Traditional crafters Indigenizing face masks during COVID-19 pandemic 'This is my artistic statement on cultural adaptation to what is going on today' By Rhiannon Johnson, CBC News April 22, 2020
Marlana Thompson from Akwesasne created this mask 'so that we don't forget what happened.' (Submitted by Marlana Thompson) Some Indigenous artists are channelling their anxieties about the COVID-19 pandemic into making unique face masks using traditional crafting techniques and materials. "During the pandemic, I'm trying to learn to relax and do stuff for me," said Marlana Thompson from Akwesasne, a Mohawk community straddling the Ontario, Quebec and New York state borders. She created a mask adorned with beaded strawberries, cedar and spruce needles in the traditional Haudenosaunee raised beading style. The mask also says "C-19 2020" to commemorate the pandemic. "So that we don't forget what happened," Thompson said. Thompson said she believes that this is a time for reflection and that there are good things coming out of the situation like families coming together through physical distancing and people taking more control over their lives and the food they bring into their homes.