ESCAPE

A Decrease font size. A Reset font size. A Increase font size.

Follow us on Twitter Like us on Facebook Visit our youtube channel Plus one us Subscribe to our RSS Feed

Archive for September, 2022

Thank you, One Fire Movement, for your unwavering support

Posted on: September 29th, 2022 by Nellie's No Comments

TonyRoost - OneFireMovement

In the waning, lazy days of summer, Tony Roost was focused on back-to-school, and thinking about what the children living at Nellie’s would need to start the year off right. He figured backpacks, notebooks, pens and pencils topped each of their lists, so he got to work collecting supplies and packing boxes.

“The need at Nellie’s never goes away,” says Tony, founder of One Fire Movement, a growing arts collective that uses the power of social enterprise to create powerful change. “When we give to Nellie’s, we know we are giving directly to families in need.”

One Fire Movement marries its celebration of the arts, with events such as live music and dancing at Pedestrian Sundays Kensington Market, with community engagement. Collective artists include songwriters, visual artists, graphic artists, musicians, photographers, and more. As an artist, songwriter, musician and poet himself, Tony founded One Fire Movement in 2009 when he quit a corporate sales and marketing job with a burning desire to help. “I essentially challenged myself to focus more on things that give me fulfillment and satisfaction in terms of my heart and soul.”

He started by calling local shelters to ask what they most needed and then engaged a few like-minded friends to pitch in. Before long, he had carloads of donations and supplies for a number of shelters, including Nellie’s.

“After my first visit to Nellie’s, I decided I wanted to see if I could push the snowball even further,” he says. And he has. Over the years, One Fire Movement has marched with Nellie’s on International Women’s Day, performed for our community in honour of Mother’s Day, sponsored a number of families every holiday season, and delivered much-needed back-to-school supplies.

“I was raised by a single mom on welfare and I was the kid who got the Christmas wish boxes every year. She was a mom who experienced violence, so working with Nellie’s just feels right,” says Tony. “There are so many factors that connect me to Nellie’s that make me want to be able to do more and more.”

It’s an honour, he says, to support an organization like Nellie’s. “A question I ask myself every day is: ‘are we doing enough for someone else and can we do more?’”

Thank you, Tony, and every member of One Fire Movement for your tremendous support of Nellie’s. Your generosity and passion mean so much to the women and their children who need us.

 

 

 

What you can do to mark the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation

Posted on: September 26th, 2022 by Nellie's No Comments
Every Child Matters

(Andy Everson of the K’ómoks First Nation, designed this logo featuring four sets of hands encircling the words ‘Every Child Matters’ against an orange backdrop)

 

September 30 is the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, a day for all Canadians to recognize the ongoing trauma caused by residential schools, and honour the children who never returned home, the survivors, their families and communities.

As a community-based feminist organization, which operates within an anti-racist, anti-oppression framework, it’s an opportunity for us to commit to the process of truth, reconciliation and justice with First Nations, Inuit and Metis. At Nellie’s, we are dedicated to creating social change through education and advocacy to achieve social justice for all women and their children.

What non-Indigenous people can do to mark the day

 “Education got us into this mess and education will get us out,” Justice Murray Sinclair, the head of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, said of the residential school system in 2015.

Public commemoration and recognition of this tragic and painful history, and its intergenerational impacts, is a vital component of the reconciliation process. Here is what you can do.

  • Wear orange. The National Day for Truth and Reconciliation is on Orange Shirt Day, an Indigenous-led grassroots commemorative day that promotes the concept of “Every Child Matters”. Orange Shirt Day was inspired by the story of residential school survivor Phyllis Jack Webstad, who was given a new orange shirt by her grandmother before being taken to a B.C. residential school. The shirt was confiscated and destroyed by her teacher on the first day of class. Wearing an orange shirt is a symbol of the stripping away of culture, freedom and self-esteem experienced by Indigenous children over generations.
  • Educate yourself. Visit the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation website, learn about the significance of land acknowledgements, honour treaties, read the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s Calls to Action and the National Inquiry of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls Calls for Justice.
  • Read. Immerse yourself in Indigenous literature with this curated list from the Toronto Public Library.
  • Watch. Discover the National Film Board’s rich online collection of Indigenous-made films and documentaries.
  • Support. Volunteer for local Indigenous organizations or causes and support local Indigenous artists and businesses.
  • Share. Help to raise awareness by sharing how you mark this day with the hashtag #NDTR on social media.