the form of a contest with cash prizes for first, second, and third place. No winners have been selected as of yet.

Eventually, the pages will all be compiled; however, the illustration contest is just Step 1 of the project.

Story continues below advertisement

“We’re also aiming to do site visits with community members where elders and knowledge keepers can share their knowledge on traditional plant uses, and community members can take pictures to be included in the book,” says De Brabandere.

The project was first started as an initiative with Parks Canada, which has been taking an increased interest in Indigenous peoples, running programs to emphasize and learn more about their traditional relationship to the land.

Their goal is to have the book completed next summer. De Brabandere says that ideally, “the book [will be] produced largely by and for the Shuswap community.
Story continues below advertisement

Once the book is published, members will have a copy to use as a guide when they gather or use plants.”

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article