Toronto Star

Quebec woman named Miss Indian World

- AZZURA LALANI STAFF REPORTER

When Raven Swamp, a 23-year-old Mohawk woman, travelled from her home of Kahnawake, Que., to Albuquerqu­e, N.M., for the Miss Indian World pageant, she wasn’t even expecting to compete.

Initially, she’d planned on going as a spectator, but changed her mind when she learned more about it.

“I was truly nervous,” she recalled. “I was intimidate­d by many of the other women because they were all title holders of their own communitie­s from different pageants and competitio­ns . . . And I personally never did anything like this.” But she entered, and won. “At the end of the (competitio­n), I felt my confidence grow in such a way that I didn’t expect,” she said. “I felt more like I was part of a sisterhood of these contestant­s.”

Swamp, a teacher at a Mohawk immersion school, was competing against women from across North America in one of the biggest pageants of its kind.

Unlike traditiona­l pageants, Miss Indian World is not focused on beauty.

Contestant­s compete in essays, interviews and public speaking on cultural knowledge, as well as by sharing a talent and traditiona­l dance.

Swamp will spend the next year representi­ng indigenous people as a cultural goodwill ambassador. She hopes to speak about language revitaliza­tion and indigenous food sovereignt­y.

“I’d like to promote native people to speak their language because it’s essential to who we are,” she said. “It connects us to our ancestors; it instils within us our world views.”

Swamp said she was grateful to everyone in her community and outside it for their support and for helping to sponsor her so she could attend the pageant.

 ??  ?? Raven Swamp, 23, competed last week in her first pageant, Miss Indian World, and won.
Raven Swamp, 23, competed last week in her first pageant, Miss Indian World, and won.

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