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<b style="font-family:'trebuchet ms',sans-serif"><font size="4">Community brings Secwepemc stories to life</font></b><br><br><font size="4" face="arial narrow, sans-serif">by Kristin Froneman - Vernon Morning Star<br>
posted Aug 1, 2014 at 1:00 AM<br><br>A young boy looks up to the elderly woman sitting beside him as she works a whittling knife over strips of cedar bark. Applying the jagged pieces to a cardboard tube, she holds up her work for the boy and myself to take a closer look.<br>
<br>“It’s going to be full with arrows when I’m done,” she says, smiling.<br><br>Marie Thomas is just one of the many volunteers using her hands and knowledge of working with the land to help make the props, masks and costumes for a community play about to be staged at the Splatsin Tsm7aksaltn Teaching Centre just north of Enderby.<br>
<br>In other parts of the centre, which acts as a day care and education centre during other times of the year, visitors and residents are learning the traditional language, music, dance and stories of the Secwepemc (Shuswap) people that will be part of the play Tuwitames (pronounced too-weet-a-miss, which means he/she is growing up.) A presentation of Grindrod’s Runaway Moon Theatre and the Splatsin Language and Culture Program, the play goes from ancient times to the present day, and is intertwined with a personal story of a young man trying to find his roots.</font><p class="" style>
<font size="4" face="trebuchet ms, sans-serif">Access full article below: </font></p><div style><font face="georgia, serif" size="4"><a href="http://www.vernonmorningstar.com/entertainment/269450251.html">http://www.vernonmorningstar.com/entertainment/269450251.html</a></font><br>
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