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Kamsack school holds first ribbon skirt day to support student shamed for wearing the traditional garment

CBC News | January 04, 2022

Categories: news


Bill before senate to make Jan. 4 national ribbon skirt day

Isabella Kulak in a ribbon skirt she made herself. (Submitted by Lana Kulak)
 

As 11-year-old Isabella Kulak picked out her outfit for school Tuesday, she knew her choice of a traditional ribbon skirt would be applauded instead of belittled.

That's because her school, Kamsack Comprehensive Institute, had declared Jan. 4 ribbon skirt day.

"It's very exciting. I'm going to wear the one I made. It was super complicated but it was fun," Kulak, a member of the Cote First Nation, told CBC's Morning Edition.


 

Kamsack Comprehensive Institute plans to make ribbon skirt day an annual event every Jan. 4 (Submitted by Lana Kulak)

Kulak drew international attention last year after she wore a traditional ribbon skirt to a school formal event.

Kulak, then 10 years old, came home upset after an educational assistant shamed her for wearing the skirt, saying it didn't match her shirt and wasn't dressy enough for a formal day.

The assistant told Isabella she should have worn a store-bought outfit similar to another student's.

Ribbon skirts are traditionally worn for Indigenous ceremonies by women and girls, but the garments are also used to show support for causes such as Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.

On Isabella's first day back to school after she was belittled for wearing the skirt, a march was held to walk her to class. Women wore ribbon skirts and men wore their ribbon shirts. Chiefs from surrounding First Nations also attended.

That was Jan. 4, 2021.

Continue reading this article on CBC.ca.


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