At long last, the SVRSS Cultural Arts Centre is officially open for use, with the grand opening being celebrated on Saturday (Jan. 24).
Among those in attendance were Swan Valley School Division staff and students, alongside council and band members of Wuskwi Sipihk First Nation (WSFN) and Sapotaweyak Cree Nation (SCN), municipal leaders, and provincial government representatives.
Keynote speakers for the grand opening included Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew, Sport, Culture, Heritage and Tourism Minister Nellie Kennedy, WSFN Chief Elwood Zastre, and SCN Chief Nelson Genaille, as well as guest speaker Caroline Quill, an elder from SCN who played an important part in the design of the facility.
Other dignitaries who were in attendance were Manitoba Minister of Municipal and Northern Relations Glen Simard, Swan River MLA Rick Wowchuk, Lac du Bonnet MLA Wayne Ewasko, and Northwest Metis Council Minister Peter Fleming.
SVSD Board Chair Gary Wowchuk took the audience on a journey through the historical timeline of the project, beginning from the days of the Glacial Lake Agassiz and the evidence of Indigenous peoples living on the shores of Lake Agassiz in what would now be the Swan Valley, all the way through the days when Treaty 4 was signed and how the culture of the Indigenous people of Manitoba informed the design elements of the space, and made room for traditional ceremonial practices that were otherwise lacking on the campus of the SVRSS.
The day started by making use of the new facility for that ceremony, with Firekeepers doing their best to keep a fire going outside in the fire circle on a morning that may likely be the coldest morning of the year. A pipe ceremony was also performed inside the space behind the main formal stage, a space that incorporates significant symbolism of Indigenous culture.
In his message, Kinew acknowledged the bus crash that stunned the community of Sapotaweyak Cree Nation, the Swan Valley, and the entire province, which happened just over one week prior. Kinew had visited the three students that were sent to the Health Sciences Centre in Winnipeg.
“We’re definitely going to be praying for these communities and for the broader community in the region,” he said. “We should also be grateful for resilient young people all across Manitoba.
“Let’s keep providing a good education and investing in wonderful facilities like this, and let’s build up this Province of Manitoba even more into the place we’re so proud of today, so our children and grandchildren can inherit a place that they’re proud of in the future.”
Following the program, the Cultural Arts Centre was open to the general public so anyone could come and view the much anticipated end product.
The $16.6 million investment into the project brought a 4,200 square foot cultural arts centre featuring a large auditorium with a raised stage, a 2,100 square foot multi-purpose room and an outdoor teaching area located adjacent to the cultural arts centre.
The space was developed in consultation with Indigenous community leaders to incorporate Indigenous learning and cultural practices. The cultural arts centre will celebrate Indigenous histories, cultures, languages, traditional values and worldviews, and will feature programming that incorporates oral traditions and storytelling, land stewardship and resource management presentations, medicine wheel teachings and smudging. Programming will also include jigging, drumming, powwows and hand drum singing.
“As mayor, I’m proud to see this investment in Swan River Valley that strengthens both education and community,” said Town of Swan River Mayor Lance Jacobson in a follow-up press release. “These new spaces will not only enrich student learning but also provide opportunities for cultural expression and collaboration that benefit the entire region.”
Completed Cultural Arts Centre opens its doors to the public
Published in Swan Valley Star and Times Community
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Swan Valley Star and Times Community
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