Times Colonist

Indigenous Food Gathering brings cultures together

- ROCHELLE BAKER Local Journalism Initiative Rochelle Baker is a Local Journalism Initiative reporter with Canada’s National Observer. The Local Journalism Initiative is funded by the Government of Canada.

Joshua Charleson throws back the lid of an enormous cooler to reveal a cache of hundreds of freshly harvested silver herring that sparked “oohs” of excitement from a crowd leaning in to

ᒒƒ•‹‹ᦟƒƒ›ᬯ ƒǡ get a look.

Charleson, or then promptly put folks to work, teaching them how to gut and prep the fish for an Indigenous smokehouse.

The hands-on workshop was just one of many at the two-day Island Indigenous Food Gathering hosted recently by the Ahousaht Nation in Tseshaht Territory near Port Alberni.

The food summit, involving First Nations from Vancouver Island and the B.C. coast, was a cultural exchange and celebratio­n aimed at strengthen­ing food sovereignt­y and Indigenous communitie­s’ response to climate change and other emergency situations.

First, at Charleson’s session, he demonstrat­es the rapid-fire technique learned from his mother and sisters to process the fish, hooking out the gill plate before using his finger to clean out the fish.

“You just kind of swoop around and pull,” he said. “Then break this piece and then, stick your finger in and just run it right over the belly like that.”

Picking up a small knife, he deftly filets the fish from its backbone in two swipes, leaving the head and tail connected for

easy hanging off cedar sticks in the smokehouse.

People gather round the cutting table to try it out themselves with coaching from Charleson, who is from the Hesquiaht Nation and relationsh­ips director with the Coastal Restoratio­n Society.

Some folks were from other areas of the coast without access to herring, and others were young people eager to learn traditiona­l food skills.

Eight-year-old Kinsley from Victoria dove right in, not letting her momentary squeamishn­ess get in her way. Several teens also stepped up to learn or sharpen their fish processing skills.

The enthusiasm and engagement

young people show for learning Indigenous food skills is a driving motivation for passing on knowledge that he had the opportunit­y to learn, Charleson said. He’s also created how-to social media videos with his wife to teach people how to smoke fish.

“This is exactly what I want. They are my target audience and I think it’s really important to pass it down to the next generation­s,” he said.

Growing up in the remote community of Hot Springs Cove, Charleson learned where and when to harvest herring and other Indigenous foods from his father and uncles.

Sustainabi­lity is a core focus of Indigenous food harvesting and preserving food security, he said.

“It’s really important to harvest things in a respectful way.”

Pacific herring stocks on the west coast of Vancouver Island collapsed under the pressure of commercial fishing two decades ago and are only recently starting to bounce back after Nuu-chah-nulth nations fought to get industrial fishing closures in place, he said.

“It’s really nice to see the resource actually coming back,” he said.

“It’s really important for all the people that missed out over the last 15 or 20 years to relearn these skills.”

Before Charleson wrapped up the herring workshop by outlining the cold smoke method he uses, Ahousaht elder ciisma (Patti Frank) swooped up to the fish-cutting table to share how she learned to process herring as a child with her eight brothers.

It was a skill she put to use to feed her kids, ciisma said, noting she used the sharpened leg bone of a deer as a filet knife.

Her name means “gathering food for my family,” ciisma said.

“My brother once said if you offer a prayer of thanks before eating, you never go hungry. And you know, we never did.”

 ?? ROCHELLE BAKER, CANADA’S NATIONAL OBSERVER ?? Joshua Charleson shows Kinsley, 8, how to prepare herring for the smokehouse at the Island Indigenous Food Gathering.
ROCHELLE BAKER, CANADA’S NATIONAL OBSERVER Joshua Charleson shows Kinsley, 8, how to prepare herring for the smokehouse at the Island Indigenous Food Gathering.
 ?? ROCHELLE BAKER, CANADA’S NATIONAL OBSERVER ?? Ahousaht elder ciisma (Patti Frank) shows participan­ts her method of gutting a herring.
ROCHELLE BAKER, CANADA’S NATIONAL OBSERVER Ahousaht elder ciisma (Patti Frank) shows participan­ts her method of gutting a herring.

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