Communications and Marketing

RRC Polytech hosts seventh annual Truth and Reconciliation Week, elevating Indigenous knowledge and Canada’s true history

September 22, 2025

For immediate release – Monday, September 22

Winnipeg, Manitoba, on the lands of Anishinaabeg, Ininiwak, Anishininwak, Dakota Oyate, and Denesuline, and national homeland of the Red River Métis – RRC Polytech is hosting its seventh annual Truth and Reconciliation Week to mark the National Day of Truth and Reconciliation, also known as Orange Shirt Day, on September 30.

This year, Truth and Reconciliation and Community Engagement Week (TRCE Week) begins today, September 22, with a virtual keynote from Phyllis Webstad, whose story of Residential School started the Orange Shirt movement in 2013. RRC Polytech has also partnered with Nursing student Dasia Chatkana, whose original design is featured on the RRC Polytech Orange Shirt in support of the Mínwastánikéwin Truth and Reconciliation Award, which is awarded to Indigenous students every year in January.

“Every year for seven years, the RRC Polytech community has come together to learn about Truth and Reconciliation and Canada’s true history from Indigenous perspectives. It’s important for us as an educational institution to not only affirm these histories centering Indigenous Peoples, but also to raise awareness to non-Indigenous Canadians that what they were taught in school doesn’t necessarily reflect all realities,” said Jamie Wilson, RRC Polytech’s Vice President, Indigenous Strategy, Business Development and Research.

TRCE Week is five days filled with sessions to educate the RRC Polytech community about the many different responsibilities of Truth and Reconciliation.

While Truth and Reconciliation is a year-round commitment for RRC Polytech, the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation is a focal point that encourages employees and students to immerse themselves in Indigenous Teachings, storytelling and experiences. Opportunities to cultivate understandings of the true history and current issues impacting Indigenous Peoples, and reconciliation efforts by society as a whole contribute to a stronger, more unified community that benefits all members.

“Truth and Reconciliation is an ongoing process of learning and integrating new information, disentangling ourselves from misinformation and unlearning what we think we know, and opening ourselves to truths that might surprise or challenge us. All the sessions we host this week are something that each participant can take back to the classroom, to the workplace, and to their personal lives – so they can continue the lifelong journey of learning today, tomorrow and every day into the future as we work towards building a better and brighter future for all,” Carla Kematch, Director, Truth and Reconciliation and Community Engagement.

Sessions include a virtual keynote from Phyllis Webstad, whose story inspired the Orange Shirt movement; a Two Spirit Sharing Circle; workshops for Talking Sticks, drumming, and painting; panel discussions with The Knowledge Keepers Council and with staff on Indigenous perspectives in inclusive hiring and belonging. Other sessions explore Inuit culture, traditional teachings like the Cedar Bath, and the historical timelines of the First Nations and Métis.

The RRC Polytech Original Orange Shirt, which is released every year alongside TRCE Week, was designed by Nursing student Dasia Chatkana. Read more about her design here and buy your shirt at the Campus Store. All proceeds support the Mínwastánikéwin Truth and Reconciliation Award, which is awarded to an Indigenous student every January to support financial reconciliation.

To learn more about TRCE Week sessions, see the full event schedule.

RRC Polytech campuses are located on the lands of the Anishinaabeg, Ininiwak, Anishininwak, Dakota Oyate, and Denésuline, and the National Homeland of the Red River Métis.

We recognize and honour Treaty 3 Territory Shoal Lake 40 First Nation, the source of Winnipeg’s clean drinking water. In addition, we acknowledge Treaty Territories which provide us with access to electricity we use in both our personal and professional lives.