This week we talk with Marsha Smoke. Marsha is the CEO and President of Moccasin Trails, a company dedicated to environmental principles and policies to protect the land. That is the impetus behind Moccasin Trails Access Matting Solutions, an Alderville-based business which takes Marsha all over Ontario and beyond. The company’s name, Moccasin Trails, comes from a story Marsha learned from her elders about the history of the grass dance.
Marsha believes in the power of storytelling to educate and heal and says there needs to be ongoing dialogue and more opportunities for residential school survivors and their families to share their stories. She sees Orange Shirt Day as giving people that opportunity. She is a one of the driving forces behind the Dibaajimowin Cultural Centre which visits towns and villages, often setting up their HQ in the tipi they travel with as they did in Port Hope this year and to Colborne where the community was invited to join in the special commemorative ceremony in Victoria Square Park for knowledge sharing and reflection, moments of silence, story-telling, flag raising and a smudge ceremony. Orange shirts were available for purchase to support the Dibaajimowan Cultural Centre.