Jingle dress dancers honour George Floyd at site where he was killed - Action News
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Indigenous

Jingle dress dancers honour George Floyd at site where he was killed

Jingle dress dancers held a ceremonyat the intersection of38thStreet and Chicago Avenue in Minneapolis on Monday,the place where George Floyd was killed by police last week.

Indigenous people in Minneapolis supporting Black Lives Matter cite similar struggles

A group of Indigenous people in Minneapolis helped to co-ordinate a jingle dress ceremony on Monday in the place where George Floyd was killed. The dance is meant for healing and was organized in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement. (Tara Houska)

Jingle dress dancers held a ceremonyat the intersection of38thStreet and Chicago Avenue in Minneapolis on Monday, the place where George Floyd was killed by police last week.

Floyd, a black man, died after a white police officer pressed his knee into Floyd's neck for minutes, even after he stopped moving.The officer, Derek Chauvin, has been fired and charged with third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter.

"The jingle dress dance is such a beautiful and powerful action to take It has this deep spiritual meaning and power behind it," said Tara Houska,who attendedthe event.

Houska, Anishinaabekwe from Couchiching First Nation in Ontario, is a tribal attorneyand community organizer with the Giniw Collective, a pipeline resistance group.

Houska saidpeople fromdifferent cultures who were there to pay their respects to Floyd joined in to observe the ceremony.

"To see the women bringing that power and that connection to that space,I think it meant a lot to the community of all colours."

The jingle dress dance attracted supporters from all backgrounds at the site of the George Floyd memorial. (Ramiro Vasquez)

According to theU.S. Census Bureau, Minnesotais home to over67,000Indigenous people.Many in the region have stepped up to support the Black Lives Matter organizers in the city sinceprotests began last week.

"We got called upon. We went and sang for Black Lives Matter at one protest on 29th and East Lake Street," said Joseph Mousseau.

Mousseau, Anishinaabe from Sandy Bay First Nation in Manitoba, is a powwow singer who has been working in Minneapolis at the Bdote Learning Centerfor the past year.

Mousseau saidgrowing up in Canada, the Indigenous and black communitiesshare experiences with police violence. He says it's one of the reasonswhy Indigenous people have been quick to support the cause.

"We're a minority in our continent," said Mousseau. "How the black people get treated down here [in America], the Natives get treated in Canada."

'We need to have healing in this community'

Iva Rasmusson is an Ojibway great-grandmother who grew up inMinneapolis and has lived in the city off and on since the1960s. She said the relationship between theIndigenous community and the Minneapolis Police Department has long beenstrained.

"Our population has been discriminated against as well so we are supporting that community," said Rasmusson, the operations manager at Bdote Learning Center.

"We need to have healing in this community."

Another community organizer, Lisa Skjefte, Anishinaabekwe from the Red Lake Band in Minnesota,helped to get drum groups to participate in actions throughout the city.

Lisa Skjefte grew up in Minneapolis. She says it's important for black and Indigenous communities to unite against things like white supremacy. (Jaclyn Melina)

"This kind of unity that's bringing people together, it's the kind of thing that's going to help us battle systems of oppression," said Skjefte.

She said that Indigenous peoplehave a long history of resistance and thatprotests this week are an opportunity to have a better relationshipwith the black community moving forward.