Orange Shirt Day & National Day of Truth and Reconciliation resource list

Content & Trigger Warnings: mention of colonization, g*nocide, r*sidential schools 

Today is Orange Shirt Day and National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, and honours the lost children and Survivors of residential schools, as well as their families and communities.  

The significance of the orange shirt comes from residential school survivor Phyllis (Jack) Webstad who wore a new orange shirt on her first day of school, a gift from her grandmother, only to have it stripped away from her.  

We stand as accomplices, and in solidarity with our Indigenous colleagues, partners, and communities, as we remember and honour the generations of children who entered into residential schools and never made it back home. We acknowledge and honour the lived experience and courage of Survivors, their families, and communities who have been fighting for generations for validation, collective action, and reconciliation.  

We invite you to take this day to reflect as you are called to, and to listen with open ears, open hearts, and an action-focused mind to the stories of survivors and their families. For non-Indigenous settlers and those who have been displaced to these lands through settler-colonial violence, who have benefitted from systems of colonialism, it is our responsibility to disrupt these systems to further justice and reconciliation. As an organization that works with many Indigenous partners, MakeWay has an important role to play in this work. 

 

Resources 

Events/Discussions Online: 

 

Learning: 

 

Places to Give/Buy: