Ω OMEGA
NEW ISSUE EVERY WEDNESDAY · WWW.TRUOMEGA.CA ·
d @TRU_OMEGA · c FB.ME/TRUOMEGA
A B Γ Δ Ε Ζ Η Θ Ι Κ Λ Μ Ν Ξ Ο Π Ρ Σ Τ Υ Φ Χ Ψ Ω
THE
T H O M P S O N R I V E R S U N I V E R S I T Y ' S I N D E P E N D E N T S T U D E N T N E W S PA P E R
VOLUME 29 · ISSUE 06 · OCTOBER 9, 2019
PAGE
2
TRU CELEBRATES RESEARCH DAY
PAGE
4
TRU FINE ARTS GRADS TAKE ON THE KAG
PAGE
6
FIELD OF SCREAMS BRINGS FRIGHT TO KAMLOOPS
TRU hosts its fourth annual Orange Shirt Day Brianna Schellenberg STAFF WRITER Ω On Sept. 30, approximately 150 students, faculty and members of the community met in the campus commons to honour the Indigenous children who were sent to residential schools across North America. The ceremony began with a prayer, and members of the Secwépemc nation performed an honour song
for the people afterwards. Everyone that attended was asked to stand in a circle outside of the Campus Activity Centre. This symbolized the school and community standing together with the Indigenous members, coming together in a partnership. This day was started by Phyllis Webstad in 2013, who lives in Williams Lake and is an alumnus of Thompson Rivers University. Webstad was sent to a residential school, and when she arrived, the orange shirt her grandmother had made her was taken away.
“It was the feeling of worthlessness and insignificance that shaped her life into promoting reconciliation,” Paul Michel, Executive Director of Indigenous Education at TRU talked about Webstad’s experience. “‘Every child matters’ is the message [Webstad] wants everyone to get from Orange Shirt Day.”
See COMMUNITYPage 3
Attendees listened to the friendship song performance by drumming members of the Secwépemc nation. (Brianna Schellenberg/The Omega)