The First Nations University of Canada (FNUniv) held its annual smudge walk in Regina on Friday in honour of residential school survivors, and children who did not make it home.
Jackie Ottmann, President of FNUniv, was one of the hundreds of people who took part in the walk.
Ottmann said that it is important to walk in unity for a very important cause.
“It’s a memorial of what happened in residential schools and for over 100 years, we had children that were taken from their home and forced into residential schooling, and many of them didn’t come home.”
The walk also honours those who did make it home and have to live with the trauma.
A smudging walk is taking place at the First Nations University of Canada in Regina.
Hundreds of people are taking place ahead of National Truth and Reconciliation Day @CJMENews @CKOMNews pic.twitter.com/ttombVQPzw
— Abby Zieverink (@ZieverinkAbby) September 27, 2024
“It’s because of the survivors that we have the Truth and Reconciliation Calls to Action, and so they have left us with an amazing legacy,” Ottmann said.
The walk is part of the university’s ongoing commitment to reconciliation and healing and is held in recognition of National Day for Truth and Reconciliation (Orange Shirt Day) on Sept. 30.