Indigenous youth group creates art tribute to Kamloops residential school victims
The smell of burning sweetgrass fills the air as passersby glance at the rocks along the shoreline of Saskatoon’s River Landing.
Some of the rocks are colourfully decorated with flowers, birds and other pictures, but 215 of the rocks are marked with numbers in stark, orange spray paint.
A woman was lighting sweetgrass for anyone who wanted to smudge at River Landing. (Lara Fominoff/650 CKOM).
The art installation commemorates the 215 Indigenous children found one week ago in an unmarked grave at the Kamloops Indian Residential School. It’s also a way for the Chokecherry Studios youth group to show solidarity with the Tk’emlúps te Secwe̓pemc First Nation.


