Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women & Girls
MMIWG / 2LGBTQ
After years of planning, a commemoration and healing totem pole was raised on unceded Kitsumkalum territory on Friday September 4th, 2020. This will now be a sacred place for families to honour the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls along the Highway of Tears. We invite you to watch the video the raising of the totem pole and witness the Chiefs and matriarchs as they breathe life into the pole.

Our continued prayers for all the families and friends of MMIWG/2sLGBTQ.
We continue to Say Her Name.





Totem Pole Raising
Totem Pole Carver Mike Dangeli and sons, Michael Daniel & Nick Dangeli
Dance groups that were not able to be in attendance to perform at the Pole Raising
An Inland Tlingit Dance Group of Northern Canada
The Dakhká Khwáan Dancers, are a National Award winning Inland Tlingit dance group based out of Whitehorse, Yukon Territory. They focus on reclaiming their languages and traditional values through their inherent art form of singing, drumming, dancing, and storytelling. They strive to present their performance with the outmost respect to cultural protocol and with the highest form of artistic integrity. Since forming in the community of Carcross in 2007, they have grown from 6 to 30 members and with the addition of a children’s group, the Dakhká Khwaán Jrs. Members of the group originate from all of the Interior Tlingit Nations as well as other welcomed Nations from the Southern Yukon and elsewhere.
Dakhká Khwáan means Inland People/Nation, a name given to them by the late Dakla’weidi elder, Mrs. Eliza Bosely. They are members of the Dakla’weidi, Yan Yedi, Ganaxteidi, Deisheetaan, Ishkihittaan, Kookhittaan, Lukaax.ádi and Wolf Clans. The group is led by Marilyn Jensen, who has danced since she was 2 years old in the group her Late Mother started in the 1970s, The Skookum Jim/Keish Tlingit Dancers. In addition, they are advised and guided by their loving group Elders and through the knowledge passed on from their Ancestors. Members of the group are the decendents of renowned Yukon Indigenous elders: Peter and Agnes Johns, Angela Sidney, Dora Wedge, Johnny Johns, Patsy Henderson, Louise Dickson, Tommy Smarch, Antonia Jack and numerous others. They share a passion for expressing our identity through the arts and absolutely love to sing, drum, learn language, make regalia and dance.
Together, they have danced across Canada, the US, New Zealand, Taiwan, the Vancouver 2010 Olympics and the Pam Am Games in 2015. The group received the 2014 National Aboriginal Cultural-Tourism Award and have been nominated for a Indigenous Music Award for their first album called Reconstruct/Deconstruct which they produced in collaboration with DJ Dash.
Lepquinm Gumilgit Gagoadim (LGG) Ts’msyen
dancers are a multi-generational dance group that formed in 2005 in Anchorage, AK. Their youngest member was born in April 2020 and their eldest member is 92. With roots from Metlakatla, AK and British Columbia, Canada, LGG strives to be an outlet to the Anchorage community on Sm’algyax, language of the Ts’msyen. Their songs and dancers show heart, enthusiasm and humor that have been left in their care by ancestors that have walked into the forest before them. LGG has been led the past 15 years by Se’iga Liimii Da Ts’m Ksyen, Marcella Asicksik.
