Abinojii Mikanah signs to start going up as Bishop Grandin Boulevard fades into the past - Action News
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Manitoba

Abinojii Mikanah signs to start going up as Bishop Grandin Boulevard fades into the past

More than a year after first approving therenaming of Winnipeg's Bishop Grandin Boulevard to Abinojii Mikanah, the city says the signs are finally going to go up.

Winnipeg Transit's schedule and route map will reflect the new names in June

A green roadway sign says Bishop Grandin Blvd
All signs for Bishop Grandin Boulevard, starting with the overhead ones, will begin tochange through May and June, followed by street name signs. The city will also be changing the signs for Grandin Street in the St. Boniface neighbourhood. (Google Street View)

More than a year after first approving therenaming of Winnipeg's Bishop Grandin Boulevard to Abinojii Mikanah, the city says the signs are finally going to go up.

Council voted unanimously to approve the new name which means"children's way" inAnishinaabemowin on March 23, 2023. But it still required administration to prepare bylaws for the renaming of that thoroughfare as well asGrandin Street in St. Boniface, which is becomingTaapweewin Way,meaning "truth"in Michif, the ancestral language of the Red River Mtis.

On Thursday, those bylaws received second and third readings at council, which now allows the city to register them with the land titles office so they legally take effect.

Businesses and property owners will be notified and all signs will begin tochange through May and June. Overhead signs will be first, followed by street name signs.

Winnipeg Transit's schedule and route map will reflect the new names when it releases its summer schedule onJune 16.

Bishop Grandin Trail, which is the active transportation path adjacent to the roadway, was officially renamed to Awasisak Mskanw, which means "children's road" in Cree, back in March2023.

The Indigenous relations division of the city is now working with elders to create new interpretive panels and signs.

The renaming honours the experiences of Indigenous residential and day school survivors, and the children who didn't make it home, the city said in a news release.

The change will be formally marked by ceremonies guided by elders in June, the release states.

The changes were sparked in 2021 in the wake of unmarked graves being discovered onthe grounds of former residential schools across Canada.

In the late 1800s, Bishop Vital-Justin Grandin lobbied the federal government to fund the construction of these schools, which resulted inchildren being torn from their families and stripped of their identities inwhat has been decried as a cultural genocide.

The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation has documented the deaths of at least 4,100 Indigenous childrenat residential schools from the date the first ones opened in the 1870suntil the last one closed in 1996.