Fundraiser for tornado-damaged First Nation draws hundreds - Action News
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Manitoba

Fundraiser for tornado-damaged First Nation draws hundreds

Hundreds of people took part in a benefit concert Wednesday for a community ripped up by a tornado earlier this summer.

Benefit concert at Pyramid Cabaret raises thousands of dollars for Long Plain First Nation

A benefit concert for Long Plain First Nation drew hundreds to Winnipeg's Pyramid Cabaret on Wednesday. (Cliff Simpson/CBC)

Hundreds of people took part in a benefit concert Wednesday for a Manitoba community ripped up by a tornado earlier this summer.

Thousands of dollars were raised from ticket sales and silent auction bids on Wednesday at the The Pyramid Cabaret in Winnipeg, organizer Rhonda Headsaid. All the money raised will go toward helping rebuild homes at Long Plain First Nation, which was hit by a storm and a tornado on July 20.

Between 150 and 160 residentsof Long Plain First Nation are still homeless after thestorm destroyed several homes, lifting at least one off itsfoundation, flipped vehicles and uprooted trees.

"It's changed the landscape," said Long Plain Chief Dennis Meeches. At least 47 homes were damaged, he said in the days after the storm.
Nearly 50 families were forced out of their homes after the tornado hit Long Plain First Nation in July. (CBC)

Head, an Indigenous musician,said she followed Facebook posts by friends in Long Plain throughout thenight of the storm, and the next day she called Meeches to offer her help.

Multiplemusicians playedduring the all-night event, includingEagle and Hawk, Jerry Sereda, Staggering Haggards, Lone Wolf Theory, Mary Mahler, Ali Fontaine andRescued By Dragonflies.

RAW: Long Plain elder grateful for benefit concert

8 years ago
Duration 1:25
Peter Yellowquill says the fundraiser to help Long Plain rebuild after the tornado last month has lifted people's spirits.

Peter Yellowquill, an elder in Long Plain First Nation, said the concert meanta great deal to thecommunity.

"[It's] good for the heart, for our spirit, to know people do care," Yellowquill said.

Meeches called the fundraiser a "tremendous event."

"Just very, very happy people came out and supported us," he said.

While rebuilding has begun, there's still a lot of work left to do to return Long Plain to normal. The extra cash will help, Meeches said.

"We're working on the repairing of our homes now and some of our community buildings, so that's coming along okay," he said.
Long Plain Chief Dennis Meeches called the fundraiser tremendous. (Cliff Simpson/CBC)

He added he is working with Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada and the Red Cross to make sure children living in hotels with their families make the transition to school in the fall as smoothly as possible.

"There will be some challenges with that, living in hotels. That's difficult for them," he said.

One member of the Long Plain community notably absent from Wednesday's event was Lisa Meeches.

The Indigenous advocate and award-winning filmmaker suffered a stroke earlier this week and remains in hospital.

"We're hoping and praying that she'll have a full recovery," Meeches said.

with files from Erin Brohman