At the entrance to a grassy grove in Central Park in North Battleford, a little girl stood on a boulder wrapped in a star blanket. As the mid-morning sunlight gently dappled the leaves of the overhanging trees in gold, the girl — no older than seven — maintained a serene expression on her sculpted bronze face.
Now, 110 years after the Battleford Industrial School — Canada’s first federally funded residential school closed — former student Annie Peyachew has taken her place in the Saskatchewan city as a symbol of hope.
“It’s very emotional today, but I’m very happy at the same time,” said sculptor and Annie’s relative Lionel Peyachew.
The artist, a member of Red Pheasant Cree Nation, explained that he never expected Friday’s event to draw so many people.
“It just shows me that everybody … still truly believes in a way of hope and resilience.”
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