A traditional Coast Salish pit cook demonstration is taking place at 玛雅视频app鈥檚 Interurban Campus. The pit cook demonstrates and promotes the traditional use of the camas, and keeps the teachings, and traditional ways alive.
玛雅视频app
Faculty and staff from Ey膿蕯 Sq葍鈥檒ewen will host the Pit Cook event at the college鈥檚 Interurban campus on Thursday, Nov. 2.
The annual event shows how the Coast Salish Nations in the region use a fire-pit to cook camas bulbs, the root of a bright blue star-like flower that grows in Garry Oak meadows. The bulbs are cooked between layers of other locally harvested plants such as sword fern, salal or skunk cabbage.
The event includes teachings from territory Elder JB Williams of the Tsawout听Nation and instructor Nicole Kilburn from the college鈥檚 Anthropology department.
鈥淭he college hosts a number of events throughout the year to enhance and celebrate Indigenous student success and encourage community development,鈥 explains Nancy Potvin Indigenous Special Events Coordinator for Ey膿蕯 Sq葍鈥檒ewen. 鈥淚t is an honour to be able to host a pit cook to demonstrate how Nations of the region have used a fire-pit for many generations to cook the camas bulb.鈥
Approximate times and activities:
- 10 am: start of the pit cook followed by a traditional medicine workshop and storytelling.
- 1:00 pm to 1:30 pm: open pit cook and share the feast.
Honouring Indigenous Resurgence is one of the priorities in 玛雅视频app鈥檚 2023-2028 Strategic Plan. Under this priority, the college is advancing work to honour Indigenization, decolonization, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada鈥檚 Calls to Action, the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and B.C.鈥檚 Declaration Act.
听
Contact information
Rodney Porter
玛雅视频app