Students building Mi'kmaw wigwam at Liverpool school - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Students building Mi'kmaw wigwam at Liverpool school

Students in Liverpool, N.S., are spending the week building a Mi'kmaw wigwam for their school's outdoor classroom.

Master craftsman Todd Labrador is showing students how to harvest roots

Grade 5 student Jadis Leopold. Kids spent Tuesday morning digging for spruce roots that will be used to hold together the wigwam. (Elizabeth McMillan/CBC)

Kids at aLiverpool, N.S., elementary school had an unconventional assignment this week: dig up spruce roots.

Grades 4 and 5 students at Dr. John C. Wickwire Academy spent Tuesday morning in a woodlot, many getting up to their elbows in soil and moss.

"I love learning about Mi'kmaw culture and I finally get to get dirty without getting in trouble," said Julia Malcolm.

Malcolm and her classmates were working alongside Mi'kmaw craftsman Todd Labrador, gathering materials for a wigwam they're helping build this week on their school grounds.

After boiling and trimming the roots, Labrador uses them as twine to hold pieces of birchbark and wood together. They'll form the seams of the wigwam.

Kids from primary to Grade 5 will be helping out with different parts of the wigwam project. (Elizabeth McMillan/CBC)

The school partnered with Labrador after receiving a $5,000 grant from the Nova Scotia Department of Education and Early Childhood Development.

The master builder, who is known for his handmade birchbark canoes and from the nearby Acadia First Nation, said the wigwam project is a chance to share Mi'kmaw traditions with students and let them relish the natural world.

"It's really important for kids today to get back outside. [There's] so much attention on staying inside and playing video games, but outside you'll get a better connection," said Labrador as students bounded out of the woods with loops of root bound around their arms.

Students Kassidy Lowe and Flora McDonald. (Elizabeth McMillan/CBC)

Flora MacDonald, who is Mi'kmaq, said her grandfather showed her how to dig roots when she was younger and she was pleased to see her classmates give it a try.

"I think it's important so we all know about the Mi'kmaw culture. And so we can all learn about it and that the Mi'kmaw culture goes on and on and never stops so we don't forget about it," the Grade 5 student said.

Her classmateKassidy Lowe said she "love[s] supporting Mi'kmaw culture."

"If you think about it, the First Nations were here before us. I think it's cool to learn about them," she said.

An Indigenous woman smiles standing next to an Indigenous man holding roots in a forest.
Melissa Labrador and her father, Todd Labrador, in a woodlot outside Liverpool, N.S. (Elizabeth McMillan/CBC)

When completed, the wigwam will be permanently installed in an area next to the elementary school's soccer field in an area that's already used as an outdoor classroom.

Principal Stacey Thorburn said the field trip capturedthe children's attention and imagination in away that indoor lessons can't.

Students helped carry the birch poles from the school to the clearing where the group is building the wigwam. (Submitted by Melissa Labrador)

"Every single kid was doing something, they were being part of the project. If you were to go into a classroom, you may not see the interest you would see here. You would never know the abilities of kids or anything. Having the outdoors, it'samazing," said Thorburn.

Labrador, who worked alongside his daughter and her two children, said being in the woods is good for everyone.

"Today you don't see any barriers, everybody's happy," he said.It doesn't matter what anyone's background is, they're all having a great time digging roots."

The wigwam is being built on school grounds and when complete, teachers will be able to hold lessons in it. (Submitted by Melissa Labrador)