'A great knowledge keeper': Mi'kmaw elder Murdena Marshall dies - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 04:02 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

'A great knowledge keeper': Mi'kmaw elder Murdena Marshall dies

Cape Breton Mi'kmaw elder and spiritual leader Murdena Marshall, 76, died Sunday night at her home in Eskasoni, N.S.

Marshall was devoted to promotion and preservation of Mikmaq culture, language, spirituality

Murdena Marshall, a Cape Breton Mi'kmaw elder, died on Sunday at age 76. (Unama'ki Institute of Natural Resources)

MurdenaMarshall, a Cape Breton Mi'kmaw elder and spiritual leader, has died.

Marshall, 76, diedSundaynight at her home inEskasoniFirst Nation.Her health had been failing for years.

Eskasoni Chief Leroy Denny said he is "overwhelmed" by the great loss to his community and nation.

"Murdena was a great knowledge keeper, a great teacher and taught so many and changed the minds of our own people, also to our allies and to the rest of Canadians, Nova Scotians," he said.

Marshall was devoted to promotion and preservation of Mi'kmaqculture, language, spirituality, educationand science.

A lasting impact at Cape Breton University

She was considered a traditional knowledge expert.

After Marshall completed a masterof education degree at Harvard University, she joined the faculty at Cape Breton University.

She played a key role in developing the university's Mi'kmaqstudies program and was instrumental in helping create CBU'sintegrative science program, whichenabled students to learn Indigenous and mainstream sciences.

Denny said he studied her work while he was in university to "better understand what our people went through."

She was married to elder Albert Marshall and was the mother of six children, and was also a grandmother and great-grandmother.