'Feels like home': Mohawk and Cree collaborate on teepee project - Action News
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'Feels like home': Mohawk and Cree collaborate on teepee project

The Mohawk-Cree Teepee project will allow Indigenous patients, students and detainees a more culturally safe place to gather, cook traditional food and do traditional activities near Montreal.

A place for Cree patients and others to gather, cook traditional food in Kahnawake

Elizabeth R. Brien, left, Elias Brien, centre, and Maggie Brien, right, at the dedication of the Mohawk-Cree Teepee project in Kahnawake, Que. last Friday. The joint project will give Cree patients and other Indigenous patients, students and those involved with the justice system a culturally safe place to gather, cook traditional food and share traditional activities near Montreal. (Susan Bell/ CBC North)

For Maggie Brien and her mom Elizabeth, it is very clear how much Maggie's sonElias loves spending time at a new cultural space in Kahnawake, Que., near Montreal.

And while he can't share his excitement with words, Elias finds other ways.

"He really likes coming here. He knows now where we are heading when we get off the highway, he immediately gets excited," said Maggie, who is from the northern QuebecCree community of Mistissini.

"Sometimes you can hear him laughing," said Elizabeth. "He knows that he's going to see people here. He knows that he's going to see other kids too."

A special feast and dedication was held Friday in Kahnawake for a unique, cross-cultural project called the Mohawk-Cree Teepee. Two permanent, hard-walled teepees have been built on Mohawk land near Montreal.

Two permanent teepees have been built on the land of the Patton family in Kahnawake, Que. (Susan Bell/ CBC North)

They will allow Cree patients like Eliasand others including Mohawk and Indigenous patients, students, people involved with the justice system and those healing from addictions a more culturally safe place to gather, cook traditional food and do traditional activities near Montreal.

The project is being jointly funded by the Cree communities of Mistissini and Waswanipi, as well as the Kahnawake Shakotiia'takehnhas Community Services (KSCS). The teepees are located on the land of the Patton family in Kahnawake, Que.

Teepee dedications

One of the teepees is dedicated to young Elias Brien. The other is dedicated to Mohawk matriarchs Beverley and Josephine Patton.

Permanent Mohawk-Cree teepees more accessible

2 years ago
Duration 0:31
Elizabeth R. Brien says the project is important for her grandson, Elias.

For Maggie, who has been in the south with Elias for close to 15 years, having a bush camp to go to and be immersed in Cree culture near Montreal means a lot.

"It feels like home like home away from home. I really like coming here. I forget that I'm still in the city when I'm here," said Maggie.

Bush camp began in 2020

This urban bush camp project began thanks to the efforts of Cree husband and wife Philip Matoush and Sharon Pepabano, who have lived and worked in Montreal for more than 20 years.

Philip works as a driver for Cree Patient Services with the Cree health board, driving Cree patients to and from medical appointments in the Montreal area.

In July of 2020, the couple and a group of volunteers, started organizing traditional cookouts with Cree patients at Camping D'aoust, a privately-run park in Hudson, about a 50-minute drive west of Montreal.

It was immediately a hit, said Matoush.

"Some [patients] can't go home for months so it feels like there's a second home for them. They feel happy the smell of the smoke It feels just like healing to them, especially eating the wild meat," said Matoush.

Mohawk and Cree come together for teepee project in Kahnawake

2 years ago
Duration 0:43
Sharon Pepabano and Philip Matoush say teepees bring an important bit of home to Cree patients in Montreal. "It's like a second home for them," says Matoush.

But there were limitations with the original setup. Getting Cree patients all the way out to Hudson was a challenge. Getting wheelchairs into the teepee, with its spruce-bough covered floor was almost impossible. The air inside the teepee was often too smokey for patients with health issues, like Elias and others.

So when Mohawk friend Bobby Patton came to the Hudson teepee for a cook-out and offered a permanent home for a traditional camp in Kahnawake, Matoush and his wife immediately said yes.

"It's Cree and Mohawk working together as one, helping each other. That's what I see," said Matoush.

ForPatton, the Mohawk-Cree teepee project will be a place to offer much-needed healing services for Indigenous peoples struggling with substance abuse and justice issues so often caused by residential school and colonial trauma.

Bobby Patton, left, in one of the permanent teepees. One of the permanent teepees is dedicated to his mother and grandmother, Beverley and Josephine Patton. (Susan Bell/ CBC North)

It will also be a place where Indigenous peoples needing to carry out community hours can do so, while connecting to their culture and healing.

"We want to bring them here [so] they can learn the cultural ways and bring them back to who they are," said Patton, adding they want Cree and Mohawks to share their traditional knowledge such as hide cleaning, smoking and snowshoe making.

"That's why we call it bringing two nations together," said Patton.

For Elias's grandmother Elizabeth these new permanent teepees will allow her grandson to more fully participate in traditional Cree activities and social gatherings.

Both the Cree and Mohawk teepee in Kahnawake are wheelchair accessible and built in a way to keep them free of smoke.

"This project means a lot to us, because now we can take Elias in anytime," said Elizabeth.

"He can come in here and join other people instead of sitting in a car."

Officials from the Cree health board, Kahnawake and Mistissini gathered Friday to dedicated the Mohawk-Cree Teepee project in Kahnawake, Que. with a ribbon cutting and a feast. (Susan Bell/ CBC North)