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Waterloo Chronicle, 8 Dec 2022, p. 4

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4 == 3 Continued from page 3 "If we have something very een, deep down in- hureday, December 8, 2022 | 2 2 2, ad aS 3 3 5 e ee icle Ene E&e because it's too § painful, then we need to go 2 back to the land, go back to 3 the ceremonies, get re- 3 aligned." An official sweat lodge conductor will place red- hot stones in the fire pit. “This represents the womb of Mot Earth the safest place you can go into. It's like our hospital— where wi t well,” Cachagee said. People need to find a way to feed their spirits these days ose ma much is bein: them, he added. pesetete is so fast and convenient, and COVID-19 hasn't helped. "They forget about themselves, they forget about what they need, and people out here, when we get them into the lodge, it shifts people," he said. "As soon as they walk into the forest, all of a sud- den, their shoulders come down. You start to hear and feel things differently, because this is our mother Ip , not far from where the sweat lodge will be located, is a long tent that will be used for educa- tional purposes. Cachagee and Reconciliation, are the result of about two years of talks with the re- gional municipality, which has provided the space at the Ken Seiling Waterloo It's time everyone start- ed coming together for con- versation, Cachagee said. Price Place Bill Jackson/Metroland Crow Shield Lodge founder Clarence Cachagee (left) with friend and supporter Bob Nally. "I believe that allyship is the way to Reconciliation," he said. C Shield Lodge doesn't aim to address the injustices of the past by calling people out, but [et aye) (ec=) Find what you're looking for, in the location you want, for the price you want to pay! Catch a Great Deal! -yle, populai Province, popular Cities or by the right price! Price. waterloochronicle.ca @autocatch.. rather by calling people in. "We never blame or shame, but what we talk about is the truth," Cacha- gee said. "Inregards to plants and trees not being here, in re- gards to animals not being here, it didn't take long at couple hundred ana je “At the same time, we have people — farmers, landowners — celebrating ‘WE NEVER BLAME OR SHAME, BUT WHAT WE TALK ABOUT IS THE TRUTH’ a couple hundred years that they've been on the same property. So that's what I really want to look at, isin the same amount of nous people? What they have gained? What have the Indigenous people lost? That's what really has tobe looked at here, in a good way. Not in a way to blame or r shame, but in a truthful Crow Shield's New Hamburg site, located on Pfenning's Organic Farm, has hosted workshops and events over the past couple of years. Visitors have in- cluded local businesses, post-secondary students. and political leaders. "We're going to start us- ing the two sites and we're See - page 5 Start your search on Home a

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