Mother Tongues, Memories, and Movement: Inside a Culturally Appropriate Program for Immigrant Seniors

Mother Tongues, Memories, and Movement: Inside a Culturally Appropriate Program for Immigrant Seniors

I followed the clacks of ping pong balls and board game pieces to find the church basement where Gaia Community Care and Wellness Society (Gaia Cares) runs its weekly wellness program for Chinese-speaking seniors. As I approached, the percussive ricochets were soon accompanied by the familiar syncopation of Cantonese–a language ingrained in me from a young age, yet limited to basic conversations and ordering dim sum items. On this day, I was determined to practice my Cantonese with the seniors at Gaia, while understanding that the challenge of expressing myself in another language was temporary and voluntary, but a facet of everyday life for many older immigrant adults.

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Two-Eyed Seeing from the perspective of a Cree mother and RCMP Officer

Two-Eyed Seeing from the perspective of a Cree mother and RCMP Officer

The granddaughter of famous First Nations activist Dorothy Maquabeak Francis reflects on intergenerational trauma, racism in policing, and relationship-building. It’s 35 below freezing in Edmonton, as a 27-year-old RCMP officer and Cree woman sits with her face pressed to the chilled window glass of her patrol car. Above her, ribbons of jade light— the Aurora Borealis—move like silk across the obsidian night sky.

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