Vancouver Sun

‘IT EXPRESSES THE WAY I FEEL’

Photo project aims to build Indigenous self-esteem and pride, as well as break barriers

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

TORONTO Colourful graffiti covers a massive wall next to a rumbling subway station. But it’s something far more mundane that’s caught the eye of budding photograph­er Jeremiah McLaughlin-Assinewai.

The 16-year-old sits on the ground to get the right angle with his smartphone, training his lens on a tangle of green weeds bursting through the pavement.

The affable teen considers himself a city boy, but says his newfound interest in photograph­y is opening him up to seeing the world — and himself — in a new light.

“My whole life I never really wanted to pursue anything, it was always about my sports, hockey and everything, but this really changed (things) and now I have a fun hobby that I enjoy,” says McLaughlin-Assinewai, who lives in Sudbury, Ont.

“It expresses the way I feel and it’s just making memories. Every photo is a memory to me.”

Later, he darts into the brush at a nearby park to capture more images with eight other young photograph­ers, all Indigenous youth taking part in a photograph­y project centred around truth and reconcilia­tion.

The outing has been organized by the charitable organizati­on Jayu in partnershi­p with the Native Canadian Centre of Toronto. Over the course of two weeks in August, seasoned photograph­ers led classes in storytelli­ng and photograph­y, with Graeme Roy, director of news photograph­y for The Canadian Press, among those involved.

It all led up to a two-month photo exhibit now open in Toronto, with all proceeds going to the youth.

Stephanie Fox-Assinewai, a youth co-ordinator at the Native Canadian Centre, says it’s about more than just encouragin­g a new skill, but building self-esteem and pride in Indigenous culture.

Fox-Assinewai brought three of her sons to the project, including McLaughlin-Assinewai, and is happy to see interest in their heritage grow. The family is from the Wikwemikon­g First Nation on Manitoulin Island.

“They take the culture more seriously as they’re getting older. They used to dance when they were small but they kind of grew out of that,” she says.

“This program is giving them encouragem­ent, empowermen­t, to let them know that it’s OK to identify as First Nations and that we are working on breaking those barriers to have reconcilia­tion.”

Those are lessons that Cedar Landon says she’s seized on, noting that although she’s spent most of her life in Toronto and Vancouver, she calls the Georgian Bay community of Neyaashiin­igmiing home.

The 22-year-old says photograph­y has helped her connect with her heritage, and focus on taking the first steps toward a career as a chef.

“I’ve always been living in the city and moving place to place and photograph­y has really helped me just be in the moment, capturing what’s around me right then and there and the people who I’m with right then and there,” says Landon, who enrolled in a culinary program in Toronto that started in September.

“Drinking and drugs is a lot of my peers’ outlet in trying to fill a void, but photograph­y’s helped me stay on my right path and use my outlet in a positive way.”

Previous incarnatio­ns of Jayu’s iAm program focused on homeless youth and young newcomers from the Middle East, including refugees from Syria, Iraq and Saudi Arabia.

Jayu founder Gilad Cohen says he’s been impressed by how quickly this group of youth — aged 13 to 25 — responded to the program.

McLaughlin-Assinewai says it won’t be hard to apply the lessons he’s learned elsewhere in his life, especially a new-found drive to embrace his family’s culture, language and history.

“Being in the city, you kind of lose that, you lose that way of how you were raised. But this program’s really connected me back to that.” The Canadian Press

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 ??  ?? Jeremiah McLaughlin-Assinewai, who took this photo, says he will apply the lessons of photograph­y to reconnect with how he was raised.
Jeremiah McLaughlin-Assinewai, who took this photo, says he will apply the lessons of photograph­y to reconnect with how he was raised.
 ??  ?? A photo by Brandon Gilbert, who took part in a photo-mentoring program led by charity Jayu in partnershi­p with the Native Canadian Centre of Toronto.
A photo by Brandon Gilbert, who took part in a photo-mentoring program led by charity Jayu in partnershi­p with the Native Canadian Centre of Toronto.

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