
'Rematriation project' hopes to return vintage Indigenous wares to their home communities
CBC
Beautifully beaded cultural pieces will return to Indigenous homes and communities, all thanks to a Manitoba Métis beadwork artist who hopes her "rematriation" project helps families reclaim part of their lost history.
Lor Brand, who is Red River Métis, began beading about five years ago. It started as a way for her to connect with the culture she never grew up with — and evolved into an online business where she sells her artwork.
A few months ago, a non-Indigenous person reached out through Brand's online business, asking whether the artist wanted some beaded pieces the person owned but wasn't using. The idea of moccasins, mukluks, and mittens sitting dormant in one person's home sparked Brand's curiosity: what else might be out there?
"It really got me thinking about all of these items that are sitting in people's basements, or antique shops or auction houses," she said. "They're not in Indigenous homes or [not] being loved in general — and all the time and energy that goes into making these items deserves to be celebrated."
Brand said a friend helped her rename the project to "rematriation" rather than repatriation, because discovering her Métis culture with her mom and her aunties felt like truly coming home — which is what she hopes to do with the pieces she finds.
"Matriarchs are the people who run our families," Brand said. "They are the people who have passed down culture in my family, and I know I'm not alone in that, so rematriation felt much more appropriate than repatriation."
In order to rematriate more cultural items, Brand put out a call on social media for donations so that she could buy more pieces in order to give them to Indigenous communities.
She was able to find the place of origin of some items she purchased, including Swan Lake First Nation and Shamattawa First Nation in Manitoba.
To help with more purchases, and the repair and packaging costs, Brand then decided to hold a raffle, where she received donations of prize items like custom earrings made by other creators. She also received more donations, noting she specifically asked non-Indigenous folks for their support.
Her efforts raised more than $6,000.
One of the prize contributors is another Métis bead artist.
Jocelyn Lamothe, a member of the Métis Nation of Alberta who lives near Edmonton, says she was grateful to be a part of the project.
"It's a real honour and privilege to be able to have contributed, even in a really small way," Lamothe said. She donated a pair of custom-made earrings.
"The empowering, collective support … clearly the project hit the hearts of many people," she said. "There's lots of work to be done as Indigenous people, and for Indigenous people, in our country, but I think this example … showed how the ripple effect of one person can really spread."













