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10242024 October 24 2024

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CHAPLEAU EXPRESS

Local News Weekly

705 - 864 - 2785

Free to Every Household

Vol. 29, Issue 8, October 24, 2024

705 - 864 - 0911

Canoe builder turns Bata Library into temporary workshop Alex Labelle is building a birchbark canoe in the atrium of Trent University’s Bata Library this fall By Eddy Sweeney, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter anoe builder Alex Labelle has turned Trent University’s Bata Library into a temporary workshop this fall. He’s set up in the library’s atrium, where he’s building a birchbark canoe for use by the Trent community. You can learn more about the initiative by listening to the audio story in the player below. Labelle said he learned the craft from his grandfather, who has built many birchbark canoes and shared his knowledge widely. But his grandfather wants to retire, Labelle explained. “So that’s why I’m here,” he said. “I wanted to carry on the tradition, because he’s been able to pass it on to me.” Labelle was invited to Trent to build the canoe by Lorenzo Whetung, the cultural advisor at the First People’s House of Learning (FPHL), and by Dawn Lavell-Harvard, the director of FPHL. The idea is to build a canoe that can be used by members of the Trent community and also to teach people the skills involved in constructing one. As Lavell-Harvard pointed out, those skills are “unfortunately disappearing.” She said it was “beautiful” to see Alex Labelle and his grandfather sharing their skills with others. Lavell-Harvard described the canoe as an essential piece of technology for Indigenous people. “Our people Long Term were on the waterways,” Forecast she said. “The canoe was Thursday essential to our survival High 11 … The difference Low 5 between surviving Friday through the next winter High 11 or not was your canoe.” Low 0 Lavell-Harvard

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Saturday High 5 Low -4 Sunday High 5 Low -1 Monday High 10 Low 7 Tuesday High 17 Low 12

Alex Labelle scraping spruce roots as he builds a birch bark canoe inside Bata Library. (Photo: Eddy Sweeney) encourages anyone who’s curious to visit the library while Labelle is working. “You will get to actually put your hands in building this canoe and contributing,” she said. “In future generations, you’ll be able to say, ‘I remember, I helped build that canoe.'” Labelle’s canoe-building project is

expected to wrap up by October 25, with a naming ceremony to follow at a future date. Trent Radio’s Local Journalism Initiative reporter Eddy Sweeney interviewed Labelle, Whetung, and Lavell-Harvard. Alex is the son of Janique Labelle and Joel Lafrance.

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