Tales of inspiration: Gord Downie, Standing Rock and the Indigenous Reads book club
The 12-year-old Anishinabe boy died of hunger and exposure after he escaped from a residential school in Kenora, Ont., and tried to find his way home. October marks 50 years since Wenjack died.
CBC Thunder Bay's Jody Porter joins us with more details about the project and the story that inspired it.
It is being called the largest protest by Indigenous Nations in recent history. For weeks, thousands of people from nearly 300 nations have been gathering in the southern part of North Dakota.
The pipeline passes right by the reservation and tribal members say if that pipeline breaks, it would be an environmental disaster.
CBC Aboriginal's Tim Fontaine recently traveled to Standing Rock. He will share stories of some of the people he met.
To kick off the Indigenous Reads book club, Katherena Vermette talks about her new novel, The Break.
The story takes us into the lives of the people who live in Winnipeg's North End. Stella, a young Métis mother, looks out her window one evening and spots someone in trouble on The Break — a barren field on an isolated strip of land outside her house.
This week's playlist:
Tragically Hip - Long Time Running
Indian City - Water Song
Iskwe - Will I See