SaskCulture Year in Review 2024-25

LEFT To support museums across the province, MAS released a film in May 2025, titled Finders Keepers: In the Spirit of Repatriation , offering guidance on how to approach repatriation. Photo by Sawyer Morris. BELOW The Museums Association of Saskatchewan created an Elders Circle to help guide respectful repatriation efforts across the province. Photo by Sawyer Morris.

a good ongoing relationship with nearby Indigenous communities to ensure the items are handled with respect.” With an understanding of the history of colonialism, he approaches his work with respect for each community’s perspective on how items should be repatriated. “Previously, there was a provision in the Indian Act that expressly prohibited traditional ceremonial practices, so a lot of traditional ceremonies had to go underground and be kept secret to keep them alive between about 1890 and 1950,” he explains. “Because of this, there is still a hesitancy in a lot of Indigenous communities to share the traditional knowledge they carry. It’s important for me and for museums to be open and create a safe space where communities feel comfortable coming forward.”

Some of Essaunce Lamarche’s priorities moving forward are to “get sacred ceremonial items that are in museums back under the care and authority of Indigenous Elders,” he says. “The next highest priority is dealing with archeological materials. There needs to be more Indigenous input in how these items are displayed and the interpretive story we tell about the past through these items, to frame it in a much more respectful way.” A lot of repatriation has already happened quietly across the province without media coverage, says Morris. “It’s private and based in ceremony in some cases, and so it’s not something that can be shared, but witnessing that and being a part of that is so powerful.”

from Elders and Knowledge Keepers has been so necessary for this work,” Morris says. Knowledge Keeper Dr. Linda Young agrees. “Inviting Elders and Knowledge Keepers who can provide guidance by sharing their collective knowledge gleaned from lived experience, oral history and ceremony honours First Nations and Métis traditions when handling sacred objects,” she says. “For me, the pace is a reference to protocol, the offering of tobacco when seeking knowledge, and trust from both parties emerges from this process.” Other steps MAS has taken over the past two years included hiring Gabriel Essaunce Lamarche in the new role of repatriation and community liaison this past September, as well as establishing online educational resources for repatriation, developing a database to house all of the materials that should be repatriated, and creating a film on the process and power of repatriation, entitled Finders Keepers: In the Spirit of Repatriation , which was launched in May 2025. “My role includes helping museums develop repatriation policies, to identifying artifacts and connecting with communities,” says Essaunce Lamarche. “From my upbringing as a member of Beausoleil First Nation in Ontario, I understand the protocols around caring for these items. It’s really important that museums do build

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