Secwepemc hereditary family builds ceremony house for healing near Chase

After celebrating ‘No thanks, no giving’ together over the weekend, Miranda Dick and her family broke ground on a new ceremony house for Indigenous Peoples.

Using grassroots resources and without help from colonial entities, Dick says she aims to create a safe place for “winter dance, ceremonies, and sweat lodges, a place for people to land in.”

It’s about “recognizing what the needs are in community and nations,” especially with respect to residential school survivors and their children, says the Secwépemc Hereditary Matriarch. 

“It’s all about what the people want,” she says. “We want healing lodges, we want our language.”

The new ceremony house will be located at Dick’s family residence in the Neskonlith Indian Band community, on unceded Secwépemc territory, just outside of Chase, B.C. 

“The ceremony house was my dad’s vision,” Dick says.

“We’re always going to syilx territory or to the sinixt territory to sing, so my dad was saying we needed to have a ceremony house for winter dance.”

Miranda Dick says her family’s Sundance drum will be going into the new ceremony house along with other xaxa (very sacred) family items. Kelsie Kilawna, Local Journalism Initiative

She says her father, Secwépemc Hereditary Chief Saw-ses, came up with the idea for the ceremony house after a trip to Vancouver in 2019.

They’d gone there to participate in a rally and attend to their hereditary responsibilities, and they returned home feeling “very cold and defeated,” Dick says. 

“We needed a place to go back to to just come and regroup.”

The lodge is also inspired by her late grandfather, Secwépemc Elder William Jones “Wolverine” Ignace, who fed frontline land defenders from his garden. Dick says Wolverine taught her about the importance of “protection before action.” 

“Everything is revolved around ceremony and that’s something Grandpa was saying with ‘protection before action,’” she says.

Miranda Dick, Secwépemc Matriarch, walks by the logs the family selected and harvested for the ceremony lodge. Kelsie Kilawna, Local Journalism Initiative

Dick says her family aims to complete the project as soon as possible, as funds and labour resources become available. They are inviting people to make a contribution to help cover the costs of creating this healing space through this GoFundMe page.

— This story was originally published by The Discourse and IndigiNews.

Join the Conversation!

Want to share your thoughts, add context, or connect with others in your community? Create a free account to comment on stories, ask questions, and join meaningful discussions on our new site.

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.
Howard Alexander

Assistant Editor Howard Alexander comes to iNFOnews.ca from the broadcasting side of the media business.

Howard has been a reporter, news anchor, talk show host and news director, first in Saskatchewan and then the Okanagan.

He moved his family to Vernon in the 90s and is proud to call the Okanagan home.

If you have an event to share contact Howard at 250-309-5343or email halexander@infonews.ca.