Anishinaabe kids share smiles, snowshoeing and culture with visiting Toronto hockey club
CBC
A group of Anishinaabe youth got the chance to show off their home to a youth hockey team visiting from Toronto earlier this month.
The youth in Whitefish River First Nation, about 70 kilometres west of Sudbury, relished the chance to show their new friends what life in Northern Ontario is like.
"Like some kids didn't know how to ice fish or snowshoe," said Brayson McGregor, 11.
The "home-and-home" exchange program between the two hockey clubs was about introducing young players to new experiences and making new friends. Organizers also hope it fosters understanding between the two teams so far apart by location.
The visit Feb. 3-5 was the second part of the exchange. In November, Whitefish River youth visited Toronto and Brayson said he still remembers the differences.
"They don't have as much bush as we do," he said.
One youth support worker said the kids from Whitefish River were so excited to see their Toronto friends again they tried remembering their secret handshakes.
The Scarborough Ice Raiders under-11 team travelled about 500 kilometres north to the First Nation. The community invited the visiting team to language lessons, community feasts and snowshoeing.
Both teams also took part in a hockey skills camp by the Three Nolans, a hockey program run by former NHL coach Ted Nolan and his two sons.
Ted Nolan said he was in a similar exchange program in the 1960s when his hockey team from Garden River First Nation visited Oakville, Ont..
"They were like us, didn't look down on us; [They] made us feel very comfortable," said Nolan.
His trip included a chance to watch the Maple Leafs practise at Maple Leaf Gardens. But Nolan's exchange didn't include players from Oakville heading to his home community. Nolan said he would have loved to show off his community, too.
The Whitefish River kids were given that chance and took their peers sliding and ice fishing and the community hosted a powwow for the two teams.
"It was fun going to the powwow social because I seen all the Scarboroughs and my friends doing that dance, and it was pretty cool," said Deacon Jacko, 10.