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Why P.E.I. chef Michael Smith is offering a culinary scholarship for Indigenous students
CBC
Renowned Prince Edward Island chef Michael Smith is taking a personal step toward reconciliation by offering a culinary scholarship to prospective Indigenous students on the Island.
Smith and his wife, Chastity Smith, are offering $75,000 over the next six years to the Holland College Foundation for Indigenous applicants who would like to study at the Culinary Institute of Canada in Charlottetown.
Students who earn the award will have their full tuition paid, as well as an internship at the couple's Inn at Bay Fortune in Souris, P.E.I.
"The idea for this award has been brewing over for several years," Smith told CBC News.
"I think taking the time to mark Reconciliation Day last year really got us thinking hard about what we could do within our business to better connect with the Indigenous community."
The onus of finding ways toward reconciliation is on non-Indigenous people, not Indigenous communities, he said.
"What slowed us down is realizing that it is simply not the job of the Indigenous community to come into our community and show us how to fix this," said Smith, adding it's important to honour relationships with Indigenous communities.
"Every one of us personally, and as businesses, need to figure out how to do this best."
Non-Indigenous chefs are "not the first cooks to walk this land," he said. "I think it's essential that we as a group of cooks, go to the elders of our First Nations community on an annual basis and ask permission to fish, farm, forage, and cook on this land."
Smith said he has had conversations with First Nation communities on P.E.I. about the scholarship. Last year, he spoke with Charlie Sark, an Indigenous chef and pizza store owner, about potential paths toward reconciliation.
"I'm really encouraged by it," Sark said about the new scholarship. "The next big thing in the culinary world could pass you by if you don't have system of support in place."
Sark, who studied at the Culinary Institute of Canada in 2015, agrees the scholarship is one of many steps needed for reconciliation.
"I think over the last few years at a societal level, we have to reckon with a lot of things in our historical past," Sark said in an interview. "An opportunity in any context to help Indigenous students in their education is a positive."
Sark said he is pleased non-Indigenous people are making an effort to tackle systemic issues of racism, and hopes scholarship will set an example for others.