These students made their own regalia for the Yukon First Nations grad ceremony - Action News
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These students made their own regalia for the Yukon First Nations grad ceremony

Friday is a big milestone for many Indigenous high school students graduating in Whitehorse. Dressed in traditional regalia, they'll celebrate the end of one chapter of their livesand the beginning of another. And for some of those students, it's a chance to show off their own handiwork.

Over the last few months, they've been working hard to design and make vests, mocassins or shirts

Three photos of young people posing in Indigenous regalia.
Reese Jackson, Shane Clennett, and Leandra Blanchard were busy in recent months making regalia they will wear on Friday at the Yukon First Nations graduation ceremony in Whitehorse. (Calista Silverfox)

Friday is a big milestone for many Indigenous high school students graduating in Whitehorse. Dressed in traditional regalia, they'll celebrate the end of one chapter of their livesand the beginning of another.

And for one group of students there were many milestones that preceded Friday's graduation ceremony goalsthat were accomplished stitch by stitch.

The Northern Cultural Expressions Society's regalia program supports Indigenous students to design and create their own regalia for Yukon First Nations Graduation. The program has been running for 14 years and has been steadily growing.

This year, the society partnered with Porter Creek Secondary School to use the school'stextile room to help accommodate the eightstudents and fourstaff involved in the program. Calista Silverfox, the program supervisor, saysit was "a good fit."

An elder woman and a young man sit at a table working on a sewing project.
Resident elder Dorothy Bellrose with Shane Clennett, participating in the Northern Cultural Expressions Society's regalia program in Whitehorse. Clennett made himself a vest to wear at the First Nations graduation ceremony in Whitehorse on Friday. (Calista Silverfox)

Some Indigenous graduating students will have older regalia passed down to them from family members, or they might have new regalia made specifically for them by loved ones.

The students involved in the Northern Cultural Expressions Society program have opted to make their own pieces of regalia. Over the course of the last four and a half months, they've learned how to use sewing machines, work with leather, beads, and most importantly, how to fix any mistakes they might have made.

Each piece of regalia made by the students carries a personal story.

Shane Clennett's vest

Shane Clennett, graduating from Porter Creek Secondary, decided to make moccasins and a vest. The vest is adorned with the silhouettes of appliqu seals and huskies, to represent his Inuit heritage and family traditions, respectively.

He's been sewing since Grade 3, but was surprised by how fast he was able to design, sew and customize his regalia.

A person works at a sewing machine.
Clennett at work. He's been sewing since Grade 3. (Calista Silverfox)

"Halfway through February, I was finished making the regaliaand I was like,'this took a lot less time than I thought it would,'" he recalled.

The first time he tried the veston was in his bathroom at home. Looking into the mirror, he says he was shocked by the reflection staring back at him.

"I was like a completely different person. Like, I didn't look like myself, like my casual clothes Inormally wear. I look like a completely different person, connected to my Inuit history instead of just the city life."

Leisa Gattie-Thurmer, the instructor for the regalia program, says thatfeeling of astonishment is part of the process but it's different for everyone.

"The other day when one of the students tried on her complete garment, she got all watery and I kind of stopped. I said, 'Oh my gosh, are you crying?' And she's like,'I don't know why I'm so emotional right now,'" Gattie-Thurmer recalled.

"And I think it's because she saw herself, finally, the way that we have always been seeing her, which is beautiful."

For Clennett, any uncertainty he may havefelt before is now in the past. He says he thinks of his regalia like a type of armour. It protects him from any doubts he might have.

A young man holds up a leather vest.
Clennett shows off his vest. (Calista Silverfox)

"I feel, like, stronger with the regalia onit makes me feel more connected."

Yukon First Nations Grad is still months away, but students are busy preparing. For weeks, many have been cutting, sewing and beading regalia they'll wear at the ceremony in June. Northern Cultural Expressions Society is running a program to help make that happen. Three times a week, students can drop in after school and work on their designs. There's feedback and instructions from staff and an elder in residence: Dorothy Bellrose. CBC's Andrew Hynes will be spending the months leading up to the graduation highlighting some of the students in the program. This week, he spoke to Shane Clenett.

Leandra Blanchard's moccasins

Leandra Blanchard, who's graduating from the Individual Learning Centre,spent the first half of the program not making regalia for herself, but for her daughter. She called it "a mom thing."

The regalia program has been a way for Blanchardto learn about her Indigenous culture, which she didn't know about for more than half of her life. Shesays didn't know she was First Nations until she was 11. She was raised by her mom, who is non-Indigenous.

"Growing up, I always knew I looked different than, you know, my non-First Nations family. I always felt different inside too. When I found out I was First Nations,Ikind of like almost confirmed a lot of things for me," Blanchard recalled.

A young woman sits at a table working on a sewing project.
The regalia program has been a way for Leandra Blanchardto learn about her Indigenous culture. (Calista Silverfox)

Blanchard's mom wasn't able to pass down regalia from Leandra's Northern Tutchone culture, but Leandra now can. By makingmoccasins, she's ensuring that her daughter doesn't have to suffer from the "identity issues" that Blanchardsays she struggled with.

"I want to make it a goal to like, make her a pair of slippers every year. And then I was imagining like, just having a big Tupperware by the time she's 18, full of slippers," Blanchard said.

Blanchard did eventually get around to making her own regalia, along with her daughter's moccasins. On Friday, she'll be wearing a traditional skirt, shawl and belt that she made herself.

A young woman sits at a table holding up some beaded moccasin tops.
Blanchard made some moccasins for both herself and her daughter. (Calista Silverfox)
The regalia some high school students will be wearing at grad in June is slowly coming together. Pieces of fabric are taking the shapes that have been in the students minds for weeks now. This is thanks to the Northern Cultural Expressions Society, that has been guiding the students through the process of creating regalia. CBC's Andrew Hynes has been dropping by to spotlight some of the students. This week, he spoke with Leandra Blanchard.

Reese Jackson's ribbon shirt

Reese Jacksonhas been in the territory for five years, and he's graduating from F.H. Collins Secondary.His family moved here from the Edmonton area; Reese is Plains Cree.

A young man works at a sewing machine.
Reese Jackson works on his ribbon shirt. (Calista Silverfox)

"Their traditional clothing and stuff is a bit different from what you'd find up here or down on the East Coast," Jackson said. "[I]t's kind of ammunition bags, ribbon shirts not really leather vests and all that"

He says he decided to make his own regalia a ribbon shirt because his father never had regalia growing up, and so he and his siblings have not inherited any.

The regalia program sparked Jackson's curiosity about his Cree culture. He says he would go down rabbitholes researching images of traditional clothing online, or would have conversations with his dad about their culture. He says it was the first time he really looked into it.

A young man stands wearing a ribbon shirt.
Jackson shows off his ribbon shirt. The regalia program sparked Jackson's curiosity about his Cree culture. (Calista Silverfox)

He said he couldn't wait to see everyone in their regalia on graduation day, and to be able to celebrate all the details that went into them.

"I definitely think I'm going to feel a lot of pride that day, kind of wearing just a traditional fit for the first time, showing it off to everyone."

Indigenous high school seniors continue to chip away at their regalia. The Northern Cultural Expressions Society has been helping these students sew, cut, and bead their traditional clothing .CBC's Andrew Hynes has been spotlighting some of the workshop's students. This week he spoke to Reese Jackson.


We hear from indigenous high school students who designed their own regalia for graduations.