Flat Bay Band will soon have new cultural centre with $2.4M help from federal government
CBC
Construction is underway for Flat Bay Band-No'kmaq Village's new healing centre.
In an announcement on Friday, the facility officially got its name — which recognizes vital community member Mary Webb.
The centre will be called the Mary Webb Gathering Place and it's expected to open next summer.
Webb was a Mi'kmaq healer and midwife from Flay Bay who delivered more than 700 babies. She died in 1978 at the age of 97.
Flat Bay Band Chief Joanne Myles said Webb's role in the community was to take care of people.
"She did a very good job of that," Myles told CBC News.
The centre will be a cultural hub that will host events, serve as a wellness centre, have office space, a kitchen and a teaching space for the Mi'kmaq language, said Myles.
"I can't wait to be able to say freely that you can come here to participate in events that we were many years ago not able to do, but can do it now," she said.
It will also be a place where people, like her children and grandchildren, can learn skills that have almost been lost, she added.
Though Webb died decades ago, Myles said people in the area and in the province know Webb as a healer and a source of inspiration.
"We can actually teach them some of the language and teach them some of the culture things that Mary used to do," said Myles. "That would be fantastic."
Federal Minister of Rural Economic Development Gudie Hutchings was at the ceremony and announced $2.4 million had been donated to the project.
The funding comes from the federal government's cultural spaces in Indigenous communities program, she said.
It's a point of pride for Webb's descendants that the centre is being named after her. Many of her family members were in attendance. One of Webb's daughters cut the official ribbon to mark the beginning of the construction phase.