Medicine Hat News

Calls for Ribbon Skirt Day after Saskatchew­an Indigenous student wearing one shamed

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

REGINA

Chris Kulak says his 10-year-old daughter, Isabella, thinks it might be time for a new downstairs closet to hold all the ribbon skirts arriving from around the world.

The brightly patterned handmade skirts adorned with bands of ribbon are worn by Indigenous women during ceremonies and as an expression of cultural pride - something the Grade 5 student has touched off in others after a bad experience at her school.

Isabella, a member of the Cote First Nation in Saskatchew­an, wore her ribbon skirt to school last month when it held a formal day before Christmas break.

“We encouraged her to wear it. Probably changed her shirt three or four times. You could tell she was nervous about does it match? Does it look good?” Kulak said in a phone interview about his daughter.

“We thought she looked wonderful.”

Isabella attends school in Kamsack, a town about 270 kilometres east of Regina. The day she wore her traditiona­l skirt, she left the house smiling, said Kulak.

But when she came home, she had taken it off and she acted withdrawn.

The family learned a staff member had told Isabella her outfit didn’t match and the skirt wasn’t considered formal. The staffer compared what Isabella had on to another student wearing a store-bought dress, he said.

The Good Spirit School Division has apologized for what Isabella’s father said he believes was a racially motivated comment.

“This was a tremendous error,” said Quintin Robertson, the division’s education director, who added that the individual who made the comment accepts responsibi­lity.

“We needed to acknowledg­e the systemic racism that still does exist and the cultural ignorance that still does exist in our school division and in our province.”

Robertson said the division is discussing the matter with the Cote First Nation, which is part of a group suggesting that a Ribbon Skirt Day be held nationally every Jan. 4.

That was Isabella’s first day back to school and members of her family wearing ribbon skirts walked to her there, said

Kulak. He and others spoke, and his daughter was drummed into the building, with supporters there from other First Nations, plus division staff.

“It began the movement and that date should be honoured,” he said.

“That’s when everybody finally woke up and realized that they had to stand up and make some noise.”

Hundreds of photos of women proudly wearing their ribbon skirts with messages of encouragem­ent for Isabella have appeared on social media and a Facebook page set up to show support for her.

“Stand tall little one ... your aunties have your back!” Manitoba NDP member of the legislatur­e Nahanni Fontaine tweeted along with a photo of her and other women in their ribbon skirts.

 ?? CP HANDOUT COURTESY THE KULAK FAMILY ?? Ten-year-old Isabella Kulak is shown in this undated handout image in Kamsack, Sask., a town about 270 kilometres east of Regina.
CP HANDOUT COURTESY THE KULAK FAMILY Ten-year-old Isabella Kulak is shown in this undated handout image in Kamsack, Sask., a town about 270 kilometres east of Regina.

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